Canada has spent an extra $24 billion beefing up security measures since the Sept. 11 attacks on U.S. soil, CBC News estimates.
The federal government has never revealed the costs of extra
security precautions taken after the 2001 attacks, but CBC calculated
the multibillion-dollar figure by tallying budgets from various
departments and interviewing sources familiar with defence-related
spending.
Domestic security accounted for the largest portion of expenditures
at around $15 billion. That amount includes costs such as paying
domestic airlines to outfit planes with reinforced doors on pilots'
cabins and installing high-tech detection scanners at ports and land
crossings.
An increase in the military's budget makes up another big chunk of
the spending. After subtracting normal yearly increases in place before
Sept. 11, the Canadian military received an estimated $9 billion extra
since 2002. The annual rate of military spending in the budget has also
doubled.
The RCMP's annual budget has also risen by close to $1 billion since
2001 and the budget of Canada's intelligence agency, CSIS, has nearly
doubled.
Cost calculations
Critics worry that the increased spending of taxpayers' money has cost Canadians in other areas.
"Where is our national child-care program? Where is the pharmacare
program? Going into massive rearmament for the military, security
apparatus for the border," said Steve Staples, head of the Rideau
Institute think-tank.
But Liberal Senator Colin Kenny, who chairs the Senate security
committee, insists the Harper government hasn't spent enough on
security in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks.
He cites one example of Canada's response in comparison to the
Americans': "We have 14 police officers to patrol the Great Lakes. The
Americans have 2,200 to do the same job."
Canada almost immediately felt the financial ripple following
al-Qaeda's attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon back in 2001,
as U.S. Congress quickly passed a multibillion-dollar spending bill to
revamp domestic security and made it clear Canada was expected to do
the same.
Three months later, then prime minister Jean Chrétien's Liberal
government announced a $7.7-billion program to strengthen Canada's
defences against terrorism.
Successive Liberal and Conservative governments continued to
increase spending, but Ottawa has kept even the most general
information about domestic security spending a secret.
Whether or not Canada has benefited from the additional security expenditures is up for debate.
"In the world of security and intelligence, there is no cost-benefit
analysis," said Wesley Wark, an associate professor at the University
of Toronto.
There have been no terrorism attacks in Canada since 2001, Wark
said, but it's hard to determine whether that means the threat was
exaggerated or if extra defence measures have worked.