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Mr. Chair and committee members, good morning. My name is Lieutenant-General Stephen Bowes, and it is my pleasure to be here today to discuss Canadian Armed Forces' operations and activities in the Arctic.
I am accompanied by Brigadier-General Mike Nixon, who is the commander of Joint Task Force North, which is responsible for the planning and conduct of operations in the north, including the Arctic.
As you know, Canada's Arctic region is immense. It comprises some 40% of Canada's overall land mass, and 75% of its coastline. Its size, combined with its austere climate and conditions, present a complex environment in which the Canadian Armed Forces must be prepared to operate at any time.
To give you a sense of the challenge, General Nixon's area of operations spans four time zones, with harsh terrain, limited daylight, and poor weather conditions for much of the year, with time and space posing a significant challenge in providing a response.
[Translation]
The Canadian Arctic is expected to experience an increase in overall activity in the coming years due to developments in areas such as natural resource exploitation, adventure activities and maritime traffic; this in turn would likely give rise to new requirements for support from the Canadian Armed Forces, such as search and rescue and supporting civilian authorities in consequence management.
[English]
The Canadian Armed Forces make a vital contribution to the fulfilment of Government of Canada priorities in the Arctic. Our tasks include demonstrating a visible presence to exercise sovereignty, conducting surveillance and control of Canadian territory and approaches, carrying out search and rescue operations, and providing assistance to government partners when called upon.
[Translation]
As confirmed in the mandate letter to the , the Arctic remains a Government of Canada priority. The specific roles and activities of the Canadian Armed Forces in the Arctic are, however, being examined as part of the ongoing defence policy review.
[English]
As commander of the Canadian Joint Operations Command, I'm responsible for exercising command and control of all Canadian Armed Forces operations, including those in the Arctic. Those are two very important categories, NORAD and Canadian Special Operations Forces Command.
The Canadian Armed Forces maintains a presence and can bring to bear specific capabilities in order to operate in the north. As I already mentioned, Joint Task Force North, under General Nixon's command, is based in Yellowknife, with detachments in Whitehorse and Iqaluit, as one of six regional task forces under the umbrella or our Joint Operations Command.
Joint Task Force North is responsible for conducting routine and contingency operations in the north and also for the development of the Canadian rangers and Junior rangers programs in the north. Joint Task Force North also liaises with the territorial, municipal, and indigenous governments in order to prepare for rapid and effective responses to emergencies.
The Canadian rangers are a subcomponent of the Canadian Armed Forces reserve. They play a central role in the Canadian Armed Forces tasked to demonstrate visible presence and exercise Canadian sovereignty in the Arctic. The Canadian rangers are currently approximately 5,000 strong in remote locations across Canada, including about 1,700 with 1 Ranger Patrol Group, which is responsible for the Canadian north. Rangers possess unique skills, local knowledge, and expertise that allow them to carry out a wide array of tasks as part of their regular duties, including search and rescue, north warning site patrols, community evacuations, and flood and fire watch. The Canadian rangers are truly the eyes, ears, and voice of the Canadian Armed Forces throughout Canada's north. As such, they also report on both routine and extraordinary activities, such as the presence of suspicious vessels.
The Canadian Armed Forces Arctic training centre, in Resolute Bay, operated in partnership with Natural Resources Canada, provides a facility capable of supporting individual and collective Arctic cold weather training. The training centre, which can accommodate about 140 personnel, also has the capability to serve as a forward operating base if needed.
The Canadian Forces station Alert, under the command of the RCAF, the Royal Canadian Armed Forces, is a signals intelligence facility designed primarily to provide situational awareness in support of military operations. It also possesses a geo-location capability that can assist with search and rescue missions, as well as support to research conducted by other government departments in the Arctic. You will have already heard about other capabilities National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces can leverage in support of its Arctic activities, such as the north warning system and NORAD's forward operating locations in the north.
In terms of operations, the Canadian Armed Forces conduct three major operations each year, which generally take place in the high, western, and eastern Arctic: Operation Nanook, Operation Nunalivut, and Operation Nunakput. Operation Nanook is the Canadian Armed Forces' largest annual exercise, which integrates participation from the Canadian Army, the Royal Canadian Navy, and the Royal Canadian Air Force, as well as whole-of-government partners. The main effort of Operation Nanook 2016 will focus on a response to an earthquake event in the Yukon territory, with a defence scenario being conducted in vicinity of Rankin Inlet in Nunavut.
[Translation]
Notably, Op NANOOK 15 included a firefighting scenario in which Canadian Armed Forces operated with federal, territorial and municipal agencies in response to a simulated wildfire in the town of Fort Smith.
That has underscored how these training scenarios help prepare our forces for real-world events, as Canadian Armed Forces have deployed to support the current response to the wildfire in the Fort McMurray area.
[English]
Operation Nunalivut is a sovereignty-based exercise that employs southern-based Canadian Armed Forces elements as well as the Canadian rangers in High Arctic operations in the challenging period of late winter.
Finally, Operation Nunakput takes place in the western Arctic each summer to exercise sovereignty and interoperability with our RCMP, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, and Coast Guard partners.
In addition to these flagship exercises, the Canadian Armed Forces continues to train through a series of cold-weather, resupply, maintenance, and surveillance exercises each year to ensure that we are ready and have the necessary situational awareness to operate in the Arctic environment.
[Translation]
To support the execution of these operations, and to synchronize and coordinate Canadian Armed Forces activities in the region overall, the Canadian Joint Operations Command has developed a plan for the North. This is a five-year plan which incorporates our operational activities with associated infrastructure and capability requirements as well as engagement with whole-of-government and international partners. The current plan looks out to the year 2020.
