Lethbridge Herald

Divisions showing over BMD

OPINIONS DIFFER ON BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENCE

- Lee Berthiaume

Personal and political divisions over ballistic missile defence were on clear display Tuesday, as a group of parliament­arians gathered on Parliament Hill to discuss the threat posed by North Korea.

Members of the House of Commons’ defence committee agreed during a rare summer meeting to a series of emergency briefings in the coming weeks on the government’s plan should North Korea attack.

The meeting came as the U.S. Treasury Department upped the ante on North Korea by sanctionin­g several Chinese and Russian entities for supporting the rogue state’s nuclear and missile programs.

There was no immediate word of Canada following with its own sanctions.

Instead, much of the discussion in the hallways before and after the committee meeting centred on whether Canada should join the U.S. continenta­l missile-defence shield, after famously opting out of the system in 2005.

The Trudeau government has sidesteppe­d questions about Canada’s intentions, saying only that ballistic missiles are one threat being discussed as Canada and the U.S. look to upgrade North America’s defences.

But one Liberal MP said Tuesday that Canada should reconsider its decision not to join the U.S. missile shield, even as the Conservati­ves danced around the issue and the NDP reaffirmed its historic opposition.

Liberal MP Mark Gerretsen said a lot has changed since then-prime minister Paul Martin decided Canada would not join ballistic missile defence in 2005.

“Personally, I think that we do need to start to look at what Canada’s role will be in that,” he told reporters after the committee meeting.

“We should be having an ongoing discussion about what our role should be in that. And I think 10 years plus after the fact is a timely opportunit­y to have that discussion again.”

Gerretsen would not comment on the government’s official position, or whether his view was shared by many other members of his party.

But fellow Liberal MP Stephen Fuhr, chairman of the defence committee, noted that Canada has limited resources when it comes to defence — a reference to the fact the U.S. has spent about $100 billion on its missile shield.

Fuhr also played down the threat posed by North Korea, citing military officials and defence experts who told the committee last year that there was no direct threat to Canada from another country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada