Sunday, 17 December 2017

A Modest Proposal-for Preventing the Purchase of Jet Fighters from Being a Burden to the Country and for Making them Beneficial to the Tax Paying Public.

The government of Canada has recently revealed a new policy in relation to its military procurement policies. While announcing a plan to acquire used F-18 Hornets from Australia to augment current RCAF aircraft, they also stated that in future they would evaluate companies bidding for government contracts for their "overall impact on Canada's economic interests."

Proposals will not only be considered based on cost, technical requirements and industrial, technological and economic benefits as they have been in the past. In future when bids are evaluated it will include an assessment of bidder’s impact on Canada’s economic interests and any bidder “responsible for harm to Canada’s economic interests will be at a distinct disadvantage.” 

The government says that the announcement marks the official launch of the open, competitive process to replace Canada’s fighter jet fleet. They plan to begin by establishing a list of suppliers, followed by extensive planning and stakeholder engagement scheduled to take place throughout 2018 and 2019 followed by a contract awarded in 2022 and the first replacement aircraft to be delivered in 2025.

How much of this plan relates to reality?

 In Canada  the entire process (apart from the development of specifications) is under the  authority of  Public Works, which uses much the same process to buy fighter jets that it uses to buy any other product or service. The new policy adds yet another layer to the process of military procurement.  It is not even clear that these new policy directives are even legal under international law.

In the past Canada has struggled even to provide relatively simple search and rescue aircraft.  Even in a situation in which successive governments and the RCAF maintained that obtaining these aircraft was their most important priority it took decades to sign a contract for new aircraft. The same can be said of the almost half century search for a Sea King helicopter replacement. In both these cases it is important to remember that even at this late date there are no new aircraft actually in service.

 This is not to say that there are not competent people in the civil service but, given that they cannot even reliably pay themselves, is it possible for rational observers to really believe that there is any likelihood of the government maintaining its’ schedule and actually delivering a jet fighter, of any kind, by 2025?

The time has come for Canadians and their government to accept reality.  The truth is that, as currently constituted, we just can’t do this. We are not able to successfully navigate the intricacies that such an expensive and complex procurement calls for.

Fortunately there is a viable alternative.

We live in what might be called post-Westphalian times. Westphalian sovereignty is the principle of international law that each nation-state has sovereignty over its territory and domestic affairs. One of the founding beliefs of the Westphalian ideal was that Sovereign states had an absolute monopoly on the legitimate use of violence.

However, as Sean McFate has observed in his book “The Modern Mercenary-Private Armies and What They Mean for World Orderr” ,The Westphalian belief that war is exclusively the privilege of the state does not match historical reality. Throughout most of history, military force was marketized, and waging war with for-profit actors was normal. Wealthy individuals and groups regularly employed private armies to pursue their objectives-political power, wealth, vendetta, glory and so on-creating a free market for force in which military might was traded as a commodity and the nationality of suppliers or purchasers meant little.

In modern times, for example, the US military has become highly privatized, with contractors making up half of its force structure in theaters of was and, it is argued, short of a national draft that country can no longer fight a sustained war without private sector involvement.

In Canada the Armed Forces and the government have long recognised the benefits of what might be called contact warfare. On demand military services generally have greater utility or value then maintaining an equivalent full-time standing military force. In many cases private sector innovation can find more efficient and effective ways of military objectives, sometimes sparing blood and treasure.

For example Public Services and Procurement Canada, on behalf of National Defence, recently awarded a $480-million contract for Contracted Airborne Training Services (CATS) to Discovery Air Defence Services Inc. The initial 10-year contract, with options to extend, could secure services until March 31, 2031, and the value of the contract could potentially reach $1.4 billion

The CATS program provides realistic combat readiness training to pilots and aircrew. During these exercises, the aircraft pilot will act in an aggressor role, allowing CAF personnel to learn and practise defensive tactics to deter an attack. Discovery Air personal and aircraft even provide Electronic Warfare training missions conducted by crews consisting of a Discovery Air Defence Services Pilot and a DND Electronic Warfare Officer from 414 Electronic Warfare Squadron.

 Contracts such as these usually describe the number of hours of flight time that will be available as well as the services performed during those flight hours.  There is no reason that similar contracts could not be signed, with the appropriate companies, for the air defence of North America.

Westphalian fears of a loss of sovereignty created by such a contract may be eased by the academic argument that providers of military support can be considered legitimate actors in areas of conflict. Such providers, it is argued, borrow legitimacy from the state that contracts the firm. Private firms do not operate alone; they are hired and, at least marginally, directed by a state. By using the established legitimacy of the state these firms are able to claim a degree of legal legitimacy.

Imagine the benefits to Canada and to the government. It would be up to the service provider to determine how best to provide the service. It would be the responsibility of that company to determine which aircraft were best suited for the mission and for procuring those aircraft. The service provider would be accountable for all maintenance, support, and disposal. It could be assumed that such a private military contractor (PMC) would find the least expensive and most efficient ways to achieve these ends.

Further, unlike our current system, the choices that the PMC made to achieve its contracted goals, the air defence of North America, would not be constrained by imaginary industrial policies, or regional economic balance or the need to keep impractical promises made in the heat of political campaigns.

We must accept that our government and Department of National Defence, as currently constituted, are not capable of fulfilling the task of providing the appropriate aircraft in a realistic timescale for a reasonable price needed for our defence. As long as the government of Canada and the public who elect them choose to accept that as a reasonable state of affairs then the procurement of such essential services from private military contractors becomes the only viable alternative.






Government launches open and transparent competition to replace Canada’s fighter aircraft

Replacing and Supplementing Canada's Fighters

Defence procurement strategy

Liberals' new pro-Canada procurement caveat still being figured out

Liberals pledge ‘continuous improvement’ of Phoenix in 2018 … but not a fix

The Modern Mercenary-Private Armies and What They Mean for World Order
Sean McFate

Government of Canada invests in air combat training services

414 Electronic Warfare Squadron

Doppelgangers of the State: Private Security and Transferable Legitimacy
 Martha Lizabeth Phelps