[English]
Finally, as you will have heard throughout my remarks, the Canadian Armed Forces works in close co-operation with other federal, provincial, territorial, municipal, and indigenous government partners as well as our regional allies to ensure we are delivering on the government's commitments and priorities in the Arctic. For the Armed Forces, that can range from support to consequence management in the north to providing support in response to a major disaster.
[Translation]
That co-operation also extends beyond Canada's borders, as Canada has a number of bilateral arrangements for co-operation in the Arctic. For example, the Tri-Command Arctic Framework lays out a roadmap for enhancing military co-operation for defence, security and safety operations in the Arctic with the United States. Canada also co-operates with the Arctic states on search and rescue activities in the Arctic.
[English]
In conclusion, the armed forces continue to work closely alongside a wide range of partners to deliver Canada's needs and objectives in the Arctic.
Thank you for inviting me to appear here today. I'm pleased to respond to any questions you may have.
I'd just like to terminate my opening remarks by saying that today we have teams in the west with the folks in Fort McMurray. I can tell you how impressed I am in monitoring, from a distance, not just our team, but also the Government of Alberta; emergency response staff; firefighters—structural and wildlife—from all over the region; the RCMP from K Division, and the manner in which they've responded; volunteer organizations and the manner in which they've responded; and even the Canadian Red Cross, that organization that we've come to rely on in the most desperate of times; and Canadians, who have rallied to this with a sense of community that is truly inspiring.
Thank you. I'll answer any questions that you may have.
I brought in General Nixon. We have a regional task force structure with six joint task forces, and his focus is the north.
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That's a great question, so thank you.
NORAD is responsible for air defence, aerospace defence, and it is responsible for maritime warning. A few years ago, North Command was stood up and added to the NORAD command structure. From a Canadian perspective. With Lieutenant-General St-Amand as the deputy commander there and the more than 50 years of successful history in working that binational relationship towards our collective defence of North America, we see NORAD as a great success.
NORTHCOM is still a new organization, much like CJOC, as a post 9/11 entity, if you will, just as CEFCOM, Canada Command, and CANSOFCOM were stood up in 2005-06 period, and with the CJOC merger just a few years ago.
As for the rules of organization, looking at it today is only good as a snapshot in time. For today's construct, I have no concerns about the relationship and would say that we're meeting the expectations of our respective governments and our respective bosses, noting that the change of command is different and noting that in the American context it's sometimes very difficult for American leaders to understand how Canada works. Given the size, scale, and scope of the United States, it's not easy for them, whether it's Canada or other nations, to understand how other organizations work.
The thing is, we're always looking at evolving our relationship to say that we have a responsibility as learning organizations. For every activity we do—everything, every operation, every exercise we run—we run an after-action review process. We compile lists of lessons identified. We try to develop processes and people responsible for ensuring that those become lessons learned, and we try to evolve.
We're also looking at circumstances and at how things might change, not just at what's going on today. In Operation Nanook, we'll have an earthquake scenario in the Yukon, and we'll use that to test. It's no different from using the forest fire in Fort Smith last year as an example to test our needs on a domestic basis.
As we look at the context of the world today and the threats toward North America—or the challenges—and then towards Canada, we're always asking ourselves where we are going to be five years and ten years from now. I think those are really good questions. A lot of them are about strategic political intent. Internally, we'll have that very good process after we run an exercise. As an example, with Vigilant Shield in the fall, with NORAD and NORTHCOM, we would be engaged in a process and asking how we could make it better, in that we responded to the crisis that was painted in the scenario of today, but how would it be tomorrow if the following things were different...?
That's what's going to generate a lot of very good and healthy professional dialogue. I gain a sense that you've seen that. We need to be mindful that we can't stand pat. We need to be aggressive in our thinking and we need to be looking to how we can make things better.
I offer that. I know your question is a teaser. There's something else that's in behind there.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
LGen Stephen Bowes: You throw it on the table. We're ready to go.
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Our search and rescue technicians are still prepared to do that if they need .to They'll do what they need to do to get the job done. They are an incredible class of Canadians, and I've watched them on video jumping into locations where the average service personnel would say that takes a special brand of courage.
For our SAR posture, we keep and analyze statistics. We use operational research on an ongoing basis to ensure that we have the optimum posture going forward. But it's a complex environment. Only 4% of search and rescue incidents occur north of the 55th parallel, so if you draw a line among the northern provinces in the west toward Fort McMurray and just a little bit north, and draw it along and cover off northern Quebec and a little part of northern Ontario, only 4% occur beyond that. However, every one of them is complex just by virtue of the environment.
We have a SAR posture across the country that is optimized toward where the majority of incidents will occur, but with a capacity to surge forward, depending on the scenario and the circumstances, in response to a crisis in the north.
The reality of our geography in Canada is that most of the people live in the south, which means that even routine miliary operations are almost expeditionary in nature in our own country. We project over long distances. To fly from Winnipeg to the high north is like flying from St. John's, Newfoundland, across the Atlantic.
We are mindful of that in everything that we orient toward the posture, but we have a whole range of assets. The way that we work, even beyond the immediate response search and rescue posture, which I know you've been briefed on.... At least, I believe Admiral Ellis was here. No, excuse me, he was at the Senate. My apologies.
