New Submarines, No Mission: The Doctrine Gap Behind Canada’s Procurement Debate – Analysis
The Royal Canadian Navy long-range patrol submarine HMCS Victoria. Photo Credit: U.S. Navy photo by Lt. Ed Early, Wikipedia Commons
By Meng Kit Tang
Buried inside the Canadian Patrol Submarine Project’s (CSPS) mandatory capability requirements sits a deceptively cautious phrase. Canada’s future submarines, the document specifies, must be capable of operating “near, in, and if necessary, under ice (for limited periods).”
Those final three words carry unusual strategic weight.
Limited by what? By propulsion endurance beneath Arctic ice? By communication constraints under polar conditions? By the authorities delegated to a submarine commander once contact with Ottawa becomes intermittent or disappears altogether?
The document does not say, and in a narrow technical sense, it cannot. Those limits are not merely engineering constraints. They emerge from prior decisions about what Canadian submarines are expected to do, against whom, under what political conditions, and with what tolerance for operational risk.
No such decisions have been articulated in public strategic documents. Not in Our North, Strong and Free. Not in the CPSP mandatory requirements themselves. Not in the Senate committee reports that have most directly addressed the undersea question.
Canada is now moving through one of the largest defence procurements in its modern history. Yet the submarine debate remains focused on a question one layer above the issue that will ultimately determine whether the program succeeds. Ottawa is asking what submarine Canada should buy before deciding what missions those submarines must perform.
That inversion matters more than the platform competition itself. Doctrine eventually follows procurement, but by then it is constrained by the submarine already chosen. Technical limits harden into operational assumptions. Once embedded in construction, doctrine must accommodate what the platform can do rather than what Arctic sovereignty may require. Procurement language becomes strategy through institutional default.
Canada risks reaching that point without publicly answering the questions platform choice will quietly resolve.
Canada’s Submarine Procurement Debate So Far
The procurement critique is largely correct on its own terms. Canada’s Victoria-class submarines are nearing the end of their operational relevance. Availability rates have long been poor. Their ability to operate under Arctic ice is minimal. The fleet can sustain only a narrow operational presence even under favourable conditions.
Much of the current debate reflects accumulated frustration over decades of deferred spending, cancelled programs, and political hesitation dating back to the abandonment of Canada’s planned nuclear submarine acquisition in 1989.
The CPSP is now firmly embedded in the procurement system, with a contract decision expected by 2028 and deliveries projected for the mid-2030s. Most analysis has therefore concentrated on acquisition questions: propulsion systems, industrial capacity, maintenance requirements, Arctic survivability, crew sustainability, and interoperability with allies.
Those are necessary debates. None addresses the prior issue beneath them. What is the fleet actually for?
That question governs far more than rhetoric. A state seeking persistent under-ice presence in the Arctic Basin requires a different operational profile from one conducting episodic sovereignty patrols near the Northwest Passage. A navy designed primarily to reinforce allied anti-submarine warfare (ASW) operations in the North Atlantic will make different trade-offs from one prioritizing independent Canadian Arctic surveillance.
Those missions overlap. They are not identical.
The “limited periods” language matters not because it suggests hidden incompetence, but because it reflects unresolved prioritization. The requirement appears to acknowledge a tension between political expectations surrounding Arctic under-ice capability and the operational limits conventional propulsion imposes. Whether that balance is sufficient depends entirely on what missions Ottawa expects the fleet to perform.
That uncertainty matters because submarines are unusually inflexible platforms once construction begins. Endurance profiles, propulsion choices, communication architectures, and crew requirements become embedded for decades. Canada is approaching that point without publicly answering the questions those choices will quietly resolve.
The Four Questions Doctrine Must Answer
In the undersea domain, doctrine is not an abstract policy exercise. It determines what a submarine commander is authorised to do while operating beneath Arctic ice under conditions of limited communication, uncertain escalation pathways, and potentially close contact with foreign submarines. Canada’s existing defence documents leave four foundational questions unresolved, and each bears directly on the platform decision now approaching.
Rules of Engagement
If a Canadian submarine operating in Arctic waters detects a Russian or Chinese submarine inside waters Ottawa considers sovereign, what follows? Does the Canadian vessel merely track and report? Is it expected to manoeuvre in ways that signal presence? Under what circumstances, if any, could a Canadian commander interfere with another submarine’s operations absent allied coordination?
No public Canadian defence document addresses those questions directly; Ottawa has not clearly articulated whether its future submarine fleet is primarily intended for surveillance, denial, sovereign enforcement, allied reinforcement, or some combination of all four.
That ambiguity is not a prudent hedge. It is an unresolved decision the procurement process is already moving beyond.
Command Authority Under Ice
Arctic submarine operations occur under severe communication constraints. Submarines beneath polar ice cannot reliably maintain continuous contact with national command authorities. Extremely Low Frequency (ELF) communication systems mitigate part of that problem, but Canada possesses no sovereign ELF infrastructure and depends heavily on allied architectures.
This creates questions no procurement document can answer. Under what circumstances can a Canadian submarine commander act without immediate authorisation from Ottawa? What authorities are pre-delegated before patrol? How much operational discretion is Canada willing to entrust to commanders operating beyond reliable communication windows?
These are not technical matters. They involve political authority, legal responsibility, and the practical boundaries of national command sovereignty.
The Deterrence Mechanism
Canadian defence policy routinely describes the future submarine fleet as contributing to deterrence in the Arctic and North Atlantic. Yet deterrence in the undersea environment differs significantly from deterrence in air or land domains, and they are operationally consequential.
