:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I will try to be succinct in my presentation and answers out of respect for committee members.
I want to begin by thanking you as committee members for the work you do on behalf of Canadians with respect to the committee on national defence.
It's a pleasure for me to be here today to discuss with you the Department of National Defence supplementary estimates for the fiscal year 2007-08, which, as you would expect, has been a very busy year, an active year.
As the members of this committee are certainly aware, the supplementary estimates provide a more detailed picture of the government's spending and are reflective of the priorities of the Department of National Defence. This year's estimates are particularly important as the funding requests are part of the government's plan to strengthen our sovereignty and international influence by investing necessary resources in our military personnel and equipment. As you would expect, the mission in Afghanistan figures very prominently in both.
This government's priority with the Canadian Forces is rebuilding them into a first-class modern military.
[Translation]
A military that can serve Canadians, a military that can protect Canadian interests and values, because the world remains an unpredictable place, and we must be prepared to meet the unexpected.
We're facing a number of complex defence and security challenges today, including: failed and failing states, international terrorism, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and a host of regional conflicts and tensions.
To meet these challenges, Mr. Chairman, we need a multi-role, combat capable military. And that is exactly what the government is building with the Canada First Defence Strategy. In Budget 2006, the government committed $5.3 billion over five years. This level of funding demonstrates the government's resolve to meet the defence challenges facing our nation. These funds are building a first class military. We're accelerating recruitment, we're providing modern equipment, and we're positioning ourselves for operational success. Budget 2007 reaffirmed the government's commitment to rebuilding defence, and accelerated the distribution of funds allocated in the previous budget.
[English]
Mr. Chair, the throne speech identified the strengthening of the ability of National Defence to protect Canada's own interests and North America's, as well as to exert international influence through key missions. At home, asserting Canada's Arctic sovereignty is a priority mission. We need to enhance the ability of the Canadian Forces to operate in the far north and establish a greater presence there.
There are several reasons for doing this. Reduced Arctic ice levels could eventually make the Northwest Passage a commercial shipping route, and we must prepare for this possibility. There is also the increased economic activity in our northern land, air, and space. This includes mining, fishing, oil and gas exploration, cruise ship traffic, tourism, and international aviation, among other things, and we need to enforce our laws there and protect our citizens, our territory, and the environment, and of course, fulfill responsibilities to conduct search and rescue operations for those in distress.
I might just add a word of respect, if I could, for the work that's done by our search and rescue. They are truly unsung heroes within the Canadian military, and the training, the professionalism, and expertise that go into some of these search and rescue operations, particularly in those harsh climates in the Arctic, is nothing short of heroic and exemplary.
Extending the government's reach into our vast Arctic territories, as you would expect, can be challenging, and for this reason the Canadian Forces are regularly called upon to carry out their own missions and to support other departments to fulfill their mandates. We work very closely with Public Safety, Indian and Northern Affairs, DFAIT, and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, to name a few.
To assert our sovereignty in the Arctic we need a military that can conduct surveillance and control over the north. We need a military that can operate effectively in some of the harshest climates and terrains in the world.
The Speech from the Throne also identified Afghanistan as a top priority, and we join with like-minded nations that stand for freedom, democracy, and respect for human rights and the rule of law. The United Nations-mandated, NATO-backed NATO mission was launched because Afghanistan was being used by international terrorists as a base to plan and prepare the 9/11 attacks on North America. The world responded after the democratically elected government of Afghanistan asked the international community for help. Canada and 36 other troop-contributing nations then answered the call. We have roughly 2,500 Canadian Forces personnel in Afghanistan, most of those in the southern province of Kandahar.
The mission is part of an integrated whole-of-government effort in helping the Afghan government establish its authority over and across the country. That includes securing their own sovereign borders. As signatories of the Afghanistan Compact with 60 other countries, we know that the benchmarks of development that are set out are goals that we seek to attain by 2011. Guided by this compact, the international community is providing the Afghan government with assistance in governance, development, reconstruction, and security. Of those, security is the essential precondition for Afghanistan's democratically elected economic and social development to go forward, and without a secure environment there, these critical efforts will be in vain.
The Canadian Forces is doing its share in this international outreach by helping the Afghan army and police build their capacity to establish security in Kandahar. These operational liaison mentoring teams now include a similar type of working relationship with police, for which Canada is also playing an important role through the department of public security.
Mr. Chair, we're increasing our efforts to train Afghan national security forces so they can take responsibility for defending their country's sovereignty and democratic institutions. This is very much in keeping with the throne speech and the recognition of the importance of Afghans taking responsibility for their own national security.
