Mr. Chair, members, thank you for your invitation.
I'll be speaking in English, but I can answer your questions in the official language of your choice.
Picture the following scenario. China wants to fire a shot across the proverbial bow, but instead of targeting U.S. infrastructure, which would risk drawing a strong response, China targets a Canadian satellite. China has several capabilities to do so, including anti-satellite missiles and a robotic arm, which China demonstrated in 2022 it can use to move a satellite out of geosynchronous orbit. Would this constitute an attack on the continent, on Canada or on NATO? The space domain falls outside of the transatlantic theatre.
Canada needs clear and definitive answers to these questions to deter malign actors with the capabilities, intent and demonstrated will to target Canadian and allied assets in space. Deterrence also depends on a qualitative overmatch of adversarial capabilities, and space depends on Canada's ability to conduct multidomain warfare.
All that presents a formidable challenge for CAF readiness and capabilities.
In real dollars, today's CAF has roughly as much funding at its disposal as it did at the end of the Cold War, and the staff contingent is about one-third smaller, yet its tasks have vastly expanded, in part because it now has two additional domains. In addition to land, sea and air, it has cyber and space. In a globally integrated threat environment, cyber and space are highly dynamic domains that are integral to the four core functions of DND, which are reassuring allies and citizens, deterring conflict, being able to fight and protecting Canadians.
Canadian civilian and military communications, national security and a wide array of civilian and military functions and operations depend on space. This is especially true in the north and in the Arctic, which are disproportionately dependent on space capabilities.
China has deployed anti-access and area denial systems along its archipelago. Canada must do likewise in the Arctic. That's because the Arctic has a critical vulnerability, where A2/AD is heavily dependent on space assets. In other words, space defence is Arctic defence, Arctic defence is continental defence and continental defence is allied defence, because it secures extended deterrence, including extended nuclear deterrence.
Canada's a regional partner anchor for the Arctic, and Canada's ability to defend NATO's northern flank ultimately depends on space. Adversaries understand this, which is precisely why malign actors are actively challenging our ability to dominate and control the space domain. In other words, strategic rivalry is on full display in space, and whoever controls space is bound to control the 21st century.
There are four key takeaways.
First, if the government is actually serious about a values-based foreign policy, then Canada should be joining the ongoing U.S. effort to bolster the outer space treaty, to which both Russia and China are signatories. This established, functional regime's deterioration or abrogation would run fundamentally counter to Canada's values and interests.
Canada must support approaches that regulate not just space capabilities, but also how these capabilities are used. Canada must make multilateral space diplomacy a top priority. In years to come, there will be two new UN open-ended working groups, with one for each approach.
Second, Canada needs a whole-of-government approach to space to forge a coherent national strategy. However, with limited resources, the execution of a space defence strategy requires Canada to double down on collaboration with allies and the private sector. See the “Combined Space Operations Vision 2031”, which is the Five Eyes effort with France and Germany that was submitted to the committee. Our space policy framework dates back to 2014.
Third, space is a prime example of why cultural evolution matters to the CAF. When the U.S. stood up Space Command, it was quite unlike other commands. Its institutional culture is flat and it recruited from other services. Space Command is heavily civilian because the skill sets required are not really found in the military.
Fourth, modern militaries cannot operate without space technologies, capabilities and data. In the event of a conflict, Canadian space defence capabilities will afford allies strategic depth and have a key multiplier effect on allies. Canada's support to Ukraine in the form of geostrategic intelligence is one indication.