Navy could shift to Pacific
August 2, 2013 - 9:16pm By PAUL McLEOD Ottawa Bureau
http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1145828-navy-could-shift-to-pacific
OTTAWA — The growth of China could push the Royal Canadian Navy’s focus to the Pacific and away from Halifax, according to some defence analysts.
Military resources are jealously guarded by politicians and local governments, but some recent papers by defence analysts wonder how long the navy’s status quo can last.
The American navy is already “rebalancing” its fleet away from the Atlantic in what’s been dubbed the “Pacific pivot.”
Canada’s fleet still tilts toward the Atlantic. There are currently seven Halifax-class frigates and two Iroquois-class destroyers on the East Coast, versus five frigates and one destroyer on the West Coast.
Theoretically there will be two submarines for each coast when they are fully repaired.
This is at a time when Canada’s trade policy is focused on Asia and former defence minister Peter MacKay lobbied for Canada’s entry into a conference of defence ministers for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
In a 2012 paper for the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, retired rear admiral Roger Girouard argued the only way to make headway on these goals is for Canada to “be a Pacific player, not an afterthought.”
That comes down to having a consistent navy presence in the region, said Girouard, former commander of Maritime Forces Pacific.
more on link
August 2, 2013 - 9:16pm By PAUL McLEOD Ottawa Bureau
http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1145828-navy-could-shift-to-pacific
OTTAWA — The growth of China could push the Royal Canadian Navy’s focus to the Pacific and away from Halifax, according to some defence analysts.
Military resources are jealously guarded by politicians and local governments, but some recent papers by defence analysts wonder how long the navy’s status quo can last.
The American navy is already “rebalancing” its fleet away from the Atlantic in what’s been dubbed the “Pacific pivot.”
Canada’s fleet still tilts toward the Atlantic. There are currently seven Halifax-class frigates and two Iroquois-class destroyers on the East Coast, versus five frigates and one destroyer on the West Coast.
Theoretically there will be two submarines for each coast when they are fully repaired.
This is at a time when Canada’s trade policy is focused on Asia and former defence minister Peter MacKay lobbied for Canada’s entry into a conference of defence ministers for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
In a 2012 paper for the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, retired rear admiral Roger Girouard argued the only way to make headway on these goals is for Canada to “be a Pacific player, not an afterthought.”
That comes down to having a consistent navy presence in the region, said Girouard, former commander of Maritime Forces Pacific.
more on link