Windsor Star

Warship's passage subject of top concern

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • Newly released documents have shed light on the secret government talks and debate that took place ahead of a Canadian warship's passage through a sensitive waterway near China last year.

Those discussion­s included a private meeting between the top bureaucrat­s at the Department of National Defence and Global Affairs Canada, weeks before HMCS Ottawa sailed through the Taiwan Strait.

Defence officials were also told to keep quiet about the frigate's trip in September 2019, three months after Chinese fighter jets buzzed two other Canadian ships making the same voyage.

And they were ordered to keep the Privy Council Office, the department that supports the prime minister, in the loop as the Ottawa was making its way through the waterway. The unusual level of attention from the highest levels of government laid out in the documents, obtained by The Canadian Press through access to informatio­n, underscore­s the sensitivit­ies surroundin­g the trip.

That is because while much of the world considers the 180-kilometre strait to be internatio­nal waters, Beijing claims ownership of the strait separating mainland China from Taiwan.

Beijing, which regards the self-ruled island of Taiwan as a rogue province, has repeatedly condemned such passages by foreign warships from the U.S., Canada and elsewhere as illegal.

HMCS Ottawa ended up sailing through the Taiwan Strait twice in early September. Media reports at the time said the frigate was shadowed by the Chinese navy.

The heavily redacted memo to Global Affairs deputy minister Marta Morgan dated Aug. 7, 2019, starts by saying the Defence Department was looking for a risk assessment for the Ottawa's planned transit. Defence Department deputy minister Jody Thomas “has also requested a meeting with you on Aug. 12 to discuss this deployment,” the memo adds.

While HMCS Ottawa was in the region at the time helping enforce United Nations sanctions against North Korea, the memo noted that the frigate was due to make a port visit in Bangkok in mid-september.

Defence officials have publicly stated that the decision to have the Ottawa sail through the strait was because the route was the fastest way for the frigate to reach Bangkok from its position near North Korea. The memo backs that assertion, noting that going around Taiwan would add one or two days to the trip each way.

Yet it also says the navy's presence in the South China Sea “has demonstrat­ed Canadian support for our closest partners and allies, regional security and the rules-based internatio­nal order.”

Global Affairs ultimately agreed to the Ottawa's sailing through the strait, but called on defence officials to keep the trip quiet, in large part because of fears the trip would coincide with the federal election campaign.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Family and friends welcome home HMCS Ottawa in December 2019. Newly released documents reveal the discussion­s between diplomatic and defence officials around the Ottawa's passage through the Taiwan Strait last year.
CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS Family and friends welcome home HMCS Ottawa in December 2019. Newly released documents reveal the discussion­s between diplomatic and defence officials around the Ottawa's passage through the Taiwan Strait last year.

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