Having been to Afghanistan recently, and having been there three times as a cabinet minister, I've witnessed first-hand some of the positive and tangible signs of incremental progress on the ground in Afghanistan. Each visit has confirmed for me that progress is being made, step by step, in reconstruction and governance, and of course, the all-important provision of security that is required and necessary to allow for this progress to continue. The visits have also confirmed for me that the members of the Canadian armed forces are focused, motivated, and very proud of the role they continue to play in this international effort to help Afghanistan.
In addition, we as Canadians are very proud of the members of the Canadian Forces who do their jobs every day on our behalf. We are witnessing public displays of gratitude and appreciation across the country for our men and women in uniform. I expect that all members of this committee, in attending Remembrance Day services, would have seen a sharp increase in attendance and public displays of affection for our military, both past and present.
I also remind you, as I'm sure you're very aware, that we now have veterans in this country who are 20 years old.
[Translation]
Mr. Chairman, whether our troops are operating in the Arctic, Afghanistan or another theatre, they face incredible challenges every single day. Even when they aren't in the headlines, members of the Canadian Forces are actively engaged in domestic and international operations on land, in the air and at sea.
Just last week, the Canadian Navy had just over 3,000 sailors at sea conducting exercises off our coast and participating in international missions.
The Air Force is no less busy. Without their efforts, we simply couldn't sustain Joint Task Force Afghanistan.
I'm sure we can all agree that our men and women in uniform conduct their missions with determination, resolve and incredible courage.
[English]
Mr. Chair, the supplementary estimates we're looking at today demonstrate the government's continued commitment to providing the Canadian Forces with the necessary tools to do their ever-important job. It builds on the many initiatives we've already put in place for our military over the course of the last 20 months.
I'll briefly describe the key items included in the supplementary estimates.
The government is providing National Defence with $875 million to strengthen the Canadian Forces' independent capacity to conduct its missions. Among other things, this includes money for expanding the number of personnel in the force and for sustaining infrastructure and equipment.
In addition, the estimates include some $340 million to support ongoing operations in Afghanistan. The money will enable Canada to play a strong leadership role in Afghanistan. As well, in February 2008, we once again will be taking command of NATO's Regional Command South. An initial $130 million is provided through supplementary estimates for the program to acquire up to 100 main battle tanks.
National Defence will also receive approximately $162 million to accelerate the delivery of the following approved major capital equipment projects: strategic and tactical airlift, main battle tanks, and precision artillery.
The estimates include $14 million for the Arctic patrol vessels program and associated infrastructure and the Halifax-class modernization frigate life extension project, which is allocated some $50 million. These ships, as you would know, Mr. Chair, are the workhorses of the Canadian navy, at home and abroad. We currently have ships deployed: the HMCS Toronto and the HMCS Charlottetown. Modernizing them will very much strengthen our sovereignty, our international influence, and our capacity to be where we're needed when we're needed.
Defending Canada and contributing to international stability clearly begins with recruitment. Without people, ships don't sail, armies don't march, and planes don't fly. As such, the estimates allocate $10 million to the Canadian Forces' recruitment campaign.
Mr. Chairman, I'm pleased to report that those recruitment efforts are going very well, and we are seeing young people, in particular, taking an increased interest in the Canadian Forces as a career.
I'll conclude, Mr. Chair, by saying that the Canadian Forces, certainly in my estimation and in that of many, are doing a tremendous job representing our country and our citizens. Our men and women in uniform are operating at home and abroad defending our sovereignty and protecting our interests and values. They stand ready to conduct operations in some of the most challenging environments, whether it's in Canada's High Arctic or in the dusty mountains of Afghanistan. They make great sacrifices. They spend a tremendous amount of time away from their families, their loved ones, and they put their lives on the line for Canadians every single day when they're in a theatre of operations. They are our best citizens, and they are the best soldiers in the world. The Government of Canada is absolutely committed to giving them the tools they need to fulfill their missions and to protect their lives. The funding allocations in the supplementary estimates stand as a testament to this fact.
I'll be happy now to take any questions the committee may have on these estimates.
Again, Mr. Chair, through you, I'd like to relay to members of this committee appreciation for the important work you do in the exercise of reviewing these supplementary estimates on behalf of the Department of National Defence.
Thank you, merci.
:
Thank you very much, Minister.
It's a pleasure to see you again, General Hillier and Mr. Fonberg. Congratulations on your new position; we'll be calling you often.
[English]
Today it's about estimates, so we're talking about spending and saving. There are two issues I'd like to talk about. I want to talk about the Auroras. As well, you've rightly said that we have to be respectful of our veterans, so I would like to talk about our veterans.
Of course we only have 10 minutes. I'll try to save some time for my friend Mr. Savage, because he has some very important questions to ask too, so I will have short questions and I'm expecting short answers.
