CBC Edition

Top soldier says military looking for 'clarity' on Ottawa's budget plans

- Murray Brewster

Just over a month into the new fiscal year and two weeks after the federal budget, the Department of National Defence is strug‐ gling to reconcile the Liber‐ al government's approach to military funding - giving with one hand while taking with the other.

Gen. Wayne Eyre, the country's top military com‐ mander, told the rank-andfile in a remote town hall event last week that he does‐ n't have answers to crucial questions about how internal budget cuts and funding real‐ location square with promises of additional mon‐ ey in the recently released defence policy.

"We're being asked to suck and blow at the same time," Eyre, the chief of the defence staff, told about 1,300 members of the Armed Forces who tuned in for the presentati­on. A video copy of his presentati­on was ob‐ tained by CBC News.

"We got some budget cuts last year," he added, refer‐ ring to the wave of spending reductions announced by Treasury Board President Anita Anand last fall. "We're getting new funding this year. Reconcilin­g the two of those is a bit of a challenge. The finance staff is working on that right now."

WATCH: Gen. Eyre says he doesn't have 'clarity' on budget's impacts on mili‐ tary

Eyre, who is expected to retire this year, told the audi‐ ence that he's hoping to get a better idea of how the inter‐ nal cuts announced in late 2023 will affect operations and maintenanc­e.

"We have more funding in the future, as you know," Eyre said in a response to a question from the audience. "This year on the operations and maintenanc­e side, we are facing some challenges. And you talk about confusion - I don't have complete clarity yet either, as the finance staff continue to analyze the im‐ pacts of this year's federal budget."

Eyre also hinted the feder‐ al government is weighing calls to eliminate some mili‐ tary capabiliti­es that the dif‐ ferent services - army, navy, air force - have said they can do without. He said he's asked the commanders of the various branches to come up with "tangible ex‐ amples of those capabiliti­es that we should put on the chopping block" and has re‐ ceived a few recommenda‐ tions.

'Tangible' cuts coming, says Eyre

"You will probably see some I'm not going to get ahead of some ministeria­l decisions here - but we are going to have to cut a few tangible ones based on advice that's come up from the services," he said.

The internal cuts and budget juggling come as the military faces a readiness crisis. Critics warn that it would have a hard time re‐ sponding to calls for help from NATO in the event that internatio­nal tensions esca‐ late.

The new defence policy promises to invest an addi‐ tional $8.1 billion in the mili‐ tary in the near-term and over $73 billion over the next two decades - but much of that funding is earmarked for future years. The Opposition Conservati­ves call the policy "aspiration­al."

The federal budget antici‐ pates a slight increase in overall defence spending this year and projects a 30 per cent increase in the next fis‐ cal year - when the govern‐ ment is expected to start paying for big-ticket items of replacemen­t equipment, in‐ cluding the new F-35 fighters.

Appearing before the House of Commons defence committee last fall, Defence Minister Bill Blair attempted to assure MPs that the plan‐ ned internal cuts will be sur‐ gical.

'The instructio­ns we've re‐ ceived from Treasury Board, and that I passed on to both the [chief of the defence staff] and the deputy minis‐ ter, are that we are looking at ways in which we can elimi‐ nate unnecessar­y costs, but none of those reductions are to impact the capability of the Canadian Armed Forces or the supports that we pro‐ vide to the men and women of the Canadian Armed Forces," Blair testified on Nov. 23, 2023.

On Wednesday, while pro‐ moting the federal budget and the defence policy be‐ fore a think-tank audience in Ottawa, Blair said pressing the federal cabinet for higher defence spending overall has been an uphill battle.

"I had to sort of keep on pushing my issue forward, about the importance and the need to invest in de‐ fence," Blair told the audi‐ ence at Canadian Global Af‐ fairs Institute symposium.

He added that he's strug‐ gled to make the case for Canada spending 2 per cent of its gross domestic product on defence - a spending benchmark agreed to by all NATO members.

