The Navy (again IMHO) needs to be able to operate globally and ships built for a single purpose and a single geographic area dramatically reduce flexibility.
Agreed that the Navy needs to operate globally - so why are their ships built so that they can't operate in our own waters as well as ice free waters?
The JSS is/was at least a nod to the Arctic in that it is/was ice-strengthened. That would make it that much more capable of asserting a military presence than anything else in the fleet.
Only trouble is now you have a support vessel that can travel farther than any vessels it is likely to support.
The Svalbard that Blackshirt and I mentioned is not a Class 8 polar breaker such as Mulroney proposed for the Coast Guard. It couldn't punch through Barrow Strait in the dead of winter but so what?
It is a stand-alone platform that can move farther North than anything the Navy currently has and with a DNV ice class of *1A1 it would be able to move farther and stay on station longer that either the Danish Thetis class frigates that are limited to 80 cm ice or the ice-strengthened trawlers currently fishing up Baffin Bay. The Kiwis MRV is also ice-strengthened and would be an interesting alternative. Either vessel could move farther up Baffin Bay than the CPFs which, as I understand it, can only safely make it as far north as Iqaluit.
At 80 MUSD apiece, (built in Norwegian yards admittedly) it seems like a much cheaper bet than MGSs that the Armoured Corps doesn't want or Tanks that the Government won't deploy.
In addition such vessels could be used outside of ice-infested waters on international deployments. If the MCDVs can then these surely could. Both the Kiwis and the Norwegians intend to use them that way.
Actually I don't particularly mind who the devil operates vessels for Canada. I just want somebody willing to operate a vessel that can keep up with foreign fishermen in our backyard and not back off when a rifle appears on deck and that can see off the vessels of other "visiting" foreign nations that may be inclined to support them. If the Navy doesn't want the job then fine. Unfortunately it seems that the Coasties don't want the job either. Maybe they should be given too the Mounties.
As to the Arctic Training Base, well, I agree with that too. In fact I would go so far as to suggest that a permanent facility at Resolute with helicopters would be an interesting adjunct/alternative to the ice-strengthened vessels and could supply a reaction capability that would ease the design requirements on the vessels - assuming the weather co-operated.
Frankly this is a bigger problem - and it is not just a military problem nor is it just a Canadian problem. While in general principle I agree with civil authority deciding "what" and the professionals in the military deciding "how" I have seen too often, not in Canadian military circles but in other environments, "professionals" preparing cases to prove that what is asked of them is impossible.
It is all too easy to design a system that can do all, be everything, create zero-pollution and employ nobody/everybody (according to the whim of the day) and be risk-free. The issue then becomes that nobody can afford it. The project gets scratched and nothing changes.
In the meantime incremental improvements and changes with manageable risks are ignored. The Best truly is the enemy of Better.
Companies go broke because of this. The environment doesn't improve because of this. And, apparently, militaries stand pat because of this.
Cheers.