Sunday, January 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Budget office's duelling estimate for Canada's war in Iraq? $122M to $166M

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Feb, 2015 10:43 AM

    OTTAWA — Canada's parliamentary budget officer was largely stonewalled in his efforts to put a price tag on the combat mission in Iraq, prompting the fiscal watchdog to call for changes to the law that governs his agency.

    Jean-Denis Frechette's latest report, released Tuesday, says cost of the current combat mission against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant likely falls somewhere between $128 million and $166 million.

    Should the mission be extended to 12 months, as expected, the cost would balloon to anywhere from $242.71 million to $351.27 million, the report says.

    Frechette was forced to produce a range of dollar figures because the Department of National Defence imposed cabinet secrecy on cost estimates and barred PBO staff from briefings given to defence academics and insiders.

    Budget office analysts compiled their figures using open-source data from previous missions, such as the Libya bombing campaign, and U.S. figures for ammunition.

    The wide-ranging estimate was compiled at the request of opposition MPs after the Harper government refused to release its own figures — something Defence Minister Jason Kenney finally did Monday, with the PBO report looming.

    Kenney pegged the cost of Canada's bombing campaign and special forces deployment at $122 million for the current budget year, which ends in March.

    But since those numbers have yet to be tabled in Parliament, it's unclear how they were compiled, said Frechette.

    Budget office officials accuse the government of practising "selective transparency," citing Monday's 11th-hour release of the government's own estimate — a move that Frechette admitted left him taken aback.

    "I think it was bizarre timing," he said.

    "In the morning, you know, the PBO very transparently announces we will publish our report today. All of a sudden, in the afternoon, the number was released by the department, by the minister. Good or bad timing, I don't know."

    The budget office is normally entitled to see financial and economic data in order to compile its reports, but National Defence argued that the Iraq information, aside from being a cabinet secret, fell beyond the watchdog's mandate.

    "You know, you have to be really narrow-minded, really strict in terms of your interpretation, if you want to always, always say that the data we're asking for is not economic or financial," Frechette said.

    "That is why Parliament will have to look at it, and look at the legislation."

    The speakers of both the House of Commons and the Senate are aware of the problem and have written to the joint committee overseeing the budget office asking for an investigation, he added.

    Budget office staff also note that once information is declare a cabinet secret, it remains sealed for 20 years and the only way to challenge the decision is to go to court.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Baird blasts African Union for choosing brutal dictator Mugabe as new chair

    Baird blasts African Union for choosing brutal dictator Mugabe as new chair
    OTTAWA — Canada is aiming sharp criticism at the African Union for appointing Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe as its new chairman.

    Baird blasts African Union for choosing brutal dictator Mugabe as new chair

    GardaWorld offering $100,000 for information about latest attack on its agents

    GardaWorld offering $100,000 for information about latest attack on its agents
    MONTREAL — Security company GardaWorld is offering $100,000 to anyone with information about the latest in a string of attacks against its agents in Quebec.

    GardaWorld offering $100,000 for information about latest attack on its agents

    Kinder Morgan Stops Pursuing B.C. Court Action Against Anti-Pipeline Protesters

    Kinder Morgan Stops Pursuing B.C. Court Action Against Anti-Pipeline Protesters
    BURNABY, B.C. — Kinder Morgan says it will not continue court action against protesters who demonstrated against the proposed expansion of a pipeline while survey crews drilled on Burnaby Mountain.

    Kinder Morgan Stops Pursuing B.C. Court Action Against Anti-Pipeline Protesters

    IKEA Canada's President Talks Business, Furniture Assembly And Winter

    IKEA Canada's President Talks Business, Furniture Assembly And Winter
    TORONTO — Ikea Canada's new president has an eye towards expansion in 2015 but is not saying whether the Swedish furniture giant will add to its 12 Canadian stores or open pickup locations.

    IKEA Canada's President Talks Business, Furniture Assembly And Winter

    Former Quebec union boss sentenced to 12 months for faking, inflating bills

    Former Quebec union boss sentenced to 12 months for faking, inflating bills
    MONTREAL — The former leader of one of Quebec's main construction unions was sentenced Friday to a year in jail after previously being convicted of faking and inflating bills worth more than $63,000.

    Former Quebec union boss sentenced to 12 months for faking, inflating bills

    Ottawa sues law firm for alleged legal fee fraud in residential schools case

    Ottawa sues law firm for alleged legal fee fraud in residential schools case
    REGINA — The federal government is suing a Saskatchewan law firm, alleging lawyers fraudulently over billed for their work with victims of Indian residential schools.

    Ottawa sues law firm for alleged legal fee fraud in residential schools case