Lethbridge Herald

Defence upgrades could be costly

LONG-RANGE RADAR SYSTEM NOT INCLUDED IN LIBERAL POLICY

- Lee Berthiaume THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

The Trudeau government’s new defence policy could end up costing billions more than advertised because it doesn’t include one big-ticket item: modernizin­g North America’s early warning systems.

That sets up a potentiall­y difficult decision: to spend even more on defence than already promised, or to cut back on some of the other promises made to the military.

The current network of longrange radars used by Canada and the U.S. to monitor airborne threats was built in the Arctic in the 1980s but is quickly nearing the end of its useful life.

The Liberals promised in their recent defence policy that the North Warning System, as it is called, would be upgraded following talks with the U.S. about ways to improve continenta­l security.

But while the policy promised an extra $62 billion for the military over the next 20 years, none of that money has been earmarked for replacing the radar system or any new capabiliti­es.

National Defence’s top financial officer, Claude Rochette, says the department could not account for the cost because Canada and the U.S. have not decided what they actually need.

A number of studies are underway to determine exactly what is needed to ensure Canada and the U.S. can continue to detect airborne, marine and even space-based threats into the 21st century.

Talks are also expected between Canadian and American officials over what other capabiliti­es they might want to add, which is where discussion­s about Canada joining ballistic missile defence could arise.

But what isn’t in doubt is that Canada will need to invest substantia­l amounts of money — some experts peg the cost at between $4 billion and $10 billion — to upgrade or replace its part of the North Warning System.

That money will need to start becoming available within the next seven years or so — a timeline that coincides with when the federal government expects to be moving back toward a balanced budget.

Rochette acknowledg­ed that it still wasn’t clear where funding for the radar upgrades would come from.

“We’ll do a cost estimate, whatever the cost is,” he said. “I cannot predict what will happen in the future if a government decides to say ‘No, I would prefer that you take this but remove that.’ It could happen.”

There had already been questions over whether the Liberals’ promised billions in extra defence spending would survive either a change in government, or future budget cuts if the economic situation worsened.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada