More sailors needed for Canada's warships
Matthew Fisher, Mideast Correspondent , Canwest News Service Published: Sunday, July 27, 2008
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ABOARD HMCS IROQUOIS, Indian Ocean -- About 800 Canadian sailors are now patrolling the politically turbulent waters near Iran and Pakistan. But mustering crews to man warships near global flash points has increasingly become a nightmare for navy planners in Nova Scotia, British Columbia and Ottawa.
They have 8,000 sailors on their books and jobs for 8,600.
"We are understaffed. There is no doubt about that," said Commodore Bob Davidson, the Canadian commander of Task Force 150 - a multi-national flotilla in the Indian Ocean that includes the Halifax-based Iroquois and well as Esquimalt, and the B.C.-based HMCS Calgary and HMCS Protecteur.
"We are looking at being short by about 300 people per coast and that is not insubstantial."
To put warships to sea the navy must routinely "borrow" sailors from other ships. For example, 108 of the Protecteur's current company of 260 sailors were not normally assigned to the supply and refuelling ship, but had been attached for the current 196-day around-the world mission.
"The quiet ships are going light," Capt. Brendan Ryan, the Iroquois captain, said. "We ask ships in the yard how many people with specific skills they have on hand. That is how we manage this."
The navy's other critical shortcoming is that its destroyers and supply ships are older than most of the sailors on-board. The Sea King helicopters on their flight decks are even older and often unavailable because of chronic maintenance issues.
Since being commissioned 36 years ago, the Iroquois has sailed more than one million kilometres, which is the equivalent of circling the globe 27 times.
Given their age, Canada's three destroyers should be replaced about now. But as they still have world-class missile defence systems that allow them to sail into harm's way, it is probable the destroyers won't be retired for another seven or eight years. However, because it takes so long after funding is approved to build warships, it will likely be several more years after that before the destroyers are finally replaced.
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Matthew Fisher, Mideast Correspondent , Canwest News Service Published: Sunday, July 27, 2008
Article Link
ABOARD HMCS IROQUOIS, Indian Ocean -- About 800 Canadian sailors are now patrolling the politically turbulent waters near Iran and Pakistan. But mustering crews to man warships near global flash points has increasingly become a nightmare for navy planners in Nova Scotia, British Columbia and Ottawa.
They have 8,000 sailors on their books and jobs for 8,600.
"We are understaffed. There is no doubt about that," said Commodore Bob Davidson, the Canadian commander of Task Force 150 - a multi-national flotilla in the Indian Ocean that includes the Halifax-based Iroquois and well as Esquimalt, and the B.C.-based HMCS Calgary and HMCS Protecteur.
"We are looking at being short by about 300 people per coast and that is not insubstantial."
To put warships to sea the navy must routinely "borrow" sailors from other ships. For example, 108 of the Protecteur's current company of 260 sailors were not normally assigned to the supply and refuelling ship, but had been attached for the current 196-day around-the world mission.
"The quiet ships are going light," Capt. Brendan Ryan, the Iroquois captain, said. "We ask ships in the yard how many people with specific skills they have on hand. That is how we manage this."
The navy's other critical shortcoming is that its destroyers and supply ships are older than most of the sailors on-board. The Sea King helicopters on their flight decks are even older and often unavailable because of chronic maintenance issues.
Since being commissioned 36 years ago, the Iroquois has sailed more than one million kilometres, which is the equivalent of circling the globe 27 times.
Given their age, Canada's three destroyers should be replaced about now. But as they still have world-class missile defence systems that allow them to sail into harm's way, it is probable the destroyers won't be retired for another seven or eight years. However, because it takes so long after funding is approved to build warships, it will likely be several more years after that before the destroyers are finally replaced.
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