It's a subject that is worth a deep dive on its own. We can get from Winnipeg with a primary Hercules in four to eight hours depending on where the incident is in the Arctic; with a Cormorant in about 12 to 16 hours depending on where it's at; and we can work through some of our hubs in the north to extend assets over range. Working off of Baffin Island, we had many of the assets touch down in Iqaluit, refuel there, and then carry on to station.
It's a complex posture and a lot depends on the circumstances, the nature of the incident and what we have to throw at it.
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Yes, and that's a great point and that would be very fair.
I'm very concerned about sovereignty, just as any Canadian would be.
When you look at military threats, you have to break them into capabilities and intent. There are nations that are developing capabilities to be able to operate in the Arctic, and intent can change quite rapidly. We do have to be prepared.
Is there today or was there a direct military threat to our Arctic? The answer is no, we don't recognize one today.
Can there be in the future? It can change because intent can change in other nations, not just the one that most people would easily identify, Russia. But there can be other scenarios in the future, if you walk out far enough. But those can go in a variety of different ways.
There is no doubt that military activity in the north has helped Canada develop the north. In my travels across the north, I have seen the footprint of the RCAF in the north quite positively, in what it has offered to the country in the way the north has been developed. Last summer, I was in Inuvik and was reminded that it was formerly a signals facility, a part of the original standup of the town. As we go across the Arctic, to control your territory, you need to be able to be dominant, which means that you have to have the ability to go through the breadth and depth of your territory at your will.
That's why we choose exercises, not just in the summer, which a lot of Canadians have typically seen. To me, one of the best operations we do is Op Nunalivut in the middle of February and March, when the weather is not good. I have been up there with them, standing on an ice floe when they were on the ice on a freshwater lake, in this particular case, when it was -58. The environment will kill you faster than it will in desert terrain.
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Any operation in that scenario would be whole-of-government.
First off, we track cruise ships. Cruise ships don't enter the Arctic without our knowing about it. We know when cruise ships go in. There are cruise ships in and around Arctic waters in the summer. They have done so for a number of years, and we track them. We make a great deal of effort on it.
I'll give you an example of a success story developing what we call maritime domain awareness. We have three MSOCs across the country, one on the Great Lakes and one on each coast. Those operations centres bring in data from a variety of sources to help develop a picture for our admirals on each coast who are joint task force commanders and plugged into the CJOC. What they see, I see. So we develop that picture.
Maritime domain awareness refers to not just “there's a ship here”; it's understanding who's on board. It's a much more comprehensive concept of where they are coming from and where they are going. Depending on the nature of the vessel, I can declare it a vessel of interest and we can track it.
What's really interesting about this, though, is the five partners concept. Everything we see at DND is shared with the RCMP, Coast Guard, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, and Transport Canada. We work together, through our various operations centres, to track and understand the nature of the activity.
To get to the specifics of the question, it depends on the scenario. Some cruise ships entering pull a shadow ship, which is available to conduct its own rescue. Other ships perhaps don't, but it speaks to regulatory issues that are beyond the purview of the Department of National Defence.
If we had to, if a ship went aground.... We have conducted an exercise in the past. It's about time, space, distance, and the conditions. We're fortunate that it's the summer months for the cruise ships, and therefore it does give us a bit of an edge, but ultimately, because of the dispersal of air force, the only way to pull people off cruise ships is to bring in another ship, transfer people to that ship, and pull them out. That's unless we set up over time an air bridge and a helicopter, or use austere landing fields and our C-130 Hercules, if we were able to do that, depending on the scenario and the geography.
It's extremely complex, but we have contingency plans. We're prepared to react accordingly.
The 1 CRPG resides in the north—north of 60—with one exception. There's a patrol in northern B.C. that's only accessible from the Yukon. So there is one patrol from 1 CRPG that's actually in British Columbia—in Atlin, B.C. It is an army unit. 1 CRPG belongs to the Canadian Army. It's under OPCON of JTFN. It is the largest unit in the Canadian Armed Forces, by the way, numerically speaking, with about 1,750 rangers spread across those 60 communities that I mentioned.
We recently had a visit to Yellowknife by the Canadian Armed Forces ombudsman to look at the ranger program, specifically in the Arctic, to identify some challenges that they're facing. They do have challenges, as any organization does. I believe it was in the mandate letter of the to look at expanding the ranger program writ large, which is across all five ranger patrol groups.
The ability to do that would be predicated on expanding the ranger instructor pool first, the personnel who provide the military instruction to the rangers. When they're on the land with the ranger patrol, it's questionable who is actually instructing whom, because the rangers are the experts. I spent last weekend in the Baker Lake area with a patrol, and it was an eye-opening experience to see their abilities on the land. They are experts in that field, and that's what we need to promote and to harvest.
The ranger program has been around for almost 70 years. It's going to continue, and it can only get better. As General Bowes alluded to, paired with that is the junior ranger program, which is kind of like cadets, but it isn't. It's based on survival skills and the like. That is another success story, in the north in particular.
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I'll break out from the land first. I'll work backwards and then I can come back on the land side.
It's early days, but here's where we're at. The commander of NORAD, the NORTHCOM group, understands very well the development of capability that Russia has embarked on over the last 15 years and that dynamic. Concurrent with that, we follow very closely developments around the world, developments of extremist organizations and the like.
So the question that came with staff—whom I have going down there all the time, and likewise coming up here, who are involved in tri-command staff talks and who work in syndicates—is that we're a learning organization, to hark back to comments that I made very early in the meeting. We try to do this and are very sincere about doing it. As we run exercises towards continental defence—both on what you would view as traditional military threats but also other threat scenarios—we try to do things better and we postulate questions and challenge ourselves.
Admiral Gortney was championing a concept for the evolution of NORAD. I think it's early days and ultimately whether we do this is up to the Chief of the Defence Staff. I haven't formulated my recommendation to him, but, ultimately, it's his responsibility to provide that advice to the Government of Canada. I don't know where that will go, but I think there is great value in continuing to explore it, even if all that it ever does in the outcome is to make us better at doing what we do today. How can that be a losing proposition for Canadians? There are a lot of questions that need to be answered, a lot of things that need to be teased out.
On the land side, just to bring it down, it's not as clear as it is in the air piece. We have NORAD, we have well-defined terms of reference and we understand that. Even on the maritime side, perhaps work still needs to be done to ensure that the leadership understands what we have in place and how that values citizens across both sides of the border.
On the land side we have a different construct that is often very difficult for U.S. leadership to understand. We have a regional joint task forces. We're a thinly populated country along a border with the United States, and lines of communication on our continent run north-south. As a division commander down in Atlantic Canada, I knew very well all of the adjutants-general of all of the National Guard elements in the New England states. I had a great deal in common understanding, because the way of life in the Maritimes is very similar to that in the core New England states. I understand that concept. So it is all the way across the country.
So we have a regional task force where on any given incident, the land component commander whom we designate is also one of my regional joint task force commanders. We're very good at dealing with being double and triple-hatted in responsibilities, as long as we ourselves understand what we need to do.
General Eyre is the division commander out west for the army. He's a regional joint task force commander. He can also be a land component commander for a particular crisis, and we have other ways of tackling the problem. So I think we're in early days of trying to understand this. If it's to develop a model simply to make it easier for the United States folks to understand how we're organized, then I'm not sure where the value is in that. So we will really tease out what the value propositions are and show how these make Canadians more secure, how they make us safer, how they enable us to respond to crises. We have a lot of work to do on this one, but we are committed to looking at and making sure that we do business better.
I thought I would focus my brief on the issue of Canadian participation in the United States' ballistic missile defence program, specifically the ground-based midcourse defense system currently deployed in Alaska and California, given that this is one of the issues outlined in the defence review guidance.
To begin I want to emphasize three key points.
First, under current circumstances, whether Canada participates or not will have no significant impact upon the NORAD relationship, Canada-U.S. defence relations in general, and the Canada-U.S. relationship as a whole.
Second, if circumstances change and the United States comes to the conclusion that Canadian participation or, more accurately, Canadian territory becomes vital to the missile defence of the United States, a failure by Canada to participate will have a major impact on the relationship and the future of NORAD. This may result if the United States proceeds to establish a third interceptor site in the northeastern United States.
Currently, the United States is completing environmental studies for a possible third site in either upstate New York, Michigan, or Ohio. If this occurs, the United States may also conclude that to make the system effective, and thus ensure the defence of the eastern seaboard and the Great Lakes region, a forward-deployed X-band tracking radar in Canada may be essential as a result of the gap between the current X-band radar at Thule, Greenland, and U.S. territory. This, of course, would also significantly alter the negotiating dynamic concerning the meaning of participation, which I will clarify shortly.
Finally, under current circumstances, as well as changed ones, the real issue is whether the Canadian government and the Canadian public believe that it is essential that Canada be defended from a limited ballistic missile attack involving a nuclear warhead, by proliferating states such as North Korea. Canada cannot and should not expect the United States to defend Canada, for a variety of strategic and political reasons. Legally, U.S. Northern Command, responsible for the ground-based system, is only mandated to defend the United States and cannot be expected to expend one or more interceptors to save a Canadian city, unless its potential target may directly impact, via the blast or radiation effect, an American location, such as Detroit. In failing to defend ourselves, Canada places American decision-makers in a horrible moral dilemma of expending an interceptor to save Canadian lives, but in so doing potentially undermining the ability of the United States to defend itself.
Any decision regarding whether Canada should or should not acquire its own missile defence capability requires the government to obtain as much information as possible about the U.S. system. To do so will cause the Canadian government to publicly, and without reservation, endorse the U.S. missile defence effort as the first step into discussions and, possibly, negotiations with the United States. This has been partially done in the context of the NATO system. Even so, this fundamentally means that the government must reverse the 2005 decision, but not formally commit to participation, because no one actually knows what participation would really mean.
It is clear, however, from the failed negotiations in 2003 and 2004, that the United States will not provide a formal guarantee to defend Canadian cities, will not give command control to NORAD, and will not give Canada detailed access to operational planning under current circumstances. This has not changed, and will not change until Canada decides to invest capital and seeks to acquire and deploy some relevant missile defence system component on Canadian soil, which will enhance the defence of the United States as well as Canada, whether it be a tracking radar or a full-fledged interceptor site. In other words, Canada must contribute a meaningful capability of value in order to truly participate with the United States in the missile defence of North America, thus altering the negotiating conditions and reversing the above three noes, which in turn will provide assurances that Canadian cities and the population are defended.
A meaningful contribution, of course, requires that Canada first acquire detailed information from the United States about the system, additional valuable requirements of the system, the costs and, of course, whether the United States will agree to settle with the capabilities of Canada—which, I would add, Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense in 1967, offered to do with the ABM system. Perhaps the United States will decide that there's nothing for Canada to contribute for now. Even so, the government will have opened the door and acquired valuable information and knowledge for an unforeseeable future.
Regardless, it is time for the government, Global Affairs, National Defence, and the public to realize that we cannot free-ride on the American missile defence system, and we cannot expect that an asymmetric contribution, such as offering to pay for the modernization of the north warning system, will result in a U.S. missile defence guarantee.
