- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 410
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/510467.html
Expert floats idea of Canadian aircraft carrier
Rear Admiral says military interested in vessel to carry choppers
By CHRIS LAMBIE Staff Reporter
The Canadian military needs an aircraft carrier if it wants to send expeditionary forces to hot spots around the world, an internationally renowned naval expert said Thursday in Halifax.
Norman Friedman delivered the advice to about 150 people, most of them in uniform, attending a maritime security conference organized by Dalhousie University’s Centre for Foreign Policy Studies.
"Because your navy got very good at operating very large helicopters, you get somewhat more out of it than other navies do — that’s a nice thing," Mr. Friedman, an American physicist specializing in strategic and technological naval problems, said in an interview.
"But if you’re going to operate expeditionary (forces), independently, I’m talking about a carrier."
Rather than a small helicopter carrier, Mr. Friedman indicated the best bet would be a large ship that could launch fighter-bombers.
"In the real world, there are a lot of places where you want to operate where no one likes you," he said. "That’s the nature of warfare."
He questioned how Canadian aircraft would get to such places if there were no friendly country nearby to use as a base.
"If I were a soldier in the Canadian army . . . I would worry a lot about who would be there to support me when I’m on the ground being fired at."
Mr. Friedman pointed out that Canada used to operate aircraft carriers. The last one was decommissioned nearly 36 years ago.
"Given the size of the country, you can manage it," he said, stressing that he wasn’t telling Canada how to run its military. "Americans always get bombed for saying rotten things in Canada, deservedly. . . . If you want to be more sovereign, you’ve got to think these things through yourselves."
But if Canada wants to launch its own expeditionary forces, it needs a carrier armed with planes that can protect troops, Mr. Friedman said.
"Otherwise you’re going to have a lot of dead Canadians who don’t deserve to be dead . . . because they won’t have any air support."
The Canadian military is interested in acquiring a small carrier, said Rear Admiral Dan McNeil, the commander of Joint Task Force Atlantic. It would be equipped with large helicopters that could ferry troops ashore.
"But (we don’t want) a conventional aircraft carrier that catapults fighter jets into the air because, quite frankly, I don’t see a need for that in the Canadian context," Rear Admiral McNeil said.
To learn more about the concept, the Canadian navy plans to send several frigates on a set of exercises this fall with the USS Gunston Hall, an amphibious assault ship designed to transport soldiers around the world and then put them ashore using landing craft and large helicopters.
Some of Canada’s Sea King helicopters, most of which are more than 40 years old, will be used to carry troops during the exercise.
A small carrier "certainly makes sense" for the Canadian navy, Rear Admiral McNeil said.
"The former government actually did buy into it, and we have to keep working on the principles to see if, in fact, this new government wants to do that," he said.
"We only make recommendations; the government decides."
Mr. Friedman is the latest in a long line of military experts who have suggested this country needs some kind of carrier.
Three years ago, retired major-general Lewis MacKenzie floated the idea during a visit to Halifax that our navy needs two small aircraft carriers like HMS Ark Royal, a 205-metre British vessel used during the Iraq war to carry commandos in an amphibious assault. He pegged the cost of a small carrier at about $1.8 billion.
Last year, Gen. Rick Hillier, the chief of defence staff, said the military wants "a big, honking ship" that can carry a Canadian battalion of soldiers and large helicopters.
Canada decommissioned its last aircraft carrier, HMCS Bonaventure, on July 1, 1970. Coincidentally, the navy held a ceremony in Halifax this week for a former Bonaventure captain. Robert Timbrell, a retired rear admiral who died in April at his Chester Basin home, was captain of the Bonaventure from 1963 to 1965.
( clambie@herald.ca)