Merci, monsieur le président.
Thank you for this opportunity to discuss Arctic sovereignty with you and the members of the committee.
I'd like to emphasize that I will be speaking from the perspective of a legal academic who is concerned with Canada's legal case in the Arctic. This is the perspective from which I come to this question of how the Canadian armed forces can help Canada's legal case.
Climate change has certainly created significant challenges for Canada in the Arctic, but a number of them, I think, will be dealt with within the existing legal framework. The Ilulissat declaration in May of 2008 testified to the fact that the five coastal parties agree that this is the framework that should apply.
From my perspective, the principal challenge facing Canadian sovereignty in the Arctic concerns the Northwest Passage, and it's to this that I would like to speak in the few minutes that have been allocated to me. Before tackling the question of the Canadian armed forces and helping Canada's position over the Northwest Passage, I need to briefly touch on a few essential aspects of this legal position, this case.
For over 40 years, of course, Canada has asserted, with varying degrees of clarity and coherence, which is slightly problematic, its right to exert exclusive and absolute authority over those waters, including the various routes of the Northwest Passage. This position is not generally accepted. I believe, through various meetings around the world, that opposition is mounting as more and more states come to realize the potential advantages that could flow from a navigable Northwest Passage.
Of course, at least since 1985 we have formalized our position, and we've been strong. The Canadian position has been strongly advocated since 1985 with the drawing of our baselines in the Arctic. I would highlight the fact that when then Foreign Affairs Minister Joe Clark made the announcement in the House of Commons, he was careful to emphasize that the baselines were being used to delineate what had always been considered Canadian historic internal waters.
Under international law, and particularly the Law of the Sea, of course, a coastal state can claim title over waters on the basis of history if it can satisfy a two-part test. The first part, which is critical, is that the coastal state has exercised exclusive authority and control over those waters over a long period of time. The second part of the test is that there has been general acquiescence to that exercise of authority, especially by those states particularly affected.
I should say that this claim Canada makes to historic waters status for the Arctic waters is a very strong claim under international law--the strongest. The Law of the Sea assimilates internal waters to land territory, so in fact Canada, as the coastal state, exercises as much authority, competence, and prerogatives over its internal waters, including in the Arctic, as it does over downtown Ottawa. It's a very strong claim.
Of course, some foreign governments have repeatedly refused to acquiesce in this claim, most notably the American government, but protests also have been lodged by the European Union. It is certainly Washington's position that an international highway cuts through this archipelago, an international strait, bringing with it a legal regime of exception.
The legal regime that applies in an international strait is that of guaranteed freedoms: guaranteed freedom of navigation for the ships of every nation, both privately owned and state owned; a right of transit for submarines submerged, without any obligation to seek permission or indeed authorization; and, as Colonel Leblanc mentioned, a right of overflight for the aircraft of every nation, both privately owned and state owned, in the air corridor above the international strait.
In international law, there is no clear-cut definition of what constitutes an international strait. It's been a very divisive issue, going back to the negotiation of the 1958 conventions. The principal source of law in this question is the 1949 decision of the International Court of Justice in the Corfu Channel case. In this case, the court had to decide whether the North Corfu Channel was an international strait.
The court defined a two-part test. This test, therefore, is made up of two distinct criteria: a geographic criterion and a functional criterion. In terms of the geographic criterion, nobody argues over that in the Northwest Passage. The Northwest Passage connects two parts of the high seas. Nobody argues that. But there is substantial debate over the functional criterion and how it should be interpreted.
The court used this language in defining the North Corfu Channel: a strait that was “used for international navigation”. It's the Canadian official position that the Northwest Passage has never been used, as of right, by international ships for navigational purposes.
Of course, there is a certain current coming out of the United States, notably the Naval War College in the United States, and more recently formulated by James Kraska, that actual use is not necessary. As long as a stretch of water can be used, potentially, for international navigation, this is sufficient to transform the body of water into an international strait.
I mention these specific points because I think Canadian armed forces have a very real role to play in helping to shore up Canada's legal arguments on these two critical points.
Before I turn to this, I'd like to apologize to the committee: I have no military Canadian armed forces expertise. This is the lawyer thinking about her best possible shopping list.
I would say that today, in 2009, Canada's legal position is vulnerable. But this vulnerability is not principally legal; it's more factual. After all, Canada's entire case rests on effective control. The point I'd like to make, my principle, is that if Canada insists that the Northwest Passage waters are internal, then that means they're part of Canada's national territory. Therefore, Canada as sovereign is obligated to guarantee an effective presence and effective control, as it would on any other part of Canadian soil. This is a huge task.
In terms of presence, I think largely in the last half-decade it's been mostly a visible presence through coast guard vessels escorting ships through the passage and providing for the needs of the various Arctic communities. In my very humble opinion, I think the coast guard is probably the best agency to ensure this kind of effective presence.
But Canada doesn't only have to be visible in the Northwest Passage; it also has to exert control over the waters of the Northwest Passage. It's here, I think, that the Canadian armed forces must intervene. I've been called alarmist, but I think the danger is very real. I think any--any--unauthorized transit by a foreign vessel, whether surface or underwater, will severely undermine Canada's legal case.
First, such a public violation of Canada's sovereignty would call into question Canada's ability to effectively govern those waters, which is an important and essential component of our historic waters claim.
Second, it would create a dangerous and weighty precedent in this debate we have, this quarrel, about what constitutes an international strait. It would be a dangerous precedent of actual use of the Northwest Passage for international navigation.
From my perspective, I hope the Canadian armed forces will be equipped with the best available technology and equipment in terms of surveillance and detection. Early detection is essential if the Canadian government is to respond effectively to such a situation.
It's also my hope, in ignorance, that an emergency plan, a formal emergency plan, exists among the different actors within the Canadian government--so between DND and other actors, about how such a dramatic scenario would be managed.
To be clear, my perspective is that to protect its legal position, the Canadian government would have to react vis-à-vis any ship or submarine that had entered the archipelago unannounced and uninvited. The amount of time available for diplomatic negotiations between Canada and the flag state of such an offending vessel would be extremely short. In the absence of a political solution to the crisis, Canada would have no other choice, I believe, but to intercept.
I think Canadian armed forces must have a capability to interdict a foreign ship navigating through the Northwest Passage without Canadian permission.