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Canada's window to defend the Arctic is closing, MP warns
Russia has been expanding its military presence in the far North
The Kremlin is militarizing the Arctic, rehabbing old Soviet bases and constructing at least 20 new ones. Putin has stated that ships sailing the economical Arctic route between Europe and the Far East will now need to obtain Russian permission.
Russia has been expanding its military presence in the far North
4/6/19
An MP who has been looking into the militarization of the North warns that if Canada doesn't act now, it could slowly lose its grip on the Arctic. Liberal John McKay, the Canadian co-chair of the Permanent Joint Board on Defense with the U.S., says he fears Canada isn't ready to defend its territory as the threat from Russia slowly expands. "We are not very well prepared," he said. Russia already has missile launchers and air defense systems dotted along ice roads at various military outposts in remote areas along its northern coast. In the last five years, the Kremlin has poured vast resources into revamping Soviet-era bases in the Arctic. "There is a very dramatic buildup of Russian military capability right across the top end of Russia, starting with Norway, working right across, right through to Alaska," McKay said Friday in an interview with Chris Hall airing today on CBC Radio's The House.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has made no secret of his goal to lay claim to a large portion of the Arctic, citing the estimated value of minerals in the north at $30 trillion. The speed of Russia's expansion is making other nations nervous. Last month, the American commander of NORAD called on U.S. and Canadian policy makers to think about whether they're doing enough to counter Russian threats in the far North. "We haven't seen this sort of systematic and methodical increase in threats since the height of the Cold War," Air Force Gen. Terrence O'Shaughnessy told the group. "I would like to see more resources applied to what has become a security issue for us, primarily driven by the fact that climate change has opened up the sea lanes." He also cautioned that the government needs to act quickly and decisively, before things get worse. "I think the window of opportunity is closing quickly. And I'm not sure that many Canadians are actually aware how quickly it is closing."
The Kremlin is militarizing the Arctic, rehabbing old Soviet bases and constructing at least 20 new ones. Putin has stated that ships sailing the economical Arctic route between Europe and the Far East will now need to obtain Russian permission.