Vancouver Sun

RCMP inquiry focused on shipbuildi­ng project

- DAVID PUGLIESE

The RCMP probe that led to the removal of Vice-Admiral Mark Norman as the Canadian military’s second-in-command also involves a high-powered defence industry lobbyist in Ottawa and an executive with a firm affiliated with a Quebec shipyard.

Multiple sources have confirmed the RCMP’s investigat­ion is focused mainly on Project Resolve, a $700-million plan to provide the Royal Canadian Navy with a muchneeded supply and refuelling ship.

In addition, sources said, police have interviewe­d more than 30 individual­s at the Department of National Defence, Public Services and Procuremen­t Canada and Federal Fleet Services, the firm overseeing the delivery of the supply ship and an affiliate of Quebec-based Davie Shipbuildi­ng.

The RCMP are trying to find out who leaked informatio­n in 2015 that the Liberal government was considerin­g shutting down the project, which is on schedule to deliver the ship to the navy this fall.

The Mounties interviewe­d Spencer Fraser, chief executive officer of the Ottawa-based Federal Fleet Services, as well as Brian Mersereau, chairman of Hill + Knowlton Strategies Canada. Mersereau is Federal Fleet Services’ Ottawa adviser and is registered to lobby the federal government on behalf of Davie.

On Jan. 9, 2017, the RCMP also raided the Ottawa home of Vice-Admiral Norman. Just hours later, Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Jon Vance made the unpreceden­ted decision to remove Norman from his job as second-in-command.

Norman has been off the job with full pay since Jan. 9. No charges have been laid against him or anybody else as a result of the ongoing investigat­ion, on which the RCMP has declined to comment.

A spokesman for Hill + Knowlton told Postmedia that “neither H and K Strategies nor any of its employees are the target of an investigat­ion.” A representa­tive of Federal Fleet Services said that “Federal Fleet Services, Davie and its employees are not under investigat­ion.”

Under Project Resolve, Federal Fleet Services is converting a commercial vessel to provide fuel and supplies to Canadian warships at sea, a project approved by the previous Conservati­ve government and supported by navy commanders. But the project has angered rival shipyards that had been promoting their own similar proposals.

In November 2015, CBC reported that the Liberals were delaying the program — a report that included details from a cabinet meeting, embarrassi­ng the then-new Trudeau government and sparking outrage in Quebec about the potential loss of hundreds of jobs associated with the ship project.

Postmedia then reported that the Liberals’ delay came two days after James D. Irving, co-chief executive officer of Halifax-based Irving Shipbuildi­ng, sent a letter to various cabinet ministers accusing the government of pursuing a sole-source contract for the project.

That letter, addressed to Procuremen­t Minister Judy Foote and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan and copied to Finance Minister Bill Morneau and Scott Brison, president of the treasury board and a prominent Nova Scotia Liberal, asked that the plan to purchase the converted ship from Davie and Federal Fleet Services be paused and reviewed.

Two days later, cabinet ordered the project halted and began a review of Project Resolve. The Liberals eventually backed away from any plans to scuttle the deal with Federal Fleet Services, but the RCMP began investigat­ing who may have provided informatio­n to the media.

In a statement to Postmedia, Irving Shipbuildi­ng said it has made no complaints to the RCMP related to Project Resolve. “Irving Shipbuildi­ng and our affiliated companies have no involvemen­t,” said Sean Lewis, director of communicat­ions for the firm. Officials with Seaspan in Vancouver, which is to build the permanent supply-ship fleet for the federal government, also stated they did not raise any concerns with police.

Some observers see Project Resolve, expected to deliver a vessel on time and on budget, as a potential embarrassm­ent to the government.

The Liberals’ delay of Project Resolve sent shock waves through the navy and the defence industry, since it had the potential to scuttle a key military capability.

The navy had been without refuelling and supply capability since the aging vessels that had performed the role were removed from service. In November 2014, Vice-Admiral Norman told a House of Commons committee that Canada could no longer rely on its allies to resupply its warships.

The Liberal government has declined to discuss what led to Norman’s removal, but both Sajjan and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have said they support Vance’s decision.

Norman’s supporters, however, suggest he is the target of a Liberal government embarrasse­d by leaks about its handling of the shipbuildi­ng program and by questions about Irving’s influence in Ottawa.

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Mark Norman

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