Canada’s Top Guns rang up $11 million in hotel bills during Libya mission
Published on Thursday September 20, 2012
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OTTAWA—Canada’s Top Guns and their support crews rang up $11 million in hotel bills during their time patrolling the skies over Libya.
But defence officials insisted Thursday it was more Motel 6 than Mediterranean villas with the average nightly rate ringing in at $115.
The defence department was sent scrambling Thursday after CBC News revealed that Canadian military personnel who took part in the NATO mission last year were housed in hotels.
That included the pilots and crews of the seven CF-18 Hornets that flew more than 900 sorties over Libya, along with the crews for a CC-150 Polaris refuelling aircraft that also took part.
The total cost of last year’s mission, known as OP Mobile, was $104 million. The cost of housing 440 personnel deployed over 227 days — from March to November — rang in at $11.5 million.
On Thursday, defence staff defended the decision saying logistics and cost dictated the decision to check-in.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper sent Canadian aircrews to join a NATO mission that was enforcing a UN-sanctioned no-fly zone and supporting demonstrators on the ground who eventually overthrew long-time leader Moammar Gadhafi.
But with crews arriving from many NATO nations, there wasn’t enough room at the Italian military bases to accommodate everyone, forcing Canadians to search for other housing options.
Adding to the headache was the fact that NATO extended the mission several times, sometimes in 60-day increments, “which made long-term planning very difficult,” defence spokesman Daniel Blouin told the Star Thursday.
“Several options were considered for housing personnel, including building our own camp, but the bases of operations in southern Italy were full,” he said.
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