Vanguard Magazine

Vanguard DecJan_2017

Preserving capacity, General Tom Lawson, Chief of the Defence Staff, Keys to Canadian SAR

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a arctIc 28 DECEMBER 2016/JANUARY 2017 www.vanguardcanada.com arCtiC ports for Canadian sea power part 1 by timothy choi Should their potential be fully embraced, ports will provide Canada with a significant source of new-found sea power in the Arctic. s ea power is the ability to influence events at sea or from the sea, and consists of in- puts (the sources of power) and outputs (what that power accomplishes). Tradi- tionally, Canadian sea power inputs have been focused primarily around the seagoing vessels of the Royal Cana- dian Navy and Coast Guard, with little emphasis on another major physical element of sea power: ports. This fact echoes the literature on sea power in general, which is also lacking in conceptualizing the roles ports play in the modern world. In the century since maritime strategy giants Alfred Thayer Mahan and Sir Julien S. Corbett wrote their masterworks on the subject, the roles of ports have expanded beyond those authors' early conceptualizations. Ports have acquired functions beyond serving as bases for naval forces and for enabling the transfer of goods between ship and land; they are also nodes for search and rescue, as well as providing environmental pro- tection. These new roles, should their potential be fully embraced, will provide Canada with a significant source of new-found sea power in the Arctic. At the heart of this is the idea that maritime strategy should encompass activities beyond those strictly related to the accumulation of econom- ic power and the application of coercive naval force to achieve political

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