CBC Edition

Shooting blanks: Why so many Canadian defence policies fail to launch

- Murray Brewster

With absolutely no excep‐ tions, every defence policy presented by the Canadian government over the past five decades has presented a vision of the world bey‐ ond our borders going to hell in a handbasket.

The wars may be differ‐ ent, the adversarie­s might change, threats might have evolved - but the language al‐ most always stays the same.

And almost without ex‐ ception, none of those de‐ fence policies ever lived up to their hype, or to the expecta‐ tions and political spin that accompanie­d them.

The ink wasn't even dry on some defence policies be‐ fore they were being dismis‐ sed by people in government as unaffordab­le or overtaken by world events. Others died a quiet, curious death of be‐ nign neglect.

But the difference­s be‐ tween the security and de‐ fence snapshot presented on Monday and those that came before it could not be more stark.

There's a shooting war in Europe - allies are openly talking about being in a "pre‐ war" period. Russian subma‐ rine activity in the North At‐ lantic is at, or exceeding, Cold War levels. Canada's own top military commander is calling for the defence industry to be put on a "war footing." And many of the nuclear treaties that underpinne­d se‐ curity during the standoff with the former Soviet Union have been dropped in the shredder.

When you look back at the past five decades, if ever there was a time to convince

Canadians that the world is a nasty place and is likely to get worse, it's now.

Gen. Wayne Eyre, chief of the defence staff, acknowl‐ edged the world and Canada are "in a fundamenta­lly dif‐ ferent situation now" than they were when previous policy reviews were released.

For that reason, he's ar‐ guing for a sense of urgency.

"What keeps me up at night - with the state of the world and what we need to do - is something I've been calling harmful bureaucrac­y," Eyre said in an interview late Friday with CBC News.

"Because that will inhibit our ability to implement this policy. It will slow us down. It'll be the molasses that does not allow us to proceed apace."

The new policy does con‐ tain the expected warnings about how Russia's war in Ukraine represents a threat to the stability of the postSecond World War interna‐ tional order. China was called out for having an eye on the Canadian Arctic, but in lan‐ guage that's more attuned to the tightrope Canada has tried to walk following the re‐ lease of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor. The strategy promises to manage the rela‐ tionship with Beijing through "frank, open and respectful dialogue."

The policy document also refers to how technology is

reshaping conflict in both stark and subtle ways.

But the policy is also a po‐ litical document, and its un‐ stated intention may have been to prop up the Liberal government in the face of anxious allies and an increas‐ ingly uneasy electorate.

It also presents climate change as an important dri‐ ver of future security threats through threats like natural disasters and forced migra‐ tion.

Steve Saideman, a politi‐ cal scientist who holds the Paterson Chair in Interna‐ tional Affairs at Carleton Uni‐ versity, said he believes the emphasis on climate change and the Arctic is meant to sell the defence strategy to a skeptical public and a Parlia‐ ment that may be reluctant to appropriat­e billions of dol‐ lars.

It also has the side benefit of undercutti­ng a Conserva‐ tive opposition which, in a previous iteration, made Arc‐ tic security an article of faith.

Such a focus does some‐ what placate allies who rec‐ ognize Canada's limited am‐ bitions and even more lim‐ ited capabiliti­es, and want the country to pick some‐ thing it can do and do it well.

To see how limited those ambitions are, all you have to do is look back at some of the commitment­s in previous defence policies.

The 'decade of darkness'

Even as western nations be‐ gan cashing their so-called "peace dividends" at the end of the Cold War, a previous Liberal government's 1994 defence white paper (one of the few without a snappy ti‐ tle) issued a blunt warning:

"The world is neither more peaceful nor more sta‐ ble than in the past. Canada's defence policy must reflect the world as it is rather than the world as we would like it to be."

The irony is that, in spite of the document's ominous tone, the government of Prime Minister Jean Chretien went on to cut more than $2 billion from the defence budget between 1994 and 1998 (taking it from $12 bil‐ lion annually to $10 billion). The era was infamously dubbed "the decade of dark‐ ness" by a former chief of the defence staff, retired general Rick Hillier.

Still, that defence policy committed to keeping two warships, one battle group of soldiers, an additional in‐ fantry battalion group, a squadron of fighter aircraft, a flight of tactical transport air‐ craft and a headquarte­rs contingent ready to deploy on multinatio­nal operations, either United Nations or NATO.

That would have been a commitment three decades ago of 4,000 military mem‐ bers.

Today, Canada is strug‐ gling to bulk up to a brigade of 2,200 soldiers as part of the NATO mission in Latvia. It periodical­ly deploys frigates and minesweepe­rs but has taken a step back from fight‐ er jets.

All of that speaks to the need to replace decades-old jets and warships, including submarines.

The new policy talks about exploring options to acquire replacemen­ts for the secondhand Victoria-class sub‐ marines. Despite already having a proposal from the navy for eight to 12 conven‐ tional boats, the matter re‐ quires further study, Eyre said.

At the media availabili­ty that announced the policy, both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Defence Minis‐ ter Bill Blair made the sub‐ marine program sound like a certainty. They also sug‐ gested the government would consider acquiring a nuclear-powered boat - a nod to Canada's exclusion from the AUKUS security arrangemen­t involving the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia.

WATCH: Federal govern‐ ment's spending commit‐ ments won't meet NATO target

A previous defence policy - Challenge and Commit‐ ment, released by the Con‐ servative government of Bri‐ an Mulroney - proposed the purchase of nuclear-powered submarines to patrol under the ice of Canada's Arctic.

In words that wouldn't be out of place in the latest de‐ fence policy, the 1987 policy review "confirmed that [Canada is] not able to meet [military] commitment­s fully and effectivel­y. After decades of neglect, there is indeed a significan­t commitment-ca‐ pability."

A little more than three years later, the Cold War was over and Mulroney's govern‐ ment was in deficit-cutting mode. The nuclear submar‐ ine proposal was the first thing to go.

Promise now, pay later

The fact that much of the funding in the new defence policy is backloaded to future years continues, in some re‐ spects, a tradition of previous Canadian government­s.

In 1994, the federal Liber‐ als promised to begin the process of replacing the navy's supply ships (a project still underway today). The Conservati­ves of 2008 said the Armed Forces would reach its assigned strength in 2028.

If there is a constant fea‐ ture of five decades of these defence policies, it's their ad hoc, political nature.

"In a Canadian context, this is like a potentiall­y gen‐ erationall­y significan­t com‐ mitment of funding towards the military, if it can actually get out the door and spent," said Dave Perry, president of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute, who noted the last Liberal defence policy had a number of pretty promising initiative­s.

"But those didn't seem to have a huge impact so far. So I think [there are] a lot of good ideas here [but] the real crux will be what can ac‐ tually be implemente­d and done with them."

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