Ottawa Citizen

Rob Nicholson inherits a mess

- J.L. GRANATSTEI­N J.L. Granatstei­n is a senior fellow of the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute.

J.L. Granatstei­n on the problems at National Defence,

Prime Minister Harper has shuffled his cabinet, desperatel­y putting the best possible face on the ministry as it prepares for the 2015 election. It might be an uphill struggle, so savagely has the government been battered in recent months. New faces, new possibilit­ies, new Tory hopes. But what about Defence, where Rob Nicholson, one with no previous military experience or evident interest, is now the minister?

When Harper came to power at the beginning of 2006, the Canadian Forces was a high priority. The war in Afghanista­n, new equipment, more troops, and much more money — the Tories promised action, and they largely delivered. But only for a few years. As casualties mounted in Kandahar, as the costs of equipment soared, and as the 2008 economic crash reverberat­ed, the military slipped off the priority list. Yes, there is still much more funding for the troops than in 2005, but the balloon of optimism has deflated completely.

Consider the Canada First Defence Strategy, announced with much fanfare in 2008. Aimed at protecting sovereignt­y in the Arctic — where there are no current or foreseeabl­e threats to Canadian interests — the CFDS was really a shopping list for equipment, some of which no one needed.

For example, the Navy doesn’t really want Arctic patrol ships than cannot sail through even minor ice. The promised usable harbour in the Arctic archipelag­o would be helpful, however, along with a Coast Guard icebreaker to keep it open to traffic, but no progress has been made in creating the harbour or building the ship. And the purchase of new search-and-rescue aircraft, of great use in the north as elsewhere in Canada, remains bogged down in the great procuremen­t swamp that has resulted from the massive intrusion of Public Works into the Department of National Defence’s territory.

Not that DND managed procuremen­t very well. The F-35 mess has been exhaustive­ly covered by the media. Only marginally less so has been the developing ship procuremen­t fiasco which many confidentl­y expect to be even more costly than that of the fighter debacle.

In a country without naval shipyards, Ottawa chose to try to create an industry, massively increasing costs and greatly increasing the risks that nothing of use will emerge for years, even decades.

Britain’s Royal Navy is buying supply ships from South Korea at a cost of about one-seventh of the Canadian estimates for roughly similar vessels. The Royal Canadian Navy’s requiremen­t to replace its aging frigates and destroyer escorts is caught up in mind-boggling process and bureaucrat­ic procedure. It will be years before steel is cut, and optimists believe it will be 2025 before a ship hits the water. Pessimists predict that 2030 is a better guesstimat­e.

And it’s not only the big ticket items like fighters and ships. Consider trucks — the army uses them, Canadian companies build them, and it ought to be a relatively simple matter to get purchases done. Not in Canada, unfortunat­ely, where political

There is no vision in the government on defence questions … no progress will be made until a direction is set with a white paper.

considerat­ions overrule costs every time. Could it really be that the Finance Department enjoys saving money by putting off defence purchases to never-never land?

The services developed their fighting edge in Afghanista­n, in the Arabian Sea, and over Libya, but that combat capability is eroding quickly because of obsolescen­t equipment, budget cutbacks, and the difficulty of retaining experience­d middle rank officers and warrants.

The booming Alberta oilpatch sucks up skilled workers (and that hurts the B.C. and Nova Scotia shipyards as well as the CF), and the promised boost in military numbers keeps being put off. The army reserve is once again unhappy with the regulars, and the troops’ overall dissatisfa­ction is not assuaged by new shoulder flashes featuring the “Royal” designatio­ns and new/old rank badges.

Unfortunat­ely, this government that started well on defence has completely lost its way. The prime minister looks out of touch, the outgoing defence minister was distracted by minor scandals and personal issues, and the new minister knows nothing of the military. Put bluntly, there is no vision in the government on defence questions — there is none in sight on the Opposition front benches, either — and the reality is that no progress will be made until a direction is set with a white paper.

Unfortunat­ely this government chooses not to listen to advice from inside or outside the government. It apparently believes that it is better to allow the 20-somethings in the Prime Minister’s Office to make policy, even a non-policy of drift. Rob Nicholson will need very good luck to rescue the sinking ship(s) at DND.

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