Canadian jurisdiction over its Northern territories
was redefined, following an April 2002 military agreement between
Ottawa and Washington. This agreement allows for the deployment
of US troops anywhere in Canada, as well as the stationing of
US warships in Canada's territorial waters.
Following the creation of US Northern Command in
April 2002, Washington announced unilaterally that NORTHCOM's
territorial jurisdiction (land, sea, air) extended from the
Caribbean basin to the Canadian arctic territories.
"The new command was given responsibility for
the continental United States, Canada, Mexico, portions of
the Caribbean and the contiguous waters in the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans up to 500 miles off the North American coastline.
NorthCom's mandate is to "provide a necessary focus for [continental]
aerospace, land and sea defenses, and critical support for
[the] nation’s civil authorities in times of national need."
(Canada-US Relations - Defense Partnership – July
2003, Canadian American Strategic Review (CASR), http://www.sfu.ca/casr/ft-lagasse1.htm
NORTHCOM's stated mandate was to "provide a necessary
focus for [continental] aerospace, land and sea defenses, and
critical support for [the] nation’s [US] civil authorities in
times of national need."
(Canada-US Relations - Defense Partnership – July
2003, Canadian American Strategic Review (CASR),
http://www.sfu.ca/casr/ft-lagasse1.htm)
(Article continues below)
Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld boasted
that "the NORTHCOM – with all of North America as its geographic
command – 'is part of the greatest transformation of the Unified
Command Plan [UCP] since its inception in 1947.'" (Ibid)
Canada and US Northern Command
In December 2002, following the refusal of (former)
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien to join US Northern Command (NORTHCOM),
an interim bi-national military authority entitled the Binational
Planning Group (BPG) was established.
Canadian membership in NORTHCOM would have implied
the integration of Canada's military command structures with
those of the US. That option had been temporarily deferred by
the Chrétien government, through the creation of the Binational
Planning Group (BPG).
The BPG's formal mandate in 2002 was to extend the
jurisdiction of the US-Canada North American Aerospace Defense
Command (NORAD) to cover sea, land and "civil forces",
"to improve current Canada–United States arrangements
to defend against primarily maritime threats to the continent
and respond to land-based attacks, should they occur."
Although never acknowledged in official documents,
the BPG was in fact established to prepare for the merger of
NORAD and NORTHCOM, thereby creating de facto conditions
for Canada to join US Northern Command.
The "Group" described as an "independent" military
authority was integrated from the outset in December 2002 into
the command structures of NORAD and NORTHCOM, both operating
out the same headquarters at the Paterson Air Force base in
Colorado. In practice, the "Group" functioned under the jurisdiction
of US Northern Command, which is controlled by the US Department
of Defense.
In December 2004, in the context of President Bush's
visit to Ottawa, it was agreed that the mandate of the BPG would
be extended to May 2006. It was understood that this extension
was intended to set the stage for Canada's membership in NORTHCOM.
In March 2006, two months before the end of its
mandate, the BPG published a task force document on North American
security issues:
"'A continental approach' to defense and security
could facilitate binational maritime domain awareness and
a combined response to potential threats, 'which transcends
Canadian and U.S. borders, domains, defense and security departments
and agencies,' (quoted in Homeland Defense watch, 20
July 2006)
The BPG task force report called for the establishment
of a "maritime mission" for NORAD including a maritime warning
system. The report acted as a blueprint for the renegotiation
of NORAD, which was implemented immediately following the release
of the report.
On April 28, 2006, an agreement negotiated behind
closed doors was signed between the US and Canada.
The renewed NORAD agreement was signed in Ottawa by the US ambassador
and the Canadian Minister of Defense Gordon O'Connor, without
prior debate in the Canadian Parliament. The House of Commons
was allowed to rubberstamp a fait accompli, an agreement which
had already been signed by the two governments.
"'A continental approach to defense and
security could facilitate binational maritime domain awareness
and a combined response to potential threats, "which transcends
Canadian and U.S. borders, domains, defense and security departments
and agencies,' the report says." (Homeland Defense Watch,
May 8, 2006)
While NORAD still exists in name, its organizational
structure coincides with that of NORTHCOM. Following the April
28, 2006 agreement, in practical terms, NORAD has been merged
into USNORTHCOM.
NORTHCOM Commander Gen. Gene
Renuart, USAF happens to be Commander of NORAD, Maj.
Gen. Paul J. Sullivan who is NORTHCOM Chief of Staff, is Chief
of Staff of NORAD.
With a exception of a token Canadian General, who
occupies the position of Deputy Commander of NORAD, the
leadership of NORAD coincides with that of NORTHCOM. (See photo
gallery below).
These two military authorities are identical in structure, they
occupy the same facilities at the Peterson Air Force base in
Colorado.
There was no official announcement of the renewed
NORAD agreement, which hands over control of Canada's territorial
waters to the US, nor was there media coverage of this far-reaching
decision.
The Deployment of US Troops on Canadian Soil
At the outset of US Northern Command in April 2002,
Canada accepted the right of the US to deploy US troops on Canadian
soil.
"U.S. troops could be deployed to Canada and Canadian
troops could cross the border into the United States if the
continent was attacked by terrorists who do not respect borders,
according to an agreement announced by U.S. and Canadian officials."
(Edmunton Sun, 11 September 2002)
With the creation of the BPG in December 2002, a
binational "Civil Assistance Plan" was established. The
latter described the precise "conditions for deploying U.S.
troops in Canada, or vice versa, in the aftermath of a terrorist
attack or natural disaster." (quoted in Inside the Army, 5 September
2005).
Canadian Sovereignty
In August 2006, the US State Department confirmed
that a new NORAD Agreement had entered into force, while emphasizing
that "the maritime domain awareness component was of 'indefinite
duration,' albeit subject to periodic review." (US Federal News,
1 August 2006). In March 2007, the US Senate Armed Services
Committee confirmed that the NORAD Agreement had been formally
renewed, to include a maritime warning system. In Canada, in
contrast, there has been a deafening silence.
In Canada, the renewed NORAD agreement went virtually unnoticed.
There was no official pronouncement by the Canadian government
of Stephen Harper. There was no analysis or commentary of its
significance and implications for Canadian territorial sovereignty.
The agreement was barely reported by the Canadian media.
Operating under a "North American" emblem (i.e.
a North American Command), the US military would have jurisdiction
over Canadian territory from coast to coast; extending from
the St Laurence Valley to the Queen Elizabeth archipelago in
the Canadian Arctic. The agreement would allow for the establishment
of "North American" military bases on Canadian territory. From
an economic standpoint, it would also integrate the Canadian
North, with its vast resources in energy and raw materials,
with Alaska.
Ottawa's Military Facility in Resolute Bay
Ottawa's July 2007 decision to establish a military
facility in Resolute Bay in the Northwest Passage was not intended
to reassert "Canadian sovereignty. In fact quite the opposite.
It was established in consultation with Washington. A deep-water
port at Nanisivik, on the northern tip of Baffin Island is also
envisaged.
The US administration is firmly behind the Canadian
government's decision. The latter does not "reassert Canadian
sovereignty". Quite the opposite. It is a means to eventually
establish US territorial control over Canada's entire Arctic
region including its waterways. This territory would eventually
fall under the jurisdiction of US Northern Command (NORTHCOM).
The Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement
(SPP)
The Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement
(SPP) signed between the US, Canada and Mexico contemplates
the formation of a North American Union (NAU), a territorial
dominion, extending from the Caribbean to the Canadian
arctic territories.
The SPP is closely related to the Binational Planning Group
initiative. An Independent Task Force sponsored by The Council
on Foreign Relations calls for the transformation of the
North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) into a "multiservice
Defense Command". The CFR document entitled "North American
Community" drafted on behalf of the SPP endorses the BPG March
2006 recommendations:
"As recommended in a report of the Canadian-U.S.
Joint Planning Group [BPG], NORAD should evolve into a multiservice
Defense Command that would expand the principle of Canadian-U.S.
joint command to land and naval as well as air forces engaged
in defending the approaches to North America. In addition,
Canada and the United States should reinforce other bilateral
defense institutions, including the Permanent Joint Board
on Defense and Joint Planning Group, and invite Mexico to
send observers.
(North American Community, Task Force documented
sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) together
with the Canadian Council of Chief Executives and the Consejo
Mexicano de Asuntos Internacionales)
The accession of Canada to this Multiservice Defense
Command, as recommended by the CFR, has already been established,
signed and sealed, approved by the Canadian Parliament in
May 2006, in the context of the renewal of the NORAD agreement.
In all likelihood, the formal merging of "the
renewed NORAD" and US NORTHCOM will be on the agenda at the
August Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement (SPP) Summit
meeting of President Bush, Prime Minister Harper and President
Calderon at Montebello, Quebec. This decision would lead to
the formation of a US-Canada NORTHCOM, with a new name, but
with substantially the same NORTHCOM rhetorical mandate of "defending
the Northern American Homeland" against terrorist attacks.
The military of both the US and Canada would also be called
to play an increasing role in civilian law enforcement activities.
The real objective underlying the SPP is to militarize
civilian institutions and repeal democratic government.
"Integration" or the "Annexation" of Canada?
Canada is contiguous to "the center of the empire".
Territorial control over Canada is part of the US geopolitical
and military agenda. It is worth recalling in this regard, that
throughout history, the "conquering nation" has expanded on
its immediate borders, acquiring control over contiguous territories.
Military integration is intimately related to the
ongoing process of integration in the spheres of trade, finance
and investment. Needless to say, a large part of the Canadian
economy is already in the hands of US corporate interests. In
turn, the interests of big business in Canada tend to coincide
with those of the US.
Canada is already a de facto economic protectorate
of the USA. NAFTA has not only opened up new avenues for
US corporate expansion, it has laid the groundwork under the
existing North American umbrella for the post 9/11 integration
of military command structures, public security, intelligence
and law enforcement.
No doubt, Canada's entry into US Northern Command
will be presented to public opinion as part of Canada-US "cooperation",
as something which is "in the national interest", which "will
create jobs for Canadians", and "will make Canada more secure".
Ultimately what is at stake is that beneath the
rhetoric, Canada will cease to function as a Nation:
-Its borders will be controlled by US officials
and confidential information on Canadians will be shared with
Homeland Security.
-US troops and Special Forces will be able to
enter Canada as a result of a binational arrangement.
-Canadian citizens can be arrested by US officials,
acting on behalf of their Canadian counterparts and vice versa.
But there is something perhaps even more fundamental
in defining and understanding where Canada and Canadians stand
as nation.
By endorsing a Canada-US "integration" in the spheres
of defense, homeland security, police and intelligence, Canada
not remains a full fledged member of George W. Bush's "Coalition
of the Willing", it will directly participate, through integrated
military command structures, in the US war agenda in Central
Asia and the Middle East, including the massacre of civilians
in Iraq and Afghanistan, the torture of POWs, the establishment
of concentration camps, etc.
Canada would no longer have an independent foreign
policy. Under an integrated North American Command, a North
American national security doctrine would be formulated. Canada
would be obliged to embrace Washington's pre-emptive military
doctrine, its bogus "war on terrorism which is used as a pretext
for waging war in the Middle East. .
The Canadian judicial system would be affected.
Moreover, binational integration in the areas of Homeland security,
immigration, policing of the US-Canada border, not to mention
the anti-terrorist legislation, would imply pari passu acceptance
of the US sponsored police State, its racist policies, its "ethnic
profiling" directed against Muslims, the arbitrary arrest of
anti-war activists.