I'll believe it when I see it.
That is a little rich, coming from a USN Admiral. The USN actively blocked us in the 1980s from getting US reactor technology when we wanted nuclear submarines the ….Former US Navy Admiral joins the chorus of critiques from down south. I'm assuming that nobody in the PMO is listening nor caring if they are listening.
Canadian Royal Navy Spending Is Disappointing
This article explorse an in-depth perspective on Canada's Royal Navy capabilities and its commitment to NATO. Discover why increasing defense spending is critical for not just meeting NATO guidelines, but for safeguarding Canadian waters, especially with looming threats from Russia and China...gcaptain.com
By James Stavridis (Bloomberg) Over a long career in the Navy, I sailed into many of Canada’s beautiful ports and commanded a Canadian frigate, HMCS Halifax, as part of a joint operation. Over the years, I saw the quality of Canadian airmen in our dual-nation air defense command, NORAD. Later, during my time as Supreme Allied Commander at NATO, I had thousands of Canadians under my command in combat in Afghanistan, Libya and other hotspots. Whenever I saw that distinctive maple leaf shoulder patch, I knew I was in the presence of a brave professional.
But I continue to be deeply disappointed by Canada’s unwillingness to increase its defense spending to meet a standard it has committed to via its membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization: 2% of gross domestic product. Today, Canada punches well below its weight with less than $40 billion spent on defense, roughly 1.3% of GDP. For a very wealthy Western democracy, this smacks of taking advantage of allies like the US, which spends well over 3% of GDP — or more than $850 billion.
And Canada has defense needs that go well beyond the allied effort to stop Vladimir Putin in Ukraine. Looking toward the Arctic, which the Canadians aptly call the “high north,” Canada faces growing Russian intransigence across the increasingly ice-free Arctic Ocean. To the west, a rising Chinese Navy — now the largest in the world — operates with increasing impunity in the waters of the north Pacific.
Related book: 2034: A Novel of the Next World War by Elliot Ackerman and Admiral James Stavridis
One program where more investment would be powerful and meaningful is nuclear submarines. Although cutting-edge boats cost more than $4 billion each, only nuclear submarines have the range and firepower to meet 21st century needs. And Canada has vast territorial waters to control, extending from its maritime provinces on the Atlantic coast, to the Arctic Ocean, to the Aleutian islands in the Pacific. Yet today, Canada has only a small force of four old, diesel submarines.
In contrast, nuclear subs are lethal, oceangoing apex predators. And entering the nuclear submarine club would offer Canada significant scientific and strategic advantages. By procuring nuclear subs, Canada will bind themselves more tightly to other NATO nations using them: the United States, the United Kingdom and France. More engagement, intelligence and technology would naturally flow toward Ottawa.
This is a particularly propitious time to make the leap, because of an awkward acronym: AUKUS. This is the new partnership between the US, UK, and Australia to help the Australians build a fleet of nuclear submarines. Painstakingly negotiated over the past several years, the agreement will begin with US nuclear Los Angeles-class submarines being stationed in Australia, then transition to US selling the boats to Canberra, then move to the Australian construction and deployment of its own fleet. It’s a canny move on the part of Australia, who — like Canada — has several oceans to defend.
The plan will take most of a decade, but has already begun to unfold with the arrival of Australian naval officers at US schools to learn to operate the submarines, a process that will take each student a year or so. It’s a powerful statement of Australia’s commitment to its own defense and to our long-standing alliance.
If Canada were to join the nuclear AUKUS program, it could easily become CANAUKUS. Admittedly, the acronym gets stranger, but the strategic advantages for our good friends to the north rise exponentially. And adding both Australian and Canadian nuclear boats to the allied fleets — especially in the Pacific — would make the alliance much stronger.
The reality is that both Russia and China have global ambitions in the Pacific, Atlantic and the Arctic — and very capable nuclear submarines. Our cousins up north could seize the moment and join us in a powerful, albeit expensive, defense program to face them together. Spending the money would move them where they should be in terms of overall defense spending. In the end, of course, these are decisions for Canadians — but American policymakers should encourage them to take the leap to nuclear submarines at sea.
James Stavridis is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A retired U.S. Navy admiral, former supreme allied commander of NATO, and dean emeritus of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, he is vice chairman of global affairs at the Carlyle Group. He is the author most recently of “To Risk It All: Nine Conflicts and the Crucible of Decision.” @stavridisj © 2023 Bloomberg L.P.
Related book: 2034: A Novel of the Next World War by Elliot Ackerman and Admiral James Stavridis
Certainly is. But times they are a changin!That is a little rich, coming from a USN Admiral. The USN actively blocked us in the 1980s from getting US reactor technology when we wanted nuclear submarines the ….
