Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
International

U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2015 01:24 PM
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is preparing to ask that new sensors be installed in the Canadian Arctic that would be able to track different types of incoming missiles.
     
    A senior defence official said Tuesday the request is being made to U.S. policy leaders — as well as the Canadian government. He said it's too early in the process to set a target date.
     
    "I don't think we have a timetable just yet," said Admiral William Gortney, the head of the Canada-U.S. Norad program and of Northern Command — the Colorado-based body with tracking responsibility for the U.S. missile-defence program.
     
    "We're just now bringing it up through our policy leaders as well as with the Canadian government."
     
    He told a news conference at the Pentagon that it's nearly time to replace the aging sensors in the Canada-U.S. North Warning System, along the old Arctic distant early warning line, the Cold War-era DEW Line.
     
    He said he'd prefer to replace them with newer technology that could not only see farther over the horizon, but also be able to track shorter-range cruise missiles.
     
    "In a few years — I'd say 10 years is the number — (the current equipment is) going to reach a point of obsolescence and we're going to have to reinvest for that capability," Gortney said. 
     
    "The question is, what sort of technology do we want to use to reconstitute that capability? We don't want to put in the same sorts of sensors because they're not effective against the low-altitude, say, cruise missiles. They can't see over the horizon."
     
    The U.S. military has in the past voiced a hope for more versatile sensors in the Arctic — and Gortney's remarks now suggest that a more formal request is in the works.
     
    The new sensors would presumably be integrated into the U.S. missile-defence program, which Canada refused to join a decade ago while continuing to play a role in monitoring the airspace with the U.S. at Norad.
     
    The Canadian government says it's reviewing Canada's half-in-half-out role in missile defence. But Defence Minister Jason Kenney recently said the government was waiting to see a review from the House of Commons Defence committee and hadn't changed its position in the meantime.
     
    As for new sensors in the Arctic, Kenney spokeswoman Lauren Armstrong said Tuesday: "We are constantly reviewing Canada's security and defence requirements but no decisions have been taken."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    RCMP Investigating After 18-year-old Woman Assaulted On UBC Campus

    RCMP Investigating After 18-year-old Woman Assaulted On UBC Campus
    VANCOUVER — Police are warning the public to be vigilant after an 18-year-old was assaulted on campus at the University of British Columbia.

    RCMP Investigating After 18-year-old Woman Assaulted On UBC Campus

    Jordanian Woman Accused Of Molesting Indian Man In Dubai

    Jordanian Woman Accused Of Molesting Indian Man In Dubai
    The 23-year-old Indian man was said to have entered the lift of his office, according to his prosecution statement, when the 32-year-old Jordanian woman molested him

    Jordanian Woman Accused Of Molesting Indian Man In Dubai

    How 'No English,' 'Indian,' 'Walking,' Grandfather Was Assaulted

    How 'No English,' 'Indian,' 'Walking,' Grandfather Was Assaulted
    The lawyer of an Indian grandfather who was assaulted by an Alabama police officer leaving him partially paralysed has in an amended lawsuit detailed how his repeated attempts to explain went in vain.

    How 'No English,' 'Indian,' 'Walking,' Grandfather Was Assaulted

    America's Desi Power Players: Obama Taps Indian Americans To Fix Things At Home And Abroad

    America's Desi Power Players: Obama Taps Indian Americans To Fix Things At Home And Abroad
    President Barack Obama, with the largest number of Indian Americans in his administration, keeps dipping into the expanding talent pool of the three million-strong Indian American community, to take care of issues ranging from combating terrorist propaganda abroad to nation's health at home.

    America's Desi Power Players: Obama Taps Indian Americans To Fix Things At Home And Abroad

    Gandhi Statue To Be Unveiled In Britain's Parliament Square

    Gandhi Statue To Be Unveiled In Britain's Parliament Square
    A statue of Mahatma Gandhi will be unveiled in Britain's prestigeous Parliament Square in London next month, a media report said Monday.

    Gandhi Statue To Be Unveiled In Britain's Parliament Square

    Why Does Obama Avoid Mentioning 'Islamic' Terrorism? Ask Bush's Speechwriter

    Why Does Obama Avoid Mentioning 'Islamic' Terrorism? Ask Bush's Speechwriter
    WASHINGTON - Why is President Barack Obama so hesitant to talk about Islamic extremism — the question is being raised repeatedly these days by many of his Republican opponents who accuse him of chronic political correctness or, worse, of softness on terrorism.

    Why Does Obama Avoid Mentioning 'Islamic' Terrorism? Ask Bush's Speechwriter