First, in November the air force cancelled Aurora surveillance flights in the north for several months because of long-term maintenance issues in the aircraft fleet. We know that you decided to take a final decision just before Christmas to eventually cancel the Aurora program. We had already spent $955 million to modernize the Auroras. That was not only a great program; it would have been a good way to save taxpayers' money, and at the same time the Auroras would have been able to fly until 2025.
The decision that you take on December 18 will cost the Canadian base in Greenwood approximately 1,000 jobs. For the aerospace industry in Nova Scotia and the Maritimes, for Canadians, it would be a loss of more than 2,000 jobs. Now we're talking about 3,000 jobs.
I want to tell you, Mr. Minister, that the Liberals are totally against that. We believe the Aurora program is great not only for the sake of search and rescue, which you supposedly have respect for, but at the same time because of the Arctic, which I think is important.
I would like to hear from you. I asked the Auditor General to take a look at that. I asked her to make a formal inquiry into it. Would you confirm to us that you have already taken the decision that you will cancel the Aurora program? Why do you want to cancel it? It takes only $600 million to $800 million, instead of buying new planes that won't be ready until after 2016.
Perhaps I'll respond briefly to some of your questions and give General Hillier an opportunity to respond as well. He of course has been spending a great deal of time in Afghanistan over the past number of years and can give you his personal observations.
First, on the Senlis Council, who are they, who do they report to, and who is on the ground in Afghanistan making these observations? I note that in their reports there is no index, there are no footnotes, and there are no quotes from individuals they've talked to in Afghanistan. I also note that much of their advice or observations appear to be of a military nature. My understanding is that they are a humanitarian group, yet they're advocating a certain troop increase, and that we should be invading Pakistan.
I completely reject their assessment of the percentage of land now under control by the Taliban. I don't believe it to be remotely true.
You asked for my personal observations. I have seen an increase in the ability of our provincial reconstruction team to complete more projects. I am told by officials there and those who have since returned from the provincial reconstruction team that we have a greater capacity to be outside the wire interacting with Afghan people.
I can tell you as well that those projects make a tremendous difference when they involve Afghan citizens and contractors. When they take ownership of the roads, schools, medical clinics, wells, and those types of infrastructure projects, when they have completed them themselves, constructed those items, they defend them fiercely and have greater ownership. To that extent I believe we are doing more.
Of course, all of this only happens behind the envelope of security that is established on the ground. That's where our Canadian soldiers are at their best. They are expanding that envelope and allowing the backfill of CIDA, of the projects they conduct. In addition to that, we have people in the capital of Kabul, with the SAT from our embassy, working directly inside the Afghanistan government to build good governance.
I'll turn it over to General Hillier.
Mr. Chair, I appreciate the apology for handling General Atkinson with slight difficulty, but let me just say that we brought General Atkinson here at your request, on the direction of the minister, to provide a briefing to you. If he shows up and is told he's wrong, we're wasting his time, my time, and your time in having him come here. That is all I would say on that one.
Sir, I would say the best thing to do is ask the Afghans whether we're making progress there or not. We have asked them that question in a variety of ways in recent weeks and months, and their response has been pretty clear. But I don't do polls myself. I base it upon what I see my soldiers, sailors, airmen, and airwomen do, and what I see myself.
Let me just give you a summary of what I have seen so you can judge for yourselves. One is the initiative on the security operations. The Taliban are slightly on a back foot. I don't over-emphasize that, but they have been knocked off their tactical approach of trying to encircle Kandahar city and Kandahar province. They have not been able to control the districts and they have not had the initiative.
With those security operations we have opened a developmental space. We have done that to allow us to build routes like Route Summit, where I stood a couple of weeks ago; to build a causeway across the Arghandab River, where I stood a couple of weeks ago; and to actually rebuild a school in Masum Gar, where I was several weeks ago to see the three shifts of children going to that school. We have also conducted those operations to allow building the security forces.
Monsieur Bachand, a year ago when I was there, we had no Afghan National Army soldiers whatsoever with us in Kandahar. As of this moment we have three battalions. Yes, they are at various levels of training and readiness, but two of those battalions are with us in the provincial districts conducting operations to enhance their own security.
A year ago we had no police whatsoever. Now we have five police substations and we hope a sixth police substation in the Panjwai area. There are all kinds of problems with the police there with not enough equipment, not enough training, and not enough pay. But it is a delight to have those problems, because last year they were not even present.
While we're doing that to allow the development in Kandahar, in the rest of Afghanistan there is acceleration in economic development and governance development, and people are getting on with their normal lives because the Taliban have been put on the back foot in the south by us, the British, and our other allies working there.
So you can judge for yourself, from what I say, what my assessment of the mission in Afghanistan is.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Minister, Deputy, and CDS, for your attendance today.
