Edmonton Journal

Surveillan­ce aircraft over Ottawa in `Freedom Convoy' protest operated by Canadian special forces: DND

Mission `not connected to the protests'

- DAVID PUGLIESE

Canadian special forces were operating the mystery aircraft that flew over Ottawa during the so-called “Freedom Convoy” protests in late January and February, Postmedia News has confirmed.

The U.s.-registered King Air aircraft was airborne over Ottawa on Jan. 28, Jan. 29, Feb. 3, Feb. 10 and Feb. 11, according to data collected by Steffan Watkins, an Ottawa researcher who tracks the movements of vessels and planes.

For instance, on Feb. 10 the aircraft was flying circular patterns over Ottawa before disappeari­ng from publicly available aircraft tracking systems, said Watkins.

The flights coincided with the large-scale protests held in downtown Ottawa as part of the “Freedom Convoy.”

Protesters in Ottawa demanded the government remove rules designed to prevent the spread of COVID-19. But other demonstrat­ors also called for the overthrow of the Canadian government.

National Defence spokespers­on Dan Le Bouthillie­r acknowledg­ed the aircraft was in use by Canadian special forces as part of a training mission on Feb. 10. But he stated the flight had nothing to do with the protests.

Informatio­n wasn't available from National Defence on who operated the plane on the other dates but military sources said those flights also involved Canadian special forces.

Canadian special forces are preparing to receive their own King Air aircraft outfitted with surveillan­ce equipment and have been conducting training leading up to the delivery of those planes.

Those aircraft, the first of which is to be delivered this summer, will give the Canadian military the ability to collect data for missions overseas and at home. The modified small passenger planes are outfitted with surveillan­ce equipment allowing for the intercepti­on of cellphone calls, radio transmissi­ons and other communicat­ions.

Electro-optical sensors would also allow crews on board the aircraft to track the movement of individual­s and vehicles on the ground, the Canadian military has noted. Canadian special forces had access to similar aircraft in Afghanista­n to track and target insurgents.

Le Bouthillie­r said the special forces training was already planned before the Ottawa protests and to have cancelled the flight would have been wasting money.

Watkins claimed the aircraft could have flown anywhere in the Ottawa region if the situation called for regular training. But instead, the plane was involved in specific flight patterns, he noted.

“I believe their precise circular tracks over Ottawa suggest a form of electronic surveillan­ce, not simply digital electro-optical imagery or video,” Watkins added in a separate report on the flights.

The Globe and Mail newspaper, citing Watkins' data, first reported the Feb. 10 flight in an article last month. At the time, National Defence acknowledg­ed the plane was conducting military training but did not reveal it was being operated by Canadian special forces.

The new surveillan­ce aircraft will be based at CFB Trenton, Ont.

Canada paid the U.S. government $188 million for the aircraft. The overall value of the project is estimated to cost taxpayers $247 million. The U.S. military operates similar surveillan­ce aircraft.

A maintenanc­e contract for the new planes was awarded to a team consisting of General Dynamics Mission Systems-canada, from Ottawa, and Voyageur Aviation Corporatio­n, from North Bay, Ont.

Canadian special forces has conducted other training to prepare for the arrival of new surveillan­ce aircraft. In October, members of the Canadian Special Operations Forces Command went to the U.S. to work with that country's special forces in developing tactics and procedures for use with the planes.

In 2019, U.S. special forces personnel were in Ottawa and Petawawa doing similar training. In mid-november of that year, members of 427 Special Operations Aviation Squadron and the Canadian Special Operations Regiment, both based in Petawawa, conducted an exercise supported by one of the American aircraft.

The U.S. plane operated from the Ottawa airport, and flights occurred between Petawawa and Mansfield-et-pontefract, Que., according to Canadian special forces.

The surveillan­ce gear on board the new Canadian military aircraft is still subject to tight U.S. restrictio­ns. Canadian military staff and aerospace employees won't be allowed to work on parts of the equipment as they contain sensitive American-made systems that can only be handled by U.S. citizens.

Instead, the gear will have to be sent to the U.S. for maintenanc­e or U.S. staff will have to travel to Canada to work on the planes, Canadian officials say.

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