Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you for for inviting me to comment on the impact of Canada's procurement process on the forces.
Put simply, the cumulative effect on the productive output of the Canadian Armed Forces ranges between “needs dramatic improvement” to “awful”.
For the small stuff and relatively simple items, the procurement process is slow, complicated and hugely bureaucratic, but it works—if there's sufficient money and people to get it done. For the major capabilities, the heart of the armed forces, in terms of equipment, such as ships, aircraft, tanks, army weapons, the current procurement process is broken and in a state of crisis.
The productive output of the armed forces can be measured by how ready they are to do the hard and dangerous stuff we ask of them—from war fighting, to peacekeeping, to deterrence, to domestic response. To be ready, the forces need to have an appropriate policy from government. They need suitable funding. They need the appropriate people, infrastructure, equipment and training. That, in turn, is essentially based on, in this case, the 2017 “Strong, Secure, Engaged”, which, by the way, reads really well, but almost none of its many promises and goals have been met, and none of its detailed and rigorously developed financial models have been realized.
We recently heard from Dr. Perry and Mr. Williams. We all now know there is a dramatic and enormous difference between what was actually promised and what has been delivered to the forces in terms of billions of dollars that should have been spent on equipment and capability, which has not.
Even if DND gets the promised money, they can't seem to spend it on the big things that really matter. Process, process, process and more process is choking the ability to get things done. Delays are expensive, by the way. They impact increased costs due to inflation or supply chain fragility. Here we are: The price of delay is the cost of failure. DND can never keep up with the failures in the defence procurement process. What does this mean?
In terms of defence in Canada, NORAD is essentially underfunded. A variety of big promises have been made for years into the future, but there's this huge gap to which we should have been contributing for the last decade. Our Arctic is undefended. There is no permanently established major equipment types that we can find in our Arctic that are Canadian.
Domestic response to fires and floods is increasing, yet the troops don't have the equipment or even the capacity in terms of numbers to respond adequately.
In the UN, we used to have thousands deployed on peacekeeping missions, which, by the way, Canada co-invented. As of now, checking the UN's stats, we have 27 military personnel deployed on UN missions, one-half of a school bus.
With NATO, we were supposed to send a battle group on short notice should there be cause to do so, which there is, by the way—let's not forget what Russia is doing, those atrocities in Ukraine. It took us months to send a couple of hundred. We're supposed to send a brigade group and command it. It still hasn't left.
In terms of international peace and security, good work should be done in the Indo-Pacific region with China wrestling its might. We have yet to do so. We are sending more ships, so we'll temporarily have three there, which is a huge accomplishment, but those ships are incredibly old.
There are billions of dollars that should have been spent on infrastructure and training facilities which have not been spent. It's been allowed to lapse or disappear.
In terms of the equipment, the navy still doesn't have its new warship contract signed. It's been decades in the making. Our submarines were built in the 1980s. Our maritime patrol aircraft are far older than the average crew. New weapons, such as torpedoes and missiles, are lacking.
In the army, new rocket or missile launchers, which are being used to such good effect by Ukraine, are coming from elsewhere, trying to stop the Russians. New artillery guns, air defence systems, low-level, medium and high, supply vehicles in the air force, new fighters.... There are contracts announced, but I don't see any fighters on the ramp.
I guess this gets to the idea that making the announcement is not enough. You actually have to get it done.
What's the result? What does it mean? Our procurement system, in my opinion, for the major capital Crown is failed.
I would be delighted to give ideas on how to address these issues during the question period.
Thank you for your attention.