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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

HMCS Charlottetown


This is the kind of thing we need to keep working on in a post Afghan conflict......

We are a strong middle power that has the moral authority to go to places like Libya and help out as well as use force when we need to.  We also have to look at military budget cuts and are they the right thing to do in this world where countries balance on tinderboxes of freedom loving youths.
Strong armies, strong navies and strong airforces are needed during these uncertain times.
A Sea King helicopter escorts HMCS Charlottetown on the waterfront in Halifax on Wednesday, May 7, 2008 after it returned from a six-month tour of the Persian Gulf. The Canadian navy is sendingHMCS Charlottetown to the waters off Libya, adding to the international military buildup in the region. THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Andrew Vaughan
HMCS Charlottetown

OTTAWA - Canada will send a warship to Libya, adding to the international military buildup in the region, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Tuesday.
The Halifax-based frigate, HMCS Charlottetown, is expected to conduct as-yet-undefined humanitarian relief operations in conjunction with an American carrier battle group led by the nuclear-powered USS Enterprise.
Harper said the warship will depart Wednesday.
"I am proud that the Charlottetown will rapidly be joining Canadian and allied forces to participate in this effort in Libya," Harper told the House of Commons.
News of the short-notice deployment came on the same day as a Canadian military Hercules transport, en route to pick up stranded oil workers, was turned back from Libya.
The British have used one of their frigates — HMS Cumberland — to evacuate its citizens from the port city of Benghazi.
A spokesman for the Ottawa-based overseas headquarters confirmed an air force C-130J Hercules was waved off its mission on Tuesday about half way between Malta and the troubled north African nation.
The transport was headed into Tripoli.
"The reason for the denial is apparently due to a shortage of ramp space at Tripoli International Airport," said Maj. Andre Salloum, spokesman for Canadian Forces Expeditionary Command.
It's the latest in a string of setbacks for the Canadian evacuation effort.
A Canadian C-17 military transport was last week denied landing rights in Libya and sat on the tarmac in Rome before beginning flights over the weekend.
And at least two civilian aircraft chartered by the Foreign Affairs Department left the chaotic north African country with no passengers.
The empty Hercules, one of the newer models purchased by the Conservative government, has returned to Malta where the air force has stationed one other C-130 and two giant C-17 transport planes.
Salloum said another flight is scheduled for Wednesday.
A spokesman for Defence Minister Peter MacKay defended the government's efforts.
"Our government's priority remains the safe evacuation of Canadians from Libya," said Jay Paxton.
"Canada's military aircraft have made trips into Libya to deliver supplies and rescue Canadian and other citizens. Those flights continue."
A military reconnaissance team and combat medics are also in Malta, evaluating what else the military can deploy to aid in the evacuations.
It's not clear what company employed the oil workers the Hercules was trying to evacuate.
The federal government has already evacuated citizens as well as a number of foreign nationals. Ottawa closed its embassy in Tripoli a few days ago and has set up a satellite diplomatic post in Malta.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper was on the telephone Tuesday with his counterpart in Malta, Lawrence Gonzi, and thanked him for hosting Canadian Forces.
A spokesman for the prime minister, Dimitri Soudas, said the two leaders also talked about the need to further deter violence by the Libyan regime against its own citizens.
Foreign Affairs Lawrence Cannon told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva that the world must focus on the unfolding "humanitarian crisis" and said Canada was willing to provide assistance. But he didn't say what form that assistance would take.
Calgary-based Suncor Energy has the biggest Canadian commercial presence in Libya, but said a statement last week that most of its expatriate staff and their families had left the country.
Pure Technologies, also based in Calgary, is said to be organizing to get its staff to safety.

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