By Clifford Krauss
29-08-04
Hundreds of Canadian troops were all around. Helicopters swooped over the tin
roofs of this isolated hamlet. A Navy frigate and a Coast Guard icebreaker were
moored and readied in a nearby fjord. Across the bay, Master Cpl. Carl Gale was
doing his part, too, as he introduced himself to an Eskimo family out picking
wild blueberries. The show of force, coupled with efforts to win over the local people, showed
how far the Canadian military was willing to go to familiarize itself with an
increasingly valued region where it has seldom operated as it strengthens
Canada's claim to it.
Not all of Canada's vast claims to the Arctic are recognized internationally.
The United States, the European Union and Denmark either contend that the
region's waterways are open to all or have placed their own claims on parts
where climate change is expected to increase access to the region's bountiful
resources in coming years.
Despite challenges from Denmark, a NATO ally, Canada is also laying claim to
an Arctic island with potential oil riches off its rocky shore. Most important,
climate change has begun to make more real the dream of opening a Northwest
Passage that would shorten ship travel between Europe and Asia by thousands of
miles. Canadian policymakers want to reserve the right to regulate and tax such
a passage. But while Canada claims the region, it does not regularly patrol it. That is
what Operation Narwhal was intended to remedy by making the military more
comfortable operating in what can be an extreme environment and by allowing a
sometimes mistrustful native population to get used to seeing Canadian troops
and navy ships in Arctic waters. For now, however, the exercise demonstrated
that the military has a long way to go to operate effectively there.
But there were small victories, too, particularly in meshing the skills of
the military and their Eskimo Ranger guides and improving relations with local
residents, like Metuq and her children.
But this is just the beginning of Canada's effort to increase its presence in
the far north. Military officials have begun planning for a far more ambitious
exercise in 2006 in Parry Channel, 500 miles north of the Arctic Circle.
Defence Minister Bill Graham noted that global warming had created "new
possibilities and new threats" in the Arctic that Canada face. Seventeen years ago, the government of Brian Mulroney announced that it would
buy 10 nuclear-powered submarines to prowl the disputed northern passages and
upgrade five Arctic airfields to step up electronic reconnaissance flights. But
the expansion was shelved in 1989 because of budget constraints.
With the Liberal government struggling to improve health care, urban
transportation and housing, however, there is little appetite in the House of
Commons to significantly increase the $ 11 bn defence budget. The military is
trying to stretch improvements on a shoestring and is staging exercises for
symbolic effect. Like these exercises, it also demonstrated Canada's determination and its
inadequate defence resources. Only five of the 16 mostly rented snowmobiles
survived the 900-mile, two-week journey through the shifting ice and howling
winds in working order.
The patrol was Canada's response to an unlikely challenge from Denmark, which
in two previous summers had landed Marines from ice-cutting frigates on Hans
Island, a desolate piece of rock in the Kennedy Channel, between Greenland and
Ellesmere Island. The Danes believed that the island and its surrounding waters
had enough fishing and gas potential to pound Danish flags and plaques into its
rocky surface and stir up a diplomatic incident that is still not settled.
Source: Star TribuneThe Arctic may be final contested frontier
"I suppose you know we are up here for training," he told Aluki Metuq,
31, and her four children, and then asked if they had seen any of the mock
satellite debris his unit was hunting for. They had not. Gale and his Eskimo
Ranger guides then joined the family for a snack of berries and a friendly chat
before resuming their patrol.
The $ 4 mm exercise is the most prominent sign to date of Canada's intensifying
effort to reinforce disputed claims over tens of thousands of miles of Arctic
channels and tundra. Once nearly permanently frozen, forbidding and forgotten,
the region is today seen by officials from Canada and competing nations as a
potential source of both wealth and trouble.
Diamond finds have already inspired a new mining rush, making Canada the world's
third-largest producer. Canada wants someday to tap natural gas in the Beaufort
Sea in a frigid zone bordering Alaska and the Yukon Territory that the United
States tried to auction off to oil companies last year. The oil companies
balked, preferring not to get mixed up in an international squabble.
"We used to forget that the Arctic was our border," Foreign Minister
Pierre Pettigrew said. "There has been a change of perception of our
reality, of where we belong."
Bad weather grounded Air Force planes and helicopters for days at a time,
slowing troop transport even while commercial airlines kept flying. A fire on a
40-year-old Sea King helicopter aboard the frigate Montreal hampered one
exercise. Two soldiers got lost one night in the barren tundra and spent a night
in a cave without survival gear.
While the frigate, drones, and other patrols searched for the mock satellite
debris, Tim Evic, a 45-year-old Eskimo Ranger, deciphered for Gale an otherwise
inscrutable terrain where his boats could land, the intricacies of the fjord's
tides, the spots where hunters and fishermen might cross and the places where
patrols could find food and water.
The government also has approved the launching of a satellite, Radarsat II, next
year that will provide high-resolution surveillance across the Arctic to monitor
the movement of surface ships. Military planners hope the satellite will work in
tandem with unmanned aerial vehicles being tested during this year's exercises
to see if they can provide useful intelligence despite the Arctic's low cloud
cover.
"We need more resources up there and we are going to look for ways to
deploy them," he said. "The sense is now the time has come."
Sceptics note, however, that even the new surveillance capacity will still not
be able to detect the US, Russian, British and French nuclear submarines that
periodically sail under the Arctic ice in waters claimed by Canada. Even if the
submarines can be detected, the Canadian Navy does not have submarines or
surface warships capable of operating in the high Arctic to do anything about
it.
"We have a habit of beginning northern security projects and abandoning
them," noted Rob Huebert, associate director of the Centre for Military and
Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary. But he said climate change,
rising energy prices and increased security concerns seemed to be driving
Canadian policymakers to take action. "We're starting to get serious about
surveillance in our Arctic," he said. "I finally see some
action."
One such operation was the "sovereignty patrol" undertaken by 20
regular Canadian troops and Eskimo Rangers in April. The patrol travelled
between Resolute Bay, site of a research centre on Cornwallis Island, and Alert,
an outpost located at the northern end of Ellesmere Island on the Lincoln Sea.
The five troopers who managed to complete the patrol hammered metal plaques into
the tundra declaring Canada's sovereignty over the remote Arctic archipelago off
the coast of northwest Greenland.
Senior Canadian Defence and Foreign Ministry officials said the government
viewed Hans Island as an important test case that could have repercussions for
sovereignty claims along the entire Northwest Passage and the Beaufort Sea. But
there, too, the challenge is to demonstrate that Canada can not only assert its
claims but also enforce them.