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Richard Purser Purser: Disaster Strikes

Disaster Strikes

Written by Richard Purser   
Canadians, who have grown used to ignoring their military almost as much as Liberal governments have ignored it whenever they have been in power at least from Trudeau on, got a glimpse of the limitations faced by Canadian Forces when its Disaster Assistance Response Team took 16 days to deploy in South Asia after the Indian Ocean earthquake/tsunami struck on December 26. And it cost Ottawa nearly $5.5 million to rent Antonov aircraft to ferry DART’s equipment overseas, owing to the CF’s lack of heavy-lift capability.

By all accounts, the team acquitted itself well and made itself useful during its stay in southeastern Sri Lanka (its last members were back in Canada 46 days after deployment), but that’s more than can be said for the government.

Whether the DART approach is the best one is in dispute; some suggest a smaller, more mobile response unit on the assumption that the first hours and days count most; others recommend a focus on long-term post-disaster requirements through a seaborne expeditionary force. This could perhaps have been settled in an ongoing review of Canada’s foreign and defence policy, which was supposed to have made its appearance by February. But the month ended with the report still in limbo.

There was a positive move in the military sector early in February with the appointment of a straight-shooting general, Rick Hellier, as Chief of the Defence Staff, who could be seen as a counter to the weak-kneed defence minister, Bill Graham, a master of fudge almost equal to the foreign minister, Pierre Pettigrew, or the prime minister, Paul Martin.

There was another moderately positive move late in the month when the federal budget announced increased defence expenditures of $6.5 billion over the next five years, but there was no clear indication where this money would be spent or when or whether it would contribute to previously announced intentions by the government to increase Canada’s paltry forces by 5,000 regulars and 3,000 reserves.

But all this was reduced to triviality by the government’s almost simultaneous announcement that it was going to spit in the face of the United States of America and tell our closest ally and friend that it could go to hell as far as Canadian participation in the ballistic missile defence of North America was concerned.

This astounding act of malfeasance by Mr. Martin renders futile any idea that Canada may have of improving its world status. We can’t even contribute to our own defence any more! And we are now rendered useless, as far as the US is concerned, in the war for world freedom.

This is a tragedy, and Paul Martin is alone to blame.