Thank you for that question, Mr. Harris. It's a great question, underlining again the uniqueness of the Canadian military justice system and the players within that system. I'd like to assist the committee and in fact the public in their general understanding.
The provost marshal and the military police are unique in Canadian society. You will find no other police force in Canada like the military police. The prime reason for that is they have two distinct roles that are often interlaced, but they are distinct roles.
One is they support the operational chain of command in matters like detainee handling, traffic control points, and other aspects, such as security, both at home in Canada and abroad on missions such as in Afghanistan.
The other major role, which their name implies, is that they are police. A big chunk of what they do is they conduct investigations, both the military police and the national investigation service. I'm sure committee members are aware of those.
I think it's fundamental to understand that. If you don't understand the context that they are, to use a good Latin term, sui generis, a unique organization, the concept of saying that they're only a police force and the concept of police independence and then potential interference, and you compare it to the RCMP or Ottawa police or Victoria police, or any other police force in Canada, it would not, in my opinion, be an accurate comparative. It is because of those very operational roles that the chain of command must play a role in the conduct of the provost marshal and, by extension, the MP's business.
What this particular new proposal is designed to do is actually to protect both the chain of command and the provost marshal in a very transparent way in those rare occasions where the chain of command, as represented solely, and I underline solely, by the Vice Chief of the Defence Staff, can issue directions in a specific investigation and can also issue general guidance. That's the first part of that new section. Frankly, those mirror my own roles and responsibilities, where I can give specific direction as well to the director of military prosecutions. The whole scheme is designed to make that process transparent so that there are no concerns from the public, members of the military, or the provost marshal himself that there is confusion about what he can do.
I can't speak for the vice chief, of course; they are their operators, but I could see an example where you might have, as in Afghanistan, an offence being committed and the provost marshal feeling obligated by law to investigate it. He would require the logistical assistance of the task force commander to get his investigators into the theatre of operation in order to conduct an investigation. At the same time, the chain of command is fighting a war in the very area where the NIS or the MP may wish to travel. In that case it would actually help the provost marshal publicly to say to the vice chief that he needs to go there and can he support it. The vice chief may, in looking at all the circumstances, say, “Sorry, not right at the moment. It's too dangerous. We're fighting a war.” It gives both sides the full opportunity to look at the issue. Then if the vice chief does issue a specific instruction not to go, it's up to the provost marshal whether that direction is made public or not, as outlined. It is in the control of the provost marshal.
Frankly, in that scenario, it actually gives the provost marshal a fairly strong defence if he was criticized by tribunals or other sources to say he has a duty to do this. He can say that he is unique and that he has an operational responsibility because they are a police force that regrettably has to do investigations in war zones, for example.
One last aspect, because you mentioned the word “interference”, is not to forget that at the end of the day, if the provost marshal or any one of his folks under command feel they are actually being interfered with, they always have the option of going to the Military Police Complaints Commission and laying an interference complaint. That is another mechanism to hold everybody accountable, and it's transparent.