Ottawa Citizen

Time to end high-seas secrecy

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Alittle more than a year ago, the second-incommand of the Canadian Forces, Vice-Admiral Mark Norman, was removed from his job by Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Jon Vance. The reasons were kept secret, even as the RCMP was removing laptops, phones and records — including many of his wife’s personal files — from his home.

Today, while a few details of the investigat­ion have leaked out, Norman still has not been charged, and has never had an opportunit­y to defend himself in any official capacity. Instead, although he still receives his salary under suspension, he spends most of his time at home, awaiting a resolution — or at least some progress — on ending his state of legal limbo. As the Citizen’s David Pugliese pointed out in an investigat­ive report this past weekend, Norman has never even been officially given the reasons for his suspension; there has been no military hearing and no independen­t examinatio­n of the evidence against him. Whatever case the RCMP amassed, it has been sitting with a federal prosecutor for months.

According to Pugliese’s new reporting, based on legal records, access to informatio­n documents and DND sources, the investigat­ion centres on government plans for the replacemen­t of two old naval supply ships. The RCMP alleged that Norman had leaked informatio­n and broken cabinet confidence­s in communicat­ing with a private player involved in the project. But though several search warrants have been granted against various parties, and police have interviewe­d more than 30 people, there still have been no charges laid. Indeed, when media organizati­ons, including ours, asked a judge to unseal the search warrant on Norman’s home, that judge indicated the case against the vice-admiral was far from solid.

It is, of course, impossible to know how grave this situation truly is, though Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan has said it “is not an issue of national security.” The government-imposed blackout on sharing details over the past year has served no one; it has merely led to a slow drip-drip-drip of facts as journalist­s meticulous­ly extract details all Canadians should automatica­lly be entitled to.

We said a year ago that the Trudeau government needed to be more transparen­t about why the second-in-command of Canada’s military had been bounced from his job. Today, it’s also evident that Norman himself is being treated unfairly. He is entitled to face the accusation­s against him. Federal prosecutor­s should air the case they have, or drop it swiftly if it is insufficie­nt. Our military faces enough problems around procuremen­t without prolonging this needless secrecy.

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