Canada's Security Net Full of Holes
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Dec. 15, 2004
TORONTO Canada's security net is full of holes, with most
border crossings guarded by a lone staffer and airport security so
lax that missing security badges and uniforms recently turned up
for sale on eBay.
A new Senate security report calls for reform, a boost in
defense spending and improved cooperation with the United States.
Canadians have relied too long on luck to avoid a terrorist attack,
it says, scolding: "Unfortunately, luck is notoriously
untrustworthy."
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The 315-page report by the Senate Standing Committee on National
Security and Defense, the first released under the year-old
government of Prime Minister Paul Martin, said most of Canada's 160
land and maritime border crossings have only one person at the
posts.
"The potential damage to the Canadian economy and other
consequences that would come with allowing a terrorist to
infiltrate the U.S. through Canada are massive," the report said.
Securing the 4,000-mile border is paramount, to prevent
terrorist attacks and protect some $1.4 billion in trade each day
between the North American neighbors.
'Absolute Disaster'
"All it would take is a serious terrorist incident, caused by
someone slipping through Canada, to shut down the border, and that
would be an absolute disaster," said Robert Bothwell, a professor
at the University of Toronto who specializes in U.S.-Canadian
relations.
The report, which some are calling alarmist and ineffectual, as
it comes from the politically appointed upper house of parliament,
noted that Canadian forces have been hit with budget cuts of about
30 percent between 1988 and 2000.
"Despite NATO's recent expansions, Canada remains mired
third-last among the 26 member countries, ahead of only Luxembourg
and Iceland," the report said. Iceland has no armed forces.
Canada promised to spend $6.2 billion over five years to improve
border security after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United
States. The measures include better screening at the 89 federal
airports, but critics say little has improved.
More than 1,000 airport security uniforms and badges disappeared
in the first nine months of the year, some turning up later on the
eBay online auction site. Transport Minister Jean Lapierre ordered
an investigation into the disappearance of the uniforms and badges,
which are required to gain access to restricted areas.
Though many Canadians and foreigners complain about long lines
and delays due to security checks at Pearson International Airport
near Toronto, the report concluded all checked baggage is not being
comprehensively screened for explosives.
"Given that terrorists have proven themselves willing to commit
suicide in order to achieve their goals, more rigorous inspection
of checked baggage is required," it said.
According to the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority,
explosives detection systems have been deployed at most of Canada's
largest airports, and the authority has pledged all checked baggage
will be screened by year's end. The Senate committee, however, said
it would take at least another year before that happens.
'Toothless'
The coast guard, meanwhile, is a "toothless" agency that is
unarmed and reports to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, the
report said.
"Despite its name, the coast guard doesn't play a serious role
in guarding our coasts," the senators said, recommending the
agency answer to the Department of National Defense for security
assignments.
Wesley Wark, a University of Toronto professor who is one of
Canada's leading academic experts on security and intelligence,
acknowledges the report paints a bleak scenario.
But he said the committee hoped to push the Martin
administration to keep up the momentum on security issues and
prevent Canadians from becoming too complacent about their own
safety.
'Slightly Alarmist'
"They need to paint things in slightly alarmist hues in order
to grab the Canadian public," Wark said. "With the growing
criticism of the Bush White House foreign policy and the increasing
sense that the whole policy of the war on terror is misguided and
in error, it becomes increasingly difficult for Canadians to
understand the need for national security spending."
He said there had been vast improvements in security relations
between Washington and Ottawa, including cross-border security
meetings and establishment of the Smart Border plan, which allows
the legitimate flow of goods and people across the shared frontier.
Tom Ridge, outgoing U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security, will
meet with his Canadian counterpart, Anne McLellan, in Detroit on
Friday to discuss areas of cooperation.
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