A submarine force optimised for covert surveillance generates deterrence through uncertainty. An adversary cannot know where the boat is and must plan accordingly. A fleet integrated tightly into allied anti-submarine warfare networks generates deterrence through collective denial capacity. A force intended primarily to demonstrate sovereign Canadian presence requires something different again: periodic, signalled activity that makes the capability politically legible.
Each of these approaches requires different platform characteristics, patrol patterns, and communication architectures. Canada has not publicly articulated which it prioritises. The procurement now underway will therefore resolve that question by default, embedding a deterrence logic into steel before Ottawa has consciously chosen it.
Allied Integration and Sovereign Boundaries
Canadian submarines will not operate independently of US naval activity in the Arctic and North Atlantic. Any serious undersea mission intersects with the highly sensitive process of water-space management: the classified bilateral arrangements governing patrol zones, depth corridors, and deconfliction procedures that prevent allied submarines from interfering with one another’s operations.
The architecture surrounding the Victoria class evolved around a fleet with limited Arctic reach and modest operational tempo. A future Canadian fleet capable of meaningful under-ice operations would require new understandings with Washington regarding patrol areas, intelligence sharing, operational coordination, and command relationships.
That negotiation forces Ottawa to confront a question successive governments have preferred to leave imprecise: how independent does Canada intend its Arctic undersea posture to be?
These are not secondary questions. They determine whether the future fleet possesses strategic coherence at all.
The AUKUS Sequencing Lesson
The comparison with AUKUS demonstrates a different sequencing logic. Australia’s nuclear submarine program is far larger and more ambitious than Canada’s conventional procurement effort. The industrial burden, alliance integration, and technological complexity are not directly comparable, nor did AUKUS resolve every doctrinal question before procurement advanced.
But before Canberra committed itself to a specific platform pathway, the AUKUS partners spent eighteen months conducting the review process that became the Optimal Pathway, examining operational missions, alliance integration, industrial capacity, basing requirements, and regional force posture before finalising platform decisions.
Doctrine and mission analysis preceded procurement. Platform choice followed from strategic purpose.
Canada’s process has moved in the opposite direction. The submarine project accelerated years ago. Requirements have been issued; suppliers narrowed. A contract decision approaches. Yet Ottawa has produced no comparable public strategic assessment clarifying what missions the submarines are expected to prioritize or what trade-offs Canada is prepared to accept.
The consequences are visible inside the requirements themselves. The under-ice “limited periods” language reflects unresolved operational assumptions. So does the stated range requirement of at least 7,000 nautical miles. Whether that figure is sufficient depends on where patrol cycles begin, how long submarines are expected to remain submerged, what missions they are tasked to conduct, and how heavily Canada intends to rely on allied infrastructure.
Requirements without settled doctrine do not eliminate uncertainty. They embed it in technical specifications where it hardens into fleet design.
The 2028 Deadline and the Doctrine Clock
The doctrine problem is no longer theoretical because the procurement timeline is no longer distant.
Once Canada signs a submarine contract, the opportunity to reconcile doctrine with platform choice narrows sharply. Hull design, propulsion assumptions, endurance limitations, and communication architectures will remain embedded in the fleet for decades. Canada will still be able to adapt tactics and deployment patterns. It will not easily redefine the strategic logic of the force itself.
That deadline arrives amid intensifying undersea competition. Russian submarine activity in the North Atlantic has risen sharply, while China continues expanding its Arctic scientific presence, icebreaker operations, and dual-use infrastructure with clear strategic implications. At the same time, the Victoria-class submarines are nearing the end of service life while maritime patrol transition timelines remain stretched.
The result is a period in which Canada may lack both the operational assets and the strategic clarity to define what Arctic undersea security requires of it.
That matters because doctrine shapes interim choices as much as long-term procurement. Without a settled conception of mission, Ottawa lacks a coherent basis for prioritizing temporary measures such as fixed sensor networks, allied burden-sharing arrangements, Arctic communication infrastructure, or undersea surveillance systems. Policy becomes reactive because the operational objective itself remains undefined.
Three things therefore need to occur before the contract is signed.
Canada requires a formal Arctic undersea doctrine process whose existence is publicly acknowledged even if its substance remains classified. Ottawa does not need to publish patrol patterns or escalation thresholds; but it needs to demonstrate that the foundational questions surrounding command authority, deterrence logic, alliance integration, and mission priorities are being addressed before platform selection is finalized.
Canada also requires a structured bilateral process with the United States focused on future water-space management and Arctic undersea coordination for the incoming fleet. Existing arrangements were built around a different operational reality. A fleet with meaningful Arctic reach will require new agreements on patrol zones, deconfliction procedures, and command relationships negotiated before the submarines enter service.
Finally, doctrine milestones should be integrated directly into the CPSP procurement timeline. Platform selection and strategic purpose cannot remain parallel processes that never formally intersect.
None of these steps require selecting a winning submarine design. All are necessary if the eventual winner is to serve a coherent strategic purpose.
The Real Stakes of the 2028 Decision
When Canada signs the CPSP contract, it will commit itself to a particular understanding of Arctic undersea operations whether Ottawa has articulated that understanding or not.
A submarine designed for intermittent under-ice access reflects different strategic assumptions from one built for persistent Arctic presence. A fleet optimized for allied integration embodies different political choices from one intended to maximize sovereign operational independence.
Those choices will not remain unsettled until doctrine catches up. The platform itself