Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Anti-F-35 campaign about to resume

After a week in which Canadians spent more time than usual commemorating ancient wars, it should be pointed out that renewed battles are looming over preparations for our next conflict.

Commons committees will soon resume sitting again up in Ottawa. That means the opposition’s attacks on Canadian defence spending will also be gearing up, especially the campaign to halt the controversial F-35 fighter program.
The attacks on the federal government’s national shipbuilding program haven’t been as sustained as the endless denigration of the jet purchase. Maybe that’s because most of the $35 billion Ottawa is budgeting for navy and coast guard ships will be spent within Canadian borders.
It’s the $14.7 billion they intend to spend on the F-35 fighter jet program (or $16 billion or $18 billion, depending on who you believe — or $29.3 billion or even $35 billion if you fold 30 years of parts and maintenance into the price tag) that really gets the official NDP Opposition’s goat. Man, they hate the idea.

The replacement plan for Canada’s aging F-18 fleet was the controversy the NDP used to spark the last federal election. In the last two years barely a week has passed in which the F-35 program has not been in the news, and only a few of those reports have been positive.
Two weeks ago we heard Lockheed-Martin had conducted the first bombing test run with one of the 40 models of the F-35 already flying, and it worked. A vertical-take-off version of the fighter — not the kind Canada wants to buy — successfully released a half-tonne smart bomb, which hit its target.
Other than that story, which ran in some but by no means all Canadian news outlets, the tone of the news coverage of the jet purchase has been an unrelenting drumbeat of criticism from the day the Liberals were no longer responsible for it (buying them was their idea, initially).
Polls have shown Canadians are generally in favour of increased spending on the military, and we like the idea of keeping up to date with new ships and helicopters and tanks and the rest of it. But the anti- F-35 campaign seems to be souring us on the idea of buying the new jets.
Last week I had the chance to ask Conservative MP Chris Alexander, the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Defence, about the much-maligned fighter program.
Alexander hadn’t yet heard about the successful bombing run. But he pointed out another piece of good news about the F-35 that has also gone largely unreported:
“Japan came on board this month. That didn’t get much attention either because it doesn’t match the Opposition’s agenda.” Japan agreed July 2 to buy four F-35s at a cost of $750 million, including simulators and parts.
Japan decided the new jet’s stealth capabilities and maneuverability were worth paying $3.7 million more per unit than they had agreed to nearly a year ago. And it still intends to buy 38 more of the jets if they like the performance of the first four.
Critics have made much of the fact that the estimated cost of the F-35 jets has risen by many millions each since the program began more than a decade ago as a secretive experimental design. Some European partners in the international development consortium say they may buy fewer planes because of the price increase, and some could drop out.
Alexander predicts the F-35 will become even more controversial this fall as the U.S. presidential election heats up and the two sides start hurling accusations of their own about the gigantic program, the most expensive in American history at a cost estimated at up to $1.45 trillion.
“It’s a unique project for the U.S., too — it’s replacing five of their current models of aircraft,” Alexander points out. The final Canadian decision to commit to the F-35 has not yet been made by the current government, he says (a claim the opposition refutes).
The final buy won’t be OKed until further studies and audits are complete and the government is convinced all procurement rules have been followed.
Ottawa’s recent equipment purchases of trucks, tanks and heavy lift planes show that its defence buying “has improved considerably” from the days when we bought old submarines that wouldn’t work, Alexander contends.
That doesn’t mean the NDP’s hatred of the F-35 project is going to abate. But another event this fall could take the sting out of their attacks, it occurred to me long after my conversation with Alexander.
It’s starting to look as though Quebecers might elect another separatist provincial government when they go to the polls in two weeks.
Most of the Opposition’s MPs hail from Quebec, where the majority of voters have historically been as anti-military as the NDP have been.
A new separatist regime in Quebec City would be a big headache for Prime Minister Stephen Harper. But it would also neutralize the opposition’s biggest complaint about his government.
Who in the rest of Canada will listen to separatist complaints about a jet program they don’t intend to help pay for?

Original Article
Source: windsor star
Author: Chris Vander Doelen

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