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Benefits as Canada Cancels its High Tech Radar Program and Believed Monitoring Drug and Gun running by the island nations enemiesBy Rangajeeva RajakarunaCanadas National Post newspaper said a high tech radar capable
of monitoring small boats operated by drug dealers and terrorists developed
with Canadian tax dollars is now being installed in Sri Lanka since
the Canadian government decided to discard it from their shores. The radar system , is installed to monitor the drug and gun running
of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), it is believed Publishing the news under Cancelled Canadian radar program is Sri Lankas
gain the newspaper said, The high-frequency surface wave radar,
developed at a cost of $39-million by Ottawa defence scientists and
Raytheon Canada Limited, had been hailed several years ago by federal
officials as the only one of its kind in the world and a major boost
for domestic security. The following is the full story the National Post published: A high-tech radar capable of monitoring small boats operated
by drug dealers and terrorists and developed with Canadian tax dollars
is being installed in Sri Lanka after the federal government decided
it couldn't use the system. The high-frequency surface wave radar, developed at a cost of
$39-million by Ottawa defence scientists and Raytheon Canada Limited,
had been hailed several years ago by federal officials as the only one
of its kind in the world and a major boost for domestic security. The federal government set aside $43-million to build and operate
eight radar sites on the East and West Coasts as part of its push to
improve security in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks
on the U.S. But the government has shut down the existing experimental radar
sites in Newfoundland and the program has been cancelled. The project
was derailed after one complaint was received that the radar interfered
with civilian communications. The experimental radars had been operating
for 10 years without a complaint. But Raytheon Canada, which builds the high-frequency surface
wave radar, is pushing ahead with marketing the system to other nations.
It has sold the radar to Sri Lanka with the help of the Canadian Commercial
Corporation, a Crown agency that helps firms market their products overseas.
Other international customers are being lined up, said Raytheon Canada
vice president Denny Roberts. "The technology works," said Mr. Roberts. "Other countries
don't seem to have a problem with it." In the past the State Department has prevented sales of Canadian
defence products to other countries by citing regulations that can limit
where equipment with U.S.-made parts might be sold. Other nations besides Sri Lanka have expressed an interest in
purchasing the radar. The information gathered by the radar network was to have been
fed into the navy's surveillance centres in Halifax and Esquimalt, B.C.
and shared with various federal agencies. The technology had not been fully exploited in the aftermath
of the war, but with recent advances in computer processing, scientists
from Defence Research and Development Canada's Ottawa laboratories decided
to revisit the idea. DRDC Ottawa, one of the Defence Department's research branches,
played a key role in developing the new radar system. The system transmits high-frequency waves that follow the curvature
of the Earth to detect and track objects hundreds of kilometres over
the horizon. Regular radars are restricted to objects in their line
of sight on the horizon. To gain its advantage, the high-frequency surface
wave radar uses the ocean as a conducting surface to increase its range. Industry officials said that the government may fund a research
program in the coming months to try to work on getting the radars operating
for Canadian use. The Canadian navy had been hoping the radars would cut down on
surveillance costs, in particular the flying time of Aurora maritime
patrol planes. The radar could be used to pinpoint suspicious ships,
after which Aurora aircraft could be directed to those vessels to conduct
further surveillance. |
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