TAA: ' The Canadian military has added Ottawa to a list of cities that could be home to one of the new territorial battalions the Tories said they would create with new defence spending outlined in yesterday's budget.
The Harper government is considering 12 cities as possible bases for these new battalions. They will be responsible for responding to domestic terrorist threats and natural disasters, like floods...
While the project is still in its planning stages, the official said the battalions will draw primarily from reservists through a major reorganization of the reserves...'
http://ottsun.canoe.ca/News/National/2006/05/03/1561626-sun.html
And an optimistic story, "Defence spending a boon for Maritimes":
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/501082.html?source=somnia
Excerpts:
'"It’s not heaps of cash," one naval officer said of the new defence budget...
As part of a long shopping list, the military is looking at a mix of heavy, strategic lift aircraft, such as the giant C-17, along with lighter, tactical transports along the lines of the new C-130-J to replace Canada’s aging Hercules transport planes.
The Hercules is the military’s workhorse and its primary means of heavy air transport. But most of them were built in the 1960s.
"The numbers I’ve heard kicked around were four C-17s and 16 C-130-Js," the officer said. "You need the long-haul aircraft like the C-17 that can go fast with a really big load."
He suspects this budget will nix talk of scaling down the navy’s project to spend $2.1 billion on a joint support ship — a combination troop and supply vessel.
"This will probably mean the JSS will get the approval and the funding," said the officer.
The navy is also considering acquiring an amphibious assault ship that can carry big helicopters and put troops ashore in the world’s hot spots. This budget does provide enough money to fund that in years to come, he said.
"There’s a couple of interesting commercial options to lease [??] in the short-term while a proper ship is being built," said the naval officer.'
Mark
Ottawa