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Here is an article, reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act, from today’s (18 Jan 07) Ottawa Citizen which should stir up a hornet’s nest:
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=607bbb42-ce9e-4efa-83af-5c3138e27cab&k=9171
If a lousy $37 Billion by 2025 is all O’Connor and Hillier can manage to recommend then both should quit because they clearly do not understand the problem.
$37 Billion represents a 20 year disarmament by stealth project.
The so called ‘first option’ ($26.9 Billion by 2025) is nothing more than a flat 3% growth rate – about enough to keep pace with inflation. In other words the Hillier/O’Connor baseline is beyond just no real growth at all, it represents a steady and accelerating decline in Canada’s national defence capabilities. That’s bloody disgraceful, in my opinion.
I believe it is widely accepted,* based on historical data, that defence inflation is much higher than the standard inflation rates predicted by e.g. Finance and the Bank of Canada. On that basis even the ‘third option’ ($37 billion) is less than enough to keep up with inflation, it – apparently the best Hillier and O’Connor have the nerve to recommend – is the no growth option.
I would guesstimate, and it is a highly unscientific wild assed guess because I have been retired for years and years, that anything less than about 7.5% growth, year after year for a decade, and then steady 5% growth will mean that we disarm Canada.
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* I know it was widely accepted, in the ‘80s and early ‘90s, even by the Auditor General, that defence inflation ran at double the general inflation rate.
Edit: corrected format in "© CanWest News Service 2007"
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=607bbb42-ce9e-4efa-83af-5c3138e27cab&k=9171
Military looking for doubling of defence spending by 2025
Richard Foot, CanWest News Service
Published: Thursday, January 18, 2007
The Defence Department is asking the Harper government to more than double its annual funding to $36.6 billion by 2025, and approve a list of about 30 new military rebuilding projects with an emphasis on protecting Canada's Arctic sovereignty.
But the military wish list - detailed in a long-awaited planning document called the Canada First Defence Strategy - faces a tough sell in the federal cabinet and the office of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, according to Liberal Senator Colin Kenny, chairman of the Senate's defence and national security committee.
Kenny, who has reviewed a copy of the plan, says he doubts the government will approve most of its spending requests. Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor has been promising to release the strategy since last fall, yet it remains stalled before the cabinet.
Kenny says Gen. Rick Hillier, the chief of defence staff, needs all the $37 billion outlined in the document to proceed with his bold plans to rebuild the Armed Forces. However, Kenny says that plan is having ''serious problems'' getting political approval.
''A week ago, there was supposed to be a meeting between O'Connor and Harper to discuss the strategy, and Harper cancelled the meeting because he didn't think that the preparation surrounding the document was adequate,'' he says.
O'Connor told the defence community in Halifax during a recent visit that a series of new spending announcements would begin this winter, but it's not clear how closely those will match the strategy proposals.
Kenny, a longtime advocate of strengthening Canada's military, says the strategy outlines three options for increasing annual funding for the Defence Department, which now stands at roughly $15 billion.
The first option is to gradually increase annual funding to $26.9 billion by 2025. The middle option seeks increases up to $35 billion by 2025, and the third option seeks an annual budget of $36.6 billion by 2025. Kenny says while those numbers sound impressive, they are not large when inflation and growth in Canada's gross domestic product are taken into account.
Canada now spends about one per cent of its GDP on defence, making it one of the lowest defence spenders in the NATO alliance.
If Ottawa adopts the cheapest option and boosts spending to only $26.9 billion, military spending would actually fall to less than one per cent of GDP in 2025, according to the document's projections.
If the most expensive option is selected and spending reaches $36.6 billion, defence spending would move to 1.3 per cent of GDP.
In October, the Senate committee on national security and defence issued a report saying Canada needed to boost defence spending to at least two per cent of GDP - or $35 billion in annual funding - by as early as 2012.
''What's frustrating is that you don't see the Canadian Forces actually functioning well under any of the options now before the cabinet,'' says Kenny. ''Even if you had the best-case scenario, it wouldn't give us the defence Canada needs or deserves.
''And I don't think the government is going to go for the 'best-case' option. I think they're going to do it on the cheap.''
Kenny declined to specify what projects the military wants as part of its rebuilding process, but said the strategy places, in his view, ''an inordinate focus on the North.''
There has been debate about whether ensuring Arctic sovereignty should fall to the military or to other agencies, and whether Canada's northern ocean should be patrolled by the navy or by the coast guard operating on new icebreakers.
Kenny says the Defence Department is clearly seeking a military solution and wants the government to purchase a fleet of six new armed Arctic patrol ships.
He also said the strategy calls for the continuation and strengthening of Canada's barely functioning submarine capability and for the building of a fleet of new ''single-class surface'' combat ships to replace the existing fleet of naval frigates, which are now reaching their mid-life stage.
There is no mention in the document, he says, of a replacement for the navy's aging destroyers.
Previous media reports have said the strategy also proposes a fleet of new-generation Leopard tanks, more light-armoured vehicles of the kind being used by Canadian troops in Afghanistan, a new fleet of search-and-rescue airplanes and additional unmanned aerial vehicles.
The Harper government has already announced plans to buy $17 billion worth of new supply ships for the navy, tactical and strategic transport planes and helicopters for the air force, and trucks for the army.
Dan Middlemiss, a defence scholar at Dalhousie University, said no matter how much of the new strategy the government ultimately adopts, it's defence decisions will likely be announced piecemeal over the coming months, or withheld and incorporated into the Conservative campaign platform in the next election.
''Many of us have been waiting to see the document for months, but it's just slipped and slipped and slipped,'' he says. ''I think the policy will either come out in dribs and drabs, or the government might turn it into a plank for the election.''
© CanWest News Service 2007
If a lousy $37 Billion by 2025 is all O’Connor and Hillier can manage to recommend then both should quit because they clearly do not understand the problem.
$37 Billion represents a 20 year disarmament by stealth project.
The so called ‘first option’ ($26.9 Billion by 2025) is nothing more than a flat 3% growth rate – about enough to keep pace with inflation. In other words the Hillier/O’Connor baseline is beyond just no real growth at all, it represents a steady and accelerating decline in Canada’s national defence capabilities. That’s bloody disgraceful, in my opinion.
I believe it is widely accepted,* based on historical data, that defence inflation is much higher than the standard inflation rates predicted by e.g. Finance and the Bank of Canada. On that basis even the ‘third option’ ($37 billion) is less than enough to keep up with inflation, it – apparently the best Hillier and O’Connor have the nerve to recommend – is the no growth option.
I would guesstimate, and it is a highly unscientific wild assed guess because I have been retired for years and years, that anything less than about 7.5% growth, year after year for a decade, and then steady 5% growth will mean that we disarm Canada.
---------
* I know it was widely accepted, in the ‘80s and early ‘90s, even by the Auditor General, that defence inflation ran at double the general inflation rate.
Edit: corrected format in "© CanWest News Service 2007"