Not necessarily, SKT.
Since CYRB is in the Arctic Control Area of Northern Domestic Airspace, there is a 9,000' 'sandwich' of Class G uncontrolled high level between FL180 and FL270. Class A airspace only starts at FL270 and goes higher in the ACA, so in lieu of any temporary control zone or terminal control area being established at CYRB, all flights below FL270 will necessarily be uncontrolled. Given that most operators would conduct some type of profile descent (last time I did a 'gut-wrenching' HI TACAN approach dropping essentially out of high level airspace within the control zone was about 24 years ago), I can't see an airliner (or any airplane, for that matter) staying above FL270 until within 25 nm of an airport (the MF radius at CYRB is 25nm). There would definitely be a clear period of travel in "fully uncontrolled" airspace until the aircraft was about to enter the MF Zone and then, while still uncontrolled, the pilot would then be required to make several communications, at least: (ref:
CAP charts for CYRB)
a) on 126.7, 15 min back from landing;
b) on 126.7, commencing the descent...not sure how an extended profile descent would affect this call, conceivably a profile descent could start notably longer than 15 minutes prior to the ETA); and
c) on the MF of 122.1 when 5 mins from commencing the approach (which for the ILS or LOC(BC) I would take to be 5 min back from planned intercept of the PT fix outbound.
The CYRB 25NM MSA is 2200' ASL, so that leaves about 24,800' of altitude between being in controlled airspace and being down at the MSA, from where you could then drop down another 400' to the PT altitude of 1,800' once you passed the RU beacon outbound on your track of 167T.
While not controlled by them myself at the time, I have been in the area when 8 ACCS is providing radar services, both PAR and an equivalent to what we would call combined primary/secondary radars. The other operators conducted both PARs and radar area let-downs (basically a vectored circling approach, negating the need for a procedure turn to navigate to the FAF) and in both cases, the control provided by 8 ACCS controllers was of excellent standard. I have to ask myself whether the issues that surrounded Resolute Bay back in 2012 were centred more on mutual miscommunication, than they were on a flagrant disregard for airspace control and airmanship, as the TSB letter would appear to impugn.
I can't ever see a civilian operator being allowed by TC to conduct a precision radar approach except in an emergency situation, so the only function I could see provided by any ATC unit, military or civilian, in CYRB would be flow control and management of the control zone/terminal control area such that civilian operators would be able to expeditiously conduct one of the approved, published approaches.
Regards
G2G