I'm subbing for the regular NDP member from New Westminster--Coquitlam. So let me just take an opportunity to say, no matter how much we may disagree on different aspects of the mission and details of what we ask our forces to do, as someone from Hamilton, with a lot of soldiers serving us, how proud we all are of the work they're doing in carrying out the mandate of Parliament, and our duty is to flesh out what that mandate should be.
My question is around the item on page 207, and it's the “Mounted Soldier Survivability: Non-lethal Laser Dazzler”, to the tune of $10.5 million. My understanding is that this is a relatively new technology, and it's meant to afford soldiers an opportunity to temporarily blind anyone in front of them, for whatever reason they may feel necessary. We all want our soldiers to have the best possible equipment so they can be protected, but this is Canada. And as we're seeing with tasers, that's not where we begin and end our concerns. We've also got to consider the public and others.
So much like the tasers, this new technology looks like a very big buy. Could you give us a sense of how much each of these costs and what this will mean exactly?
But the focus of my question is around the issue of health. We are part of a treaty signed in 1998 that said we wouldn't use any laser weapons that could cause permanent blindness. Therefore, what we of course need to do is make sure we're doing adequate testing to ensure that is not happening inadvertently, much like a concern that now exists for tasers. So I'd be curious to know what steps have been taken, what medical steps have been taken, what kind of technological assurances there are, given that we signed an agreement that's part of the Geneva Convention that would guarantee we do such testing to ensure that we meet the requirements of the treaty we signed in 1998.
So my focus is on exactly how many, and how would they be deployed? My main focus is on how much testing has been done. What kind of assurance could you provide, including tabling documents if necessary, that shows that the proper testing has been done, that we've met our international obligations, and that we're not going to inadvertently be doing something these aren't intended to do, which is to cause permanent blinding.
And if I could put one other question in there, I would also like to know whether or not these would ever find their way into domestic crowd control situations.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Mr. Blaney.
You are right. It is clearly a priority for our government to ensure a heightened presence in the Arctic for personnel, infrastructure and the promotion of our sovereignty in this region, which is so important for our country. I think our country is proud to protect the Arctic. Our government must therefore make significant investments in that region. We must also truly demonstrate our sovereignty to the other nations that have interests in the Arctic.
[English]
So to that extent, as you would know, the himself has made several trips to the Arctic, and there have been significant announcements as recently as this summer.
We have committed to building a deepwater port in Nanisivik. This will be a docking and refuelling facility in the Arctic, which will allow for a greater presence for our naval vessels. Clearly, the navy's operational range will be enhanced by the ability to refuel at this deepwater port, and that facility will also be in close proximity to the Northwest Passage, which is again an area of significant value and significant strategic importance to Canada.
We're also going to establish an Arctic training centre in Resolute Bay. This will be a year-round multi-purpose facility that will support training within the Arctic. It's intended to have year-round operations and personnel of approximately a hundred. There are real challenges, as you would expect, because of the harsh weather and the daylight. As we approach Christmas in the Arctic, it's literally dark 22 or 23 hours a day. So some of our training equipment and vehicles that we find there are special in their use. What we want to do is give them the increased training and capacity on the equipment to have a quicker response time, and also the necessary support throughout the region. It's a vast territory, in which we have to try to provide that type of response.
I mentioned earlier our search and rescue. Their operations in the north of course will continue to be of vital importance.
The Canadian Rangers, who have been traditionally a tremendous presence for us and a tremendous source of pride for our Arctic citizens, will see an increase in number from 4,100 to 5,000 as a result of an increase in budget. They will be outfitted with new, modern equipment--GPS equipment--because, as you would expect, they are often on patrols far afield. We will be giving them the necessary protective equipment and uniforms to provide that type of reach.
Finally, I would point to the investment in Arctic patrol ships, which is again a very important item.
[Translation]
that you have a lot of interest in shipbuilding capacity in Lévis.
[English]
These Arctic patrol ships, which we announced last summer, are a Polar class 5 type of offshore patrol vessel. They'll be custom-built and designed here in Canada, which I think will be a great shot in the arm for our shipbuilding industry. They'll be a very heavy, versatile, armed navy vessel, one that will be able to perform the necessary movement in sustained operations in ice. There are very treacherous ice conditions, as you would expect, most times of the year. In fact, one of the misnomers about the increase in open waters in the Northwest Passage is in fact that this isn't necessarily going to make it easier to navigate in the Northwest Passage. In fact, there is much more free floating ice, which makes it in some instances even more treacherous than when there was large and predictable and visible ice within the water of the Northwest Passage.
Those are a few items that I would point to. The patrol and the reach and the increased personnel and equipment for the Arctic are very much in keeping with the and the government's commitment to expanding our sovereignty and our control over the Arctic.