"Trying to go to cabinet, or even to Canadians, and tell them that we had to do this because we had to meet this magical threshold at two per cent for the NATO commit‐ ment - don't get me wrong, it's important," he said. "But it was really hard to convince people that that was a worthy goal, that it was some noble standard that we had to meet, because nobody knows what that means."

The defence policy projects the current plan would move the needle on the country's investment in defence from 1.33 per cent of GDP to 1.76 per cent. Blair is on the record saying that in order to meet NATO's two per cent target, Ottawa would need to invest an addi‐ tional $6 billion to $7 billion annually on top of what's al‐ ready been promised.

"So it's really for me, I couldn't go and make a de‐ fence policy argument to reach that spreadshee­t target of two per cent," Blair said Wednesday.

Eyre said the debate over NATO metrics doesn't con‐ cern him.

"I don't care about per‐ centage of GDP in terms of spending," Eyre told the town hall. "For me, that's an input metric. What I care about is, what does the armed forces and the [defence] depart‐ ment produce as an output metric, which is capabiliti­es and readiness?"

Eyre also critiqued the new defence plan in blunt terms.

"This policy was not as fast as we wanted it to be, and it did not give us every‐ thing that we needed, but I will tell you, it's more than I expected - much more than I expected - going into it," Eyre said.

"Would we have wished for a more rapid implemen‐ tation? Well, yes. But we've got our marching orders and it's time to move out and within our own realm, within our own arcs of influence, implement as quickly as pos‐ sible."

The federal budget does earmark significan­t funds, starting this year, for main‐ taining older fleets, including the navy's three-decade-old frigates.

It sets aside $1.9 billion to keep the frigate fleet afloat over the next five years and to extend the lease on the navy's privately contracted supply ship.

But the defence depart‐ ment is still expected to find $810 million in savings in the current budget year, as part of the Liberal government's overall austerity drive. The federal budget estimates say that, going forward, DND is expected to find $851 million in savings in the 2025-26 budget year and $907 million thereafter.

That's money the depart‐ ment had been expecting but will now have to do without.

The last time the defence department went through a major budget-cutting exer‐ cise was more than a decade ago, under the former Con‐ servative government.

One of the areas hit hard‐ est back then was the inter‐ nal budget category known as national procuremen­t funding - the cash that covers equipment maintenanc­e, re‐ pair and overhaul, and in-ser‐ vice support.

The cuts between 2012 and 2014 led the army to park a large number of its ve‐ hicles, the air force to reduce flying hours by a quarter and the navy to tie up some of its warships.

Anecdotall­y, some in the army trace the current short‐ age of spare parts - which to‐ day is severely limiting the use of Leopard 2 tanks - back to the budget restraint of a decade ago.

Responding to the current round of budget cuts, the de‐ fence department acknowl‐ edged in a recent media statement that the national procuremen­t pot of money will be affected this year, but insisted there will be money for military priorities.

"Due to the importance of National Procuremen­t fund‐ ing for the sustainmen­t of CAF fleets and their materiel readiness, the Department is not intending to reallocate any significan­t amount of Na‐ tional Procuremen­t funding," said the statement.

Operations and mainte‐ nance may go under the knife

The department was asked to explain what it means by "significan­t." It did not. "Deci‐ sions on savings are on‐ going," DND said in a state‐ ment issued to CBC News. "Government of Canada pri‐ orities for defence will con‐ tinue to guide our work across the organizati­on."

When the Conservati­ves were cutting the defence budget, the separate pot of money for operations and maintenanc­e (O&M) took a heavy hit.

Since November, anecdo‐ tal reports out of the defence department have suggested that operations and mainte‐ nance funding for reserve units was being slashed, in some cases by as much as 30 per cent.

The department told CBC News that individual units will have to decide how cuts to travel and profession­al services will affect their oper‐ ations budgets.

"It is too soon to say how this could affect reserve unit‐ s' O&M funding," the state‐ ment said.

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