“There are no limits to the mighty future of the majestic expanse
of Canada with its virile, aspiring, cultured, and generous-hearted people”.
Winston S. Churchill
Toronto,
Canada. Canada is a great country with which I have a great affinity. However, its
Ottawa Establishment suffers from the same affliction from which most Western
elites suffer; talking grand talk whist walking little walks. This affliction is
most un-Canadian as unlike its noisy neighbour to the south Canadians pride
themselves on having their feet firmly on the ground. At the excellent 62nd
General Assembly of the Atlantic Treaty Association organised by Hugh Segal and
Julie Lindhout and their team at the NATO Association of Canada the grand talk,
little walk affliction was sadly all too apparent. Whilst there was much talk
of defending freedom and values, there was little willingness to pay for that
defence. Sadly, strategic denial is all the rage here in Canada.
The most
obvious denial concerns Russia. The Ottawa Government like many of their Western
Europe counterparts suffer from a full-on dose of the “Putin could not really
do that, could he?” syndrome. The assumption of the Canadian Government is that
the self-declared enemy of the West would not dare risk a force-on-force
confrontation with NATO by attacking/subverting the Baltic States. This is ‘hope-for-the
best’ strategy-fying at its worst, and ignores or simply reflects an ignorance
of the scenarios the Kremlin are considering for a lightning land grab in the
Baltics. Right now Russia has both the capability and the opportunity to undertake
such a strike and there is little the Alliance could do about it if Russia
simply stopped at the Polish-Lithuanian border.
To be fair to
Canada Ottawa is sending some 450 troops to Latvia to establish an ‘enhanced
forward presence’ in order to bolster NATO deterrence. Many NATO nations have
declined to offer such assurance to its Baltic partners – France and Italy to
the fore (or is that rear?). However, Canada at best can send only half a battlegroup because it armed forces are either insufficiently equipped or insufficient
of deployable number to send more, better-armed troops.
Part of the
reason for this is the current Canadian Government under Prime Minister Trudeau
is locked in a strategic time-warp. Ever since Lester Pearson joined two other “wise
men” sixty years ago to produce a report into the non-military aspects of NATO
Canada has prided itself on its pioneering role in military support for soft
power. It is a badge of honour for Canadians that they are one of the world’s
great peacekeepers, and rightly so.
However, that
was then and this is now. To hear Canadian after Canadian line-up to tell me
how they are going to better perfect a peacekeeping art that belongs to another
age smacked of a ‘stop the world we want to get off’ view of matters strategic.
There is clearly little or no willingness on the part of official Canada to
recognise that Canada is a three-ocean power all three of which are now contested
in a new great power geopolitical age.
Canadian
defence spending (or lack of it) revealed strategic hokum at its smelliest. Indeed, I was
deeply impressed by the ingenious but utterly disingenuous ways senior
Canadians seem to convince themselves Canada is spending enough money on
defence when Canada plainly is not. One senior Canadian said that Canada spends
better than other Alliance member-states – nonsense. Another Canadian told me
that other states fiddle the books to get to the agreed 2024 NATO Defence
Investment Pledge of 2% GDP on defence of which 20% of that is to be spent on
new kit – sort of nonsense. There is a NATO mechanism for calculating defence
expenditure which Canada simply chooses to ignore.
None of this
bodes well for the Trudeau defence review. Indeed, it looks likely to be yet
another of those politics dressed up as strategy reviews which implies an
increase in defence expenditure when in fact defence cost inflation will see yet
another real terms cut in Canadian defence expenditure. The most likely victim
will be much-needed major procurement programmes. Result? If the balloon really
goes up over the next decade the people who will bear the brunt of Ottawa’s
defence out-of-touchness will be the superb but under-equipped ordinary airmen,
seamen and soldiers of the Canadian Armed Forces.
Maybe these figures
(based on SIPRI 2015 estimates) will wipe the smile off Prime Minister Trudeau’s
face. Cut through the flannel and the
fact is that Canada spends $478 per capita on defence. This compares with the
US which spends $1859 per capita on defence, the UK $1066, France $977, and the
Netherlands $759.
The worst failing is that Ottawa thinks that defence expenditure is discretionary.
Worse, that Canada can engage in geopolitics as Ottawa so chooses. This is nonsense.
If there is one country that is totemic for globalisation it is Canada. One
only has to see modern Canada to understand that. To think that Canada can opt-out
of the really dark side of globalisation was perhaps the greatest conceit of
all here. And yet that is precisely what rich Canada seems determined to do.
End the strategic denial
and get strategic real Canada!
Julian Lindley-French
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