Funding woes sap military: Sajjan
Remains tight-lipped about new defence policy, spending plans
OTTAWA — Questions swirled on Wednesday as Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan offered a grim assessment of the state of the military, but stopped short of saying how the government plans to fix it.
In a speech to a who’s-who crowd of defence industry representatives and experts, Sajjan said years of underfunding had hollowed out the armed forces and left them struggling with even basic tasks.
“We are now in the troubling position where status quo spending on defence will not even maintain a status quo of capabilities,” Sajjan said.
“Current funding has us digging ourselves into a hole. A hole that gets deeper every year. As a percentage of GDP, we are spending less on defence today than we were in 2005.”
The comments came as the federal government prepares to unveil its new defence policy, which Sajjan promised would begin to address some of the problems.
“It will be a plan to get out of the hole we are starting in and it will be a plan to build an even stronger military,” he said, adding that implementation by defence officials could take years.
But the key question for many attendees of the Conference of Defence Associations Institute event was whether the government will invest billions of additional dollars into the forces.
Sajjan offered mixed signals on the funding question. He acknowledged during a question-andanswer session with the audience that fielding a credible military is “going to cost money. It’s going to take a significant investment.
“When Canadians hear the defence investment that we are going to be putting in,” he said, “it’s going to be significant.”
But he stressed a need to get back-to-basics by talking about the overriding need to find money for 18 essential military procurement projects.
Sajjan said the government has to deal with those must-have projects, which include upgrades to two military helicopter fleets and engineering and logistical vehicles for the army, “before it can build anything new.”
The minister also repeated the government’s previous line when asked about meeting NATO’s two per cent defence spending target.
Canada spends about one per cent of GDP on defence, but Sajjan said the country is stepping up in other ways, such as deploying hundreds of troops to lead a NATO force in Latvia.
Officials have suggested the funding shortfall amounts to tens of billions of dollars.
Even if more money is added, however, there’s no guarantee the department will be able to spend it, as evidenced by the budget decision just a few weeks ago to delay $8.4 billion in planned purchases over the next 20 years.
That problem has been blamed on a shortage of procurement staff, onerous amounts of red tape and a bureaucratic process that has slowed the military procurement system to a crawl.
Sajjan’s assessment of the challenges facing the military was largely welcomed by the event’s attendees, but many remained uncertain about how the government plans to address the issue.
Richard Fadden, who served for two years as the top civilian in National Defence and later as national security adviser to Stephen Harper, said he was encouraged by Sajjan’s focus on defence spending.
“But I’m going to hold my vote until I hear the policy, and in particular, whether the funding commitments are next year, five years, or 25 years [from now],” he said. “Because it’s an old trick, of course, for defence to say ‘yes, we’re solving everybody’s funding problems,’ but they’re really solved 25 years from now.”
One of Sajjan’s key messages was that the government has rigorously analyzed the costs of procurement projects, and of the defence policy as a whole.
That includes enlisting six accounting firms to review how the government and military came up with its costs and ensuring sustainable defence funding.
Defence analyst David Perry of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute said that would help solve some of the problems, but not all.
Sajjan accused previous governments, especially the Conservatives, of hamstringing the military by making short-term decisions. Stephen Saideman, a military expert at Carleton University, suggested this government’s decision to buy Super Hornet fighter jets on an interim basis ran counter to that message.