- Reaction score
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Here comes some of the economic costs already,
Goose Bay Radar Project in jeopardy
NORAD surveillance aid: U.S. cancels meeting after PM refused to join missile defence
a journalist
CanWest News Service
Tuesday, March 01, 2005
U.S. officials cancelled an information briefing on a proposal to install a missile defence radar in Goose Bay, Labrador, shortly after Paul Martin announced Canada would not take part in the Pentagon's missile shield, federal officials say.
The federal government and aerospace industry representatives were pushing for the installation of the X-Band radar for NORAD surveillance and space monitoring roles, but the sophisticated sensor on the East Coast would also have been able to detect an incoming rocket fired from the Middle East.
The construction of the radar, which uses U.S. technology, was being promoted as a way to contribute to the North American Aerospace Defence Command's surveillance mission while enabling Canada to keep a strong military presence at Goose Bay. Several NATO nations who conduct flight training at the military base have told the federal government they intend to pull out, and the Defence Department has been scrambling to find new military customers or roles for the facility, one of the area's main employers.
The installation of the X-Band radar, built by aerospace giant Raytheon, would have created 340 short-term jobs in the area as well as 100 permanent positions. There was hope in some Liberal circles that the announcement of the construction of the radar would help the party's fortunes in an upcoming byelection to replace MP Lawrence O'Brien. Mr. O'Brien, the Liberal MP for Labrador, died of cancer in December at age 53.
Steve Jurgutis, a spokesman for Defence Minister Bill Graham, said the proposal was being pushed by industry representatives and did not have any endorsement from the Minister. "There are no plans whatsoever to install an X-Band radar at Goose Bay," he added.
Mr. Graham is in Goose Bay tomorrow to make an announcement on a contract for construction work at the base, sources said.
Officials say the X-Band proposal is not dead, but acknowledged the Prime Minister's decision to opt out of the missile shield has hindered the plan.
The X-Band radar was being promoted in government circles as more of a space surveillance system than a missile shield sensor. The high-powered radar can monitor positions of satellites and other spacecraft such as the space shuttle, allowing NORAD to do its job of cataloguing the whereabouts of objects in orbit.
But the radar's location in Goose Bay would also give it a valuable role in the monitoring of missile launches from countries such as Iran. According to a study obtained by the Ottawa Citizen, the installation of a missile-defence radar on Canada's East Coast would provide for the intercept of missiles headed for North America as much as three minutes faster than if the surveillance devices were based in the United States. That advantage would be particularly important if the missile was carrying nuclear or chemical weapons, according to the May, 2001, report.
"To properly address the Middle Eastern threat an East Coast system would have to be deployed," notes the Defence Department study. "Canada's value-added role would be to provide a place to deploy such a system."
The missile shield would use interceptor rockets to shoot down warheads aimed at North America.
Shooting down a missile quickly is essential to preventing debris from hitting Canada or the United States, according to the report released under the Access to Information Act.
The report concluded there would not be any advantage to having the missile interceptors themselves located on Canadian territory.
Rick Lehner, a spokesman for the U.S. Missile Defence Agency, said he hadn't heard about plans for a Goose Bay radar. But he added that if Canada was looking for an X-band radar for tracking space debris and spacecraft, then the missile agency would not be involved.
Mr. Lehner said X-Band radars for the missile shield would be installed in Alaska, with portable versions of the radar in locations throughout the Pacific region.
The missile defence system uses a ground-based interceptor rocket to destroy incoming warhead.
Hope nobody in Goose Bay needed a job............
Goose Bay Radar Project in jeopardy
NORAD surveillance aid: U.S. cancels meeting after PM refused to join missile defence
a journalist
CanWest News Service
Tuesday, March 01, 2005
U.S. officials cancelled an information briefing on a proposal to install a missile defence radar in Goose Bay, Labrador, shortly after Paul Martin announced Canada would not take part in the Pentagon's missile shield, federal officials say.
The federal government and aerospace industry representatives were pushing for the installation of the X-Band radar for NORAD surveillance and space monitoring roles, but the sophisticated sensor on the East Coast would also have been able to detect an incoming rocket fired from the Middle East.
The construction of the radar, which uses U.S. technology, was being promoted as a way to contribute to the North American Aerospace Defence Command's surveillance mission while enabling Canada to keep a strong military presence at Goose Bay. Several NATO nations who conduct flight training at the military base have told the federal government they intend to pull out, and the Defence Department has been scrambling to find new military customers or roles for the facility, one of the area's main employers.
The installation of the X-Band radar, built by aerospace giant Raytheon, would have created 340 short-term jobs in the area as well as 100 permanent positions. There was hope in some Liberal circles that the announcement of the construction of the radar would help the party's fortunes in an upcoming byelection to replace MP Lawrence O'Brien. Mr. O'Brien, the Liberal MP for Labrador, died of cancer in December at age 53.
Steve Jurgutis, a spokesman for Defence Minister Bill Graham, said the proposal was being pushed by industry representatives and did not have any endorsement from the Minister. "There are no plans whatsoever to install an X-Band radar at Goose Bay," he added.
Mr. Graham is in Goose Bay tomorrow to make an announcement on a contract for construction work at the base, sources said.
Officials say the X-Band proposal is not dead, but acknowledged the Prime Minister's decision to opt out of the missile shield has hindered the plan.
The X-Band radar was being promoted in government circles as more of a space surveillance system than a missile shield sensor. The high-powered radar can monitor positions of satellites and other spacecraft such as the space shuttle, allowing NORAD to do its job of cataloguing the whereabouts of objects in orbit.
But the radar's location in Goose Bay would also give it a valuable role in the monitoring of missile launches from countries such as Iran. According to a study obtained by the Ottawa Citizen, the installation of a missile-defence radar on Canada's East Coast would provide for the intercept of missiles headed for North America as much as three minutes faster than if the surveillance devices were based in the United States. That advantage would be particularly important if the missile was carrying nuclear or chemical weapons, according to the May, 2001, report.
"To properly address the Middle Eastern threat an East Coast system would have to be deployed," notes the Defence Department study. "Canada's value-added role would be to provide a place to deploy such a system."
The missile shield would use interceptor rockets to shoot down warheads aimed at North America.
Shooting down a missile quickly is essential to preventing debris from hitting Canada or the United States, according to the report released under the Access to Information Act.
The report concluded there would not be any advantage to having the missile interceptors themselves located on Canadian territory.
Rick Lehner, a spokesman for the U.S. Missile Defence Agency, said he hadn't heard about plans for a Goose Bay radar. But he added that if Canada was looking for an X-band radar for tracking space debris and spacecraft, then the missile agency would not be involved.
Mr. Lehner said X-Band radars for the missile shield would be installed in Alaska, with portable versions of the radar in locations throughout the Pacific region.
The missile defence system uses a ground-based interceptor rocket to destroy incoming warhead.
Hope nobody in Goose Bay needed a job............