That is a little rich, coming from a USN Admiral. The USN actively blocked us in the 1980s from getting US reactor technology when we wanted nuclear submarines the ….
Certainly is. But times they are a changin!
In theory it would take over all support and control of deployed missions. In practice its only interested in Army things and passes back all responsibility for mission sustainment to the RCN, while adding further layers bureaucracy.
I cant speak to the RCAF.
No real role for CJOC with RCAF deployments, unless you count the JFACC, which is just 1 Cdn Air Div wearing two hats (much like MARLANT wears the MCC hat).
After suffering enough CJOC-induced stupidity the last decade my first thought was…
I still maintain CJOC is an example of bloat and not required. But I'm just a simple Storesman.
In theory no, but I think in practice yes.
CJOC should have cut out a number of other entities when it was created, but I haven’t seen any relay PY savings from it.
But I've not been doggedly following the CAF structure for the past 20 years.
The RCAF operates as a subset of the USAF, or to be more precise, a subset of NORAD. It doesn't go anywhere since its primary task is the defence of the Canadian sector of North America, a job it does every day. Every now and then it despatches a small detachment on temporary overseas duty.
My first flying tour was 6 years long; I spent more than 3.5 of those years outside North America and did 10 “named op” deployments and about that many exercises, on top of all the stuff we did over/around North America.
Other fleets are just as or possibly more busy and away from their postal code lots.
From my window, I’m not sure the para above is accurate for the tactical fleets.
Germany under fire for dropping Nato spending pledge
Berlin abandons legally binding commitment to spend 2 per cent of GDP on defence in last-minute reversal
ByJörg Luyken18 August 2023 • 4:23pm
The defence ministry is run by the Green party in Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s three-way coalition government CREDIT: Ronald Wittek/Shutterstock
Germany’s government has been criticised for an “absurd” plan to present interest payments as defence expenses after stepping back from pledges to hit Nato spending targets.
Berlin abandoned a legally binding commitment to spend 2 per cent of GDP on defence in a last-minute reversal on Wednesday, a government official told Reuters.
An objection to the clause, which had been part of a new budget financing law, was reportedly raised by the foreign ministry. The ministry is run by the Green party in Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s three-way coalition government.
The developments came as Germany’s Bild newspaper reported that the country’s defence ministry had been instructed to include debt-servicing payments as military spending for next year to make up for the fact that Berlin would otherwise fall far short of the Nato target.
€14 billion short
Defence spending for 2024 is projected to come in €14 billion short of target. However, the defence ministry is planning to cover for around €9 billion of that deficit by adding debt servicing to its official expenditure.
“The idea of categorising interest payments as defence expenses is outright absurd. While soldiers can protect our nation, interest rates certainly cannot,” said Info Gädechens, an MP for the opposition centre-Right CDU party.
A spokesperson for the defence ministry told The Telegraph the move was in line with Nato standards.
“In addition to the entire defence budget… defence expenditure according to Nato criteria can sometimes also include expenditure on other individual plans,” such as spending by foreign and finance ministries, the spokesperson said.
Berlin will also include €4 billion of military assistance provided to Ukraine in its defence spending figures.
The defence ministry said that “expenditures for the capacity building of partner states in the areas of security, defence, and stabilisation” can legitimately be included in the overall spending figure handed to Nato.
Failed to hit goal
Germany has repeatedly failed to hit Nato’s defence spending goal in recent years, aggravating other allies, most notably the United States.
Donald Trump, the former US president, regularly berated Berlin over its defence commitments while in office.
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last February, Mr Scholz pledged to heavily reinvest in Germany’s military.
Speaking to the German parliament three days after the war began, he promised to hit the Nato spending target “year after year”, a pledge he repeated at the alliance’s summit in Vilnius last month.
Caught flat-footed by the invasion of Ukraine, Germany’s top generals admitted last February that the country’s army was “naked” in the face of any potential invasion.
Since then, Berlin has made a stuttering attempt to buy in modern equipment, most recently spending £2.75 billion on Israel’s Arrow-3 missile-defence system.
Good read/watch material on how the war in the information space is conducted
Sometimes the more and more everyone talks about current state and potential future state, the less I’m inclined to remain in Canada when I retire. I’d rather enjoy my remaining time on the planet living in a place more inline with my overall beliefs.
Just plain reelin'I've said before that providing for the CAF is a bit like fishing for big fish on a low test line. If you fight too hard the line breaks and the fish escapes. You just have to wait for the opportunity and take up any slack that the fish offers you. Right now we are being offered some slack. We should be reeling for all we are worth.
Sometimes the more and more everyone talks about current state and potential future state, the less I’m inclined to remain in Canada when I retire. I’d rather enjoy my remaining time on the planet living in a place more inline with my overall beliefs.