Thank you, Mr. Chair. It's a pleasure to be here and take part in these important discussions.
My research and expertise lie in the field of Arctic defence, safety and security, and it's in that area that I would like to offer some comments.
Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Canada has been forced to reconsider its national security situation. Given the proximity of our Arctic to Russia's, the north has naturally featured heavily in these discussions.
The first point I would like to make is that in considering the Arctic defence and security dynamic, the committee should keep in mind that there is no such thing as an Arctic defence and security dynamic. One can no more speak of Arctic security than Asian or African security with any precision. The Arctic is a big place, and the different sub-regions must be viewed through very different lenses.
While the European Arctic is absolutely seeing a resurgence of hard security threats, I would caution the committee not to see these as common circumpolar dangers. Simply put, the Russian threat to the Arctic is largely confined to the European Arctic now and for the foreseeable future. Discussions of stationing Canadian forces in the north or of adding more combat capability to defend the Canadian Arctic miss the point and risk stranding resources in a region that is not the centre of gravity of this new geostrategic contest. This assessment stems not from any naive belief that Canada's Arctic is somehow detached from global security; rather, a simple survey of the Canadian Arctic raises the question of what, if any, strategic value a Russian attack could achieve.
This is not to say that there is no military dimension to the Canadian Arctic. The region has long been an avenue through which the Soviets—now Russians—may project power. Ballistic and cruise missiles, as well as submarines, could use the Arctic as a transit route to hit critical infrastructure further south or to strike at the Atlantic sea lanes of communication.
Given this threat, new investments should be made to upgrade NORAD's aerospace and maritime detection capabilities, and I know the government is already looking at those options. I also know that other witnesses have provided analysis and recommendations in this area, so I won't belabour the point.
What is needed to augment Canadian Arctic safety, security and defence is not, therefore, a ground military presence, or even a military guard against Russia per se, rather a more comprehensive system of surveillance and situational awareness. The renovation of Canada's aerospace surveillance to detect Russian bombers and cruise missiles is a part of that.
However, the threat to the north is now far more complex than it was when either the DEW line or the north warning system was developed. As Canada works with the United States to augment and expand NORAD's capabilities in the region, what we need now is all-domain awareness. That means tracking not just incoming weapons systems but also illegal fishing vessels, trespassing craft and other hybrid threats. The Arctic is opening up, and an ice-free or ice-reduced future means that more activity must be monitored and policed. These threats span the safety, security and defence spectrum, and while Russian hypersonic weapons pose the most dire threat, their deployment is unlikely. Meanwhile, illegal fishing by, for instance, Chinese state-backed fleets or trespassing by criminal organizations is less dangerous but far more likely to emerge.
Canada has important elements of this all-domain system already. There's the RADARSAT constellation, a growing fleet of navy and Coast Guard icebreakers and patrol ships, and the ongoing DRDC efforts to build choke point surveillance and above-ice and under-ice detection systems. These are dispersed assets that can be tied together into a bigger picture as part of this effort.
What this means is that the renewal of NORAD's capabilities in the north must be all-domain, looking at aerospace, maritime and even under-ice detection and monitoring. These systems have been under development in various stages for decades, but there has never been a concerted push to realize a system of systems. The Russian threat to use the Arctic as an avenue of approach is real. So too is China's emerging Arctic interest. Coupled with the increasing accessibility of the Arctic Ocean and Canada's internal and territorial waters, the time to take a holistic view of northern surveillance has clearly arrived.
This is only a very basic overview, of course, but I'm certainly happy to take questions.