In effect, the government must invest in a meaningful way in order to ensure the defence of Canada.
Thank you. I look forward to your questions regarding this issue or anything else concerning the defence of North America or global security politics.
It's a great honour to be here. My comments are directed at all the members, but especially to the members of the new government, because you have some very difficult decisions to make.
I'm going to start by providing just a bit of context. Let me preface this by saying that I think you will have to recommend to substantially increase Canada's defence budget. We are currently drifting below 1% of GDP. I suspect that you will need to increase that to at least 1.5% and perhaps even 2% of GDP. This has an impact on the issues that you are discussing in this committee.
Just to flesh that out with a bit of context, the Canadian navy is in serious trouble. It has no supply ships. It has no air defence destroyers. Its marine coastal patrol vessels have been deemed unworthy of a mid-life refit. The submarines are close to 30 years old and have spent most of their lives in refit and maintenance. On the navy, I could go on.
The army is in serious trouble. The fleet of armoured trucks is for the most part undeployable and seriously in need of replacement. For example, if you are thinking about engaging in United Nations peacekeeping on any scale, you'll need to replace those trucks first.
The air force is in trouble. Canada's search and rescue fixed-wing planes are approaching half a century in age. Our fighter-jet fleet is 30 years old. There are serious concerns about metal fatigue. We have only 14 long-range search and research helicopters. In this, the second-largest country on earth, the Canadian Forces, the Royal Canadian Air Force, is on record as saying that they need at least 18 to do the job properly.
Again, I could go on. The north warning system needs to be upgraded.
This is all core context, because it amounts to tens of billions of dollars that you will need to spend.
Let's talk about the situation with regard to air warning and defence in the north. I want to deal first with the issue that has come before this committee in the past year or so, that of drones for Arctic surveillance.
The good news here is that the Canadian Forces and the Canadian government more generally are actually pretty well equipped right now in terms of Arctic surveillance. We have RADARSAT-2, which is the world's best synthetic aperture radar satellite built for the Arctic. We have funding committed for the first three satellites in the RADARSAT Constellation. You should think hard about increasing that to the proposed six.
We have the northern watch system, which is highly functional but needs to be upgraded in the next 5 to 10 years. We have the Aurora maritime patrol aircraft, 14 of which are going through a major refit process. There are four more for which the parts for the refits have been acquired. I would recommend that you refit all 18. They provide an excellent surveillance capacity. Transport Canada has two Dash 8s, and one Dash 7. They overfly every foreign vessel visiting Canada's Arctic.
There are other capabilities. There are RCMP officers in every single northern community. That's surveillance.
Do we actually need drones for the Arctic? Well, on my priority list of spending, they simply wouldn't be there. I would like to gently suggest that the reason they have been put forward in the context of the Arctic is that the previous government twice denied a request from the Canadian Forces to acquire drones for use in armed conflicts overseas. They didn't get it for those, and the Arctic may have been an additional argument that was introduced. Be careful about this.
In terms of fighter aircraft, I've already mentioned that the CF-18s are getting very old. They desperately need to be replaced. They need to be replaced within a reasonable budget, and the planes that replace them need to be not just capable of Arctic operations but suited for Arctic operations. Be very careful about costs here. Some of these planes are proven and have set costs. One of the planes that could be under consideration is not yet proven, is not yet complete, and has uncertain costs. Then you have other factors that come into play, like changes in the exchange rate between Canada and the United States.
The acquisition budget for the F-35s of $9 billion for 65 planes was set at an exchange rate of 92¢ on the U.S. dollar. At today's exchange rate, at 77¢ to the dollar, you can only buy 56 F-35s, so consider whether or not your government, within a set budget and a minimum number of planes, is going to be able to acquire some of the aircraft under consideration. That should be part of the actual statement of requirement, a minimum number of planes for the set budget.
Another issue concerning the F-35 that I just want to flag is the single engine. I know you've heard testimony on this, and you've been told that fighter jet aircraft engines are becoming progressively more reliable. That indeed is true, but twin engine jets are still more reliable than single engine jets. I would refer you simply to the U.S. Air Force safety center website, which actually has charts that show the reliability of different engines and different planes. The single engine planes like the F-16 are getting more reliable, but they are still not approaching the reliability of comparable twin engine planes.
I heard a very strange comment from one of your previous witnesses who was citing the fact that because trans-ocean civilian airlines are moving from four engine to two engine planes, somehow that makes the F-35 appropriate for the Arctic. I don't think anyone in this room would want to fly from Ottawa to London, England, on a single engine civilian aircraft.
I looked at the safety record of the Boeing 777, the world's safest twin engine civilian aircraft, and somewhere in the world, at least once a month—once a month—a Boeing 777 loses an engine. We never hear about it because they have a second engine that they can fly and land safely with, but be very careful about this.
Finally, on missile defence, I have heard previous witnesses being asked in this committee about the possible costs of Canada joining missile defence. There are actually numbers on this. We know how much the U.S. government has spent on its midcourse interceptor system here in North America: $40 billion U.S. We know how much they are spending per year to maintain and grow that system: $1 billion U.S.
You might imagine, and perhaps you might want to ask, whether the United States will let Canada join for free. I doubt it. If we say that perhaps they would want us to pay our share of the retrospective costs of building up the system, the Canadian population is one-tenth that of the United States, so that's $4 billion. If they say that they want us to pay one-tenth of the ongoing annual cost, that is $100 million. You can ask them, but it needs to be factored in, in terms of considering all of these different priorities, as do the risks that are being addressed. If you assume that North Korea is somewhat rational, and it has a choice between sending an intercontinental ballistic missile toward Canada or the United States that draws a bright red line back to North Korea and invites almost certain retaliation, it has a choice between doing that and putting its nuclear warhead on a small private yacht and sailing it into Seattle, Los Angeles, or Vancouver Harbour.
Again, I'm not saying that you shouldn't take risks seriously; I'm just saying that you need to consider costs, you need to consider the degree of risk, and you need to actually consider whether or not the money that is being asked for by some other experts, which they're asking you to spend, actually has gone through a careful risk analysis.
In my analysis, we're good on surveillance in the Arctic right now and we'll be so for the next 20 years. There's no need for drones. We do need long-range fighter aircraft for the Arctic, but they need to be twin engine planes and they need to fit within a reasonable budget. We don't need to join U.S. missile defence because the threat, relatively speaking, does not top out on that priority list, and the cost of joining is likely to be prohibitively high in a very stressed budget situation where you are already going to have to significantly raise Canadian defence spending.
Thank you very much.
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I'd like to thank the members of the committee for giving us the opportunity to come before you to discuss one of the critical elements of Canadian security.
I would begin by pointing out that there is a tendency to view the Arctic as somehow a separate, peaceful component that does not have a bearing on overall Canadian security. This is completely wrong. The Arctic is as much a part of Canadian security as one can imagine any other component is, and for that matter the geopolitics of the Arctic have always been there. I remind the committee members that the reason the Americans in all probability got to buy Alaska from the Russians had everything to do with the first Crimean War, which is something that we often forget, to our peril.
What does the committee need to aware of in the changing elements of geopolitics of the north? We have the rhetoric of co-operation and, indeed, from the period of the end of the Cold War to the current period, we have seen tremendous co-operation between the Arctic states. Canada, the United States, and Norway spent billions helping the Russians decommission the preceding Soviet nuclear-powered submarine fleet, first through the AMEC program and subsequently through the G-8 program. There was significant co-operation in that period, and it will be remembered as a golden era.
We are now seeing at least three major geopolitical trends that are integrating Arctic security interests into all the larger interests. What are these three trends?
The first, and the one that most people pay the most attention to, is the development of new resources and resource opportunities in the Arctic. With the recognition of the impacts of climate change, people become aware that the Arctic does offer things such as transportation routes for cruise ships of a very large size. This is only one that people put at the forefront.
The second major component that has changed is the interest of other states in the Arctic. Back in 1998, anyone who suggested that China would be interested in the Arctic would have been laughed out of the room. The idea of the Arctic and China just simply wasn't going to be corrected. In 1999 we had the first visit of a Chinese vessel into Canadian waters when the Xue Long visited at Tuktoyaktuk. This has continued on a steady progression. The Saudis are also very interested in the Arctic. They have said openly that part of their rationale for allowing oil prices to collapse was to drive out both the shale producers and the Arctic producers. In other words, it's the outside interests.
But the biggest factor that I would bring to the attention of the committee that you have to bring forward into your considerations is the fact that there is a growing strategic imperative on both the part of Russia and the United States that is increasingly going to conflict. That will ultimately spill into the Arctic. Let me be clear. It is not about fighting over the extended continental shelf, fighting over diamond mines or oil or gas resources; it's about the necessity of both Russia and the United States pursuing core strategic requirements that will require us to be very cognizant of what is happening in this context.
What are some of these major factors?
First and foremost for Russia is the maintenance of nuclear stability or what we in the west refer to as “nuclear deterrence”. We tend to be focused on the realities of dealing with insurgencies and other aspects of conflict in Afghanistan and Syria and elsewhere. But the Russians have never wavered, from Yeltsin onward, that their core strategic requirement is nuclear stability. To maintain nuclear stability, they have put most of their funds in the rebuilding of the northern fleet. We have seen that they've had major failures in being able to do so, but they have stayed the course in rebuilding their nuclear missiles, nuclear-powered subs, and their attack subs, and are now in a very vigorous phase of rebuilding these forces. This also ties into why we have seen the Russians also rearming many of their northern bases. Publicly, they state that they are doing this in the context of an opening northern sea route, and that is part of the answer. But the other part is to provide protection of their northern fleet as part of their nuclear stability.
The second component of what the Russians have always told us they see as a major threat--and this is in all their documentation--is the expansion of NATO.
How does that spill over into the Arctic?
Yesterday, it was announced that, for the first time since polls have been maintained, a majority of Swedes are now in favour of joining NATO. One of the core issues that Canada will be facing is that if the two Arctic neutrals, Sweden and Finland, decide to join NATO—and there are growing indications, at least in the open literature, that they are moving towards this procedure—then we could see a major change in how the geopolitics of the Arctic will then transpire.
The third element we see within the American context is, of course, the interaction with the American ballistic missile defence system. Let's move to the Americans, for a moment, and see how this spills into the Arctic.
Two of their major elements have direct ramifications, as Dr. Fergusson has already made clear. A major element of the ABM system is their base in Fort Greely, Alaska. They currently have 26 interceptors. They're putting in another 14. This is where they have the bulk. Of course, they are looking to place them elsewhere. Now, this is not about defending the Arctic; this is about defending a North Korean launch, but the Russians, according to the literature, are starting to see it as something different.
The second factor for the Americans is their acceptance of an expansion of NATO. They were the ones who were pushing for an expansion of Georgia, which, of course, had ramifications in the 2008 Georgian-Russian war, and we suspect that the Americans are in favour of the Finns and the Swedes joining NATO. We see these factors all coming together.
Where does that leave Canada?
With regard to the two major defence alliances we have had, Dr. Fergusson has already very capably laid out the issue in terms of ABM and what it means for NORAD.
For Canada, the major security ramifications we have for NATO are coming up very quickly. Should Sweden and/or Finland ask to join NATO, we as a member will be participating in that decision. That will have ramifications. If we say no, we run the risk of encouraging Russian aggressive behaviour. If we say yes, there will be ramifications for us with regard to the type of co-operation that we have been able to build in other forums, such as the Arctic Council. There are real decisions; we can't sit on the sideline in this particular context.
What happens in the future with regard to our considerations for Arctic security?
First and foremost, it is not about who owns the North Pole or who gets to say where the continental shelf goes. These are all important issues from a foreign policy perspective, but they are not the core issues from a security perspective.
Rather, what is happening is that the Arctic will increasingly be one of the central geopolitical realities of the international system. Russia and the United States have core security issues. We can expect that China will increasingly start to have core strategic interests. We saw for the first time last September a Chinese naval task force coming into the Aleutian Islands. We've never seen that before.
The question for Canada, and the question that you have to face, looking into both the short term and medium term, is how does Canada then allocate the resources necessary to ensure that our northern security—not sovereignty, but security—is properly protected, given the fact that the Americans, the Russians, and the Chinese, regardless of how nice we may wish to think things are, will actually be seeing the area.
Thank you very much.
:
Thank you very much. The committee has my speaking notes, so I will endeavour to be brief.
I will begin by stating the obvious, that geopolitical tensions have increased considerably in the Arctic over the past few years. The principal reason for this has been the renewal of Russian Cold War-era strategic bomber flights buzzing the North American air defence identification zone—both the Canadian and American side. To my knowledge, there has never been a violation of our airspace; however, I am sure you have received detailed knowledge on that from your visit to Colorado Springs.
I should point out that these activities are primarily political or, at the very least, as political as they are military. It is Russian posturing. It is an attempt by the Russians to use the Arctic in a very visible way to send a very visible message to Canada and our American allies.
This said, it is important not to overstate the military threat that these activities represent. Those Russian bombers are not an immediate military threat. They are large, slow planes that are very easily tracked. In fact, the Russians intentionally fly them at very high altitudes so that they are very easily tracked by our air defence radar.
Russian bases that have spread across the north have also received considerable attention, mostly in the popular media, and have been represented as a kind of threat to the North American Arctic. I would point out that this is probably an overestimation of that threat. Russian soldiers stationed in the Russian Arctic are not a particular threat to the North American Arctic.
Furthermore, Russia has also been rebuilding its navy, and most of that navy, of course, has been positioned in the Arctic. Again, this has often been misinterpreted as an attempt to remilitarize the Russian Arctic and the Arctic considered more broadly.
From a historical perspective, it is important to remember that, since at least the beginning of the Cold War, the Russians have kept the bulk of their most valuable naval assets in the Arctic, not because they intend to use those assets for Arctic purposes, but simply for geographic reasons. The Arctic is, ironically, the Russians' best port area. It is Russia's only ice-free port area and the only area with easy access to the world ocean. Russian assets based there are not necessarily meant for the Arctic.
The Russians have also been rebuilding their submarine capability. Now, these boats are intended largely for use in the Arctic. The Russians have historically had a very strong under-ice presence through most of the last decades of the Cold War.
Again, it is important to note that the Russians are not expanding into a vacuum. The Americans and perhaps the Brits—information on that is still classified—but the Americans at least have maintained an under-ice capability since the end of the Cold War. In fact, the Americans have sent an average of two nuclear attack submarines under the ice into the polar basin every year since 1990. The Russians are not expanding into a vacuum there, and our allies have a very strong competency in defending the Arctic Ocean at present.
The Russians also have a national interest in restraining military operations in the Arctic. Their strategic interests dictate co-operation rather than tension and competition. The reason for this is primarily economic. About 20% of the Russian GDP comes from the Arctic, and in fact developing the Arctic— primarily oil and gas, but also mineral resources—is one of Russia's most important tasks in the years ahead. Vladimir Putin has labelled the region a “strategic resource base”, and with good reason.
Russia's oil and gas deposits further south in its older fields, primarily in western Siberia, are depleting quickly. The costs of lifting oil from those regions are increasing very dramatically, which means that Russia will need to develop the Arctic. This is an existential requirement for the Russian state to maintain itself in its current state. For Russia to develop the Arctic, it needs foreign capital and foreign technology, and it is going to be hard to attract that capital and technology, be it from the west or from China or even India, if the region is perceived as one of competition.
This said, it is also important to recognize that Russian domestic politics are often at odds with its strategic requirements and its broader national interests. The creation of a siege mentality, which Vladimir Putin has succeeded in doing and which has kept his approval ratings so high, demands the kind of posturing that we have seen in the Arctic. It demands that Russia be seen messaging the west and demonstrating its strength in that region, which is, of course, emotionally very important to Russia. Russia is an Arctic country like Canada and, therefore, action in the Arctic has outsized importance and visibility.
Of note here is Russia's new cruise missile capability, which they demonstrated very recently in Syria. An attack on an ISIS position last November was carried out with the Russians' new Kh-101 cruise missile. Using this asset was entirely unnecessary. ISIS has no early detection capability, no air defence, and so the use of this very advanced cruise missile was, and can only be understood as, messaging to the west. It was a message that they have this new capability and, most importantly, that they have a very long reach.
This applies to the Arctic because it demonstrates Russia's ability to attack most crucial North American targets from areas just northwest of the Arctic archipelago, either from submarines or from bombers. As such, NORAD does need to look at an all-domain awareness, or at least a multi-domain awareness, moving forward, as you heard from Admiral Gortney. An attack on North America could come from either the maritime or the air domain. Russia is, of course, a threat in both of these areas. The threat is not probable, but it is possible, and it is our military's job to analyze the possible, with the probable ever in mind.
As such, Canada and the United States will need to further develop their maritime co-operation. We will need to enhance our understanding of one another in that region, and we are going to have to convey to our militaries that NORAD does have an existing maritime domain awareness mission, because, of course, that mission does exist. However, there is, let's say, a lack of understanding within both militaries that that mission exists.
Where does Canada go from here? There is probably no need at the present time for expanded maritime assets for surveillance. The assets we have, as Dr. Byers has mentioned, are suitable. What needs to be expanded is our co-operation and the forums through which we communicate with one another. Any type of further integration and co-operation with our American colleagues through NORAD or other means is, of course, desirable.
Canada is going to have to expand its air defence. We are going to need to continue to intercept Russian bombers as they buzz the North American air defence identification zone. However, this isn't going to be a combat mission, or at least it is highly unlikely that this would ever evolve into a combat mission. So I would advise, contrary to what Dr. Byers says, that we not put Arctic capabilities too high on our priority list. It is still a priority, but this is not something that we are going to need to devote too many resources to in the future.
The Arctic will not be, or will almost certainly not be, a combat theatre. We should view it as a region that needs to be watched, a region that needs to be guarded from Russian posturing. We need to watch for increased Russian posturing, both in the air and, potentially, moving forward, under the ice or on the sea.
Thank you.
:
I will share any remaining time with my colleague, Mr. Gerretsen.
Thank you to all four of you for being here, for your tremendous work, and for offering us your insight and counsel.
I'd like to start with a question for Professor Byers on the issue of fighter aircraft and the replacement thereof, and I'd like to start with anecdote.
I had the privilege of completing part of my civilian flight training right here in Ottawa, at Ottawa Aviation Services, in a little single-engine aircraft. At the time, Ottawa Aviation Services had a policy of suspending flight operations any time temperatures went below 20°C. They did that, not because of a general lack of capability of the aircraft, but because of the realization that if a student went down in the Gatineau hills as a result of engine failure, she or he would be in serious trouble. That's within a very tight radius of Ottawa. I appreciate your testimony on the single-engine versus twin-engine paradigm, especially given the unique nature of the work that these aircraft are going to be doing in the Far North, not here in the Ottawa area.
I'm wondering if you could complete for the committee the analysis of the replacement of the fighter aircraft, looking at interoperability, refuelling issues, runway length, and then, most importantly, the evolving threats that we face, both domestically and from foreign forces. Give us your insight on what the criteria should be for our next fighter aircraft.
:
I also have a personal interest in this, in that I have a 15-year-old son who wants to fly fighter jets.
Certainly, the Canadian Arctic is extraordinarily large. It's 40% of the second-largest country on earth. We have very extensive maritime zones. We have, at the moment, twin-engine fighter jets that we chose because of the safety provided by a second engine, just like the U.S. Navy chose the F-18, and has bought a lot of replacement Super Hornets, again for the second engine, because of the safety over hostile ocean—or Arctic, in our case.
If we were to choose a single-engine jet for the Arctic, we would have to substantially improve our Arctic search and rescue, so that we could get to pilots quickly if they had to parachute to safety.
Again, you might not hear this from the air force; it's a harsh reality. They're not looking at the fighter jet for Arctic security; they're looking at the replacement fighter jet for operations overseas. That's why they want particular planes.
We have a fleet of F-18s. The logical thing, from my perspective, is to do a fleet extension of Super Hornets, which could fulfill the exact same mission, require relatively little new training for mechanics and pilots. And, of course, we know that we can afford the Super Hornet. We don't know if we can afford—
:
From my perspective, first of all with regards to the Swedish and Finnish involvement, that raises the issue of course of what the future holds for the NATO-based American phased adaptive approach to missile defence and whether you want to add a site for further defence. That be actually a site to defend North America rather than Europe. So I don't think they're going to make one difference either way in terms of North American defence.
In terms of technologies, in terms of opportunities in the missile defence world, that train left the station two decades ago. Canada did not engage. The American research and development program is well advanced across the board in missile defence. The likelihood that there are any opportunities for Canadian firms or Canadian technology is extremely low. There may be some firms that are somewhat engaged on the margins as a function of the integrated nature of the Canada-U.S. defence technology and industrial base.
Cruise missile defence in terms of warning and identification of cruise missiles is a problem, which I think you probably heard from Admiral Gortney. There are numerous potentials in that area in terms of Canada's involvement in terms of the early warning. It's really about surveillance, reconnaissance, tracking, target identification, and cruise missile defence, which is vitally important. The capacity to intercept cruise missiles is already in place with the F-18s and will be in place with any replacement of the F-18.
About missile defence, it's difficult to know. I can tell you right now that, if Canada proposed an interceptor site in return for direct access to command and control of the defence of North America as a whole—a low probability of attack, but it's greater than zero—the United States would be interested in providing that capability in some form of negotiated arrangement.
Possibly as well, as I mentioned, tracking radars will be important if the United States proceeds down that path. They have alternatives, of course, in radar. They could put in offshore radar, as they have in the Pacific right now and off Alaska.
So there are some opportunities, but they're not great ones. I hope that answers your question.