bobbymike

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Pentagon Issues First Arctic Strategy

The Pentagon issued its first Arctic strategy, laying out how the US military will work to promote security, stewardship, and international cooperation in the region. "This strategy identifies the department's desired end-state for the Arctic: a secure and stable region where US national interests are safeguarded, the US homeland is protected, and nations work cooperatively to address challenges," reads the executive summary of the document, which DOD released on Nov. 22. The strategy, based on the Obama Administration's broader 2013 National Strategy for the Arctic Region, notes that "the Arctic is at a strategic inflection point as its ice cap is diminishing more rapidly than projected and human activity, driven by economic opportunity . . . is increasing in response to the growing accessibility." These developments "present a compelling opportunity" for DOD to work with allies and partners to promote human and environmental security there, states the summary. "It is the responsibility of every Arctic nation—and all nations who have interests there—to work together to build a peaceful and secure region," said Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel in a Nov. 22 speech in Halifax, Canada, introducing the strategy. (Arctic Strategy; caution, large-sized file.) (Hagel transcript)
 


Regards,
 
Canada’s new prime minister, Mark Carney, announced a C$6bn (£3.2bn) deal with Australia to develop a military radar system in the Arctic capable of detecting hypersonic missiles amid increasing security threats from the Donald Trumpadministration.

Mr Carney warned that Canada’s adversaries were “increasingly emboldened” while its closest ally, the US, was shifting priorities.
 
Re: reply #3, no-one at Davie seems to have twigged that ICE Pact is dead in the water. Still, there's nothing to stop Davie from shopping their Polar Max heavy icebreaker design to the USCG.

Well, nothing other than the potential loss of a CAD 3.25 billion contract in hand (is it dog and bone reflection time?). Oh ... and a much reduced chance of any further Ottawa bail-outs when Davie goes bankrupt for the nth time.
 

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