Wednesday, January 31, 2007

What the CF may have to give up

Major cuts in order to have money for all the new equipments, if the plans are approved. Hits for all three services, as might be expected (I wonder which aggrieved service member leaked the document).
The Canadian Forces is [sic] recommending getting rid of ships, surveillance aircraft and up to 25 per cent of its Griffon helicopter fleet to help pay for new equipment in the future, according to the Conservative government's defence strategy obtained by the Citizen.

The cuts would include six Aurora maritime patrol aircraft, one destroyer and the navy's two aging refuelling and resupply ships. The elimination of the resupply vessels will mean the navy is going to face at least a two-year period in which it will not have its own means to refuel vessels at sea.

The government's "Canada First" defence strategy also highlights the previously announced plans to buy medium-lift helicopters, tactical and strategic airlift planes, aerial drones, search and rescue and northern utility aircraft.

The military will also look at the replacement of the CF-18 fighter, according to the strategy, which is not yet public.

But those new purchases come at a cost.

"To make these much needed investments possible, the Canadian Forces will reduce a number of platforms, including Aurora surveillance aircraft and Griffon utility aircraft," according to the strategy.

In the document, Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor says the erosion of military capabilities is "far worse" than originally anticipated.

"Reversing this decline will take time and involve a number of difficult decisions," writes Mr. O'Connor. "Moreover, we must consider the pressing needs of the military against other government priorities."..

As it gets rid of the Auroras, the air force will purchase approximately 12 aerial drones to be located at Canadian Forces Base Comox in British Columbia and CFB Greenwood in Nova Scotia for domestic surveillance and overseas operations. The first of those will be in operation starting in 2008. The purchase of longer-range drones would be considered in the future.

Work will be stopped on the ongoing $900-million modernization program for the Aurora.

Another air force plan to spend hundreds of millions of dollars more on a structural life extension for the aging Auroras will also be cancelled. The remaining Auroras will be re-assigned to Arctic sovereignty patrols.

Over the next three to four years, the military will also get rid of one Iroquois-class destroyer and its two Protecteur-class refuelling and supply ships.

The defence strategy acknowledges that the replacement for the existing refuelling vessels, the Joint Support Ship, will not be in the water until at least 2012. The navy will have to somehow "manage the risk" of operating without refuelling and supply ships for a two-year period, according to the strategy paper.

According to the Canada First report, the navy will also begin work on the acquisition of the future surface combatant fleet, a new type of vessel that will come into service in 2018. Those 14 ships would replace the service's existing frigates and Iroquois-class destroyers...

In the meantime, the Halifax-class frigates will be modernized and command and control equipment now on the Iroquois-class destroyers will be transferred to the frigates.

The air force will get rid of CF-18 fighter aircraft that have not been modernized.

The army will get rid of most of its Air Defence Anti-tank Systems, a ground-based air defence missile system. A small number of the systems will be kept around long enough to provide protection for the Winter Olympics in B.C...

The Conservative strategy also gives the army approval to cancel the planned $750-million purchase of the Mobile Gun System, a wheeled armoured vehicle that was to be built by General Dynamics in London, Ont. Army commanders did not see the mobile gun as providing enough protection and firepower for troops.

The army will also be allowed to cancel the Multi-Mission Effects Vehicle, an upgrade program for the Air Defence Anti-tank Systems that was to be handled by Oerlikon Aerospace in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que.

A minimum number of Leopard tanks will be kept for training and operations, according to the strategy paper. But a replacement for a direct-fire capability won't be introduced until 2015 at the earliest.

The strategy also calls for the purchase of more M777 howitzers, the same type of gun now in use by Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan. It also outlines the previously announced purchase of new trucks for the army...
No Auroras for Afstan I would guess. With the reduction in their numbers I would say the case is even stronger for more civilian maritime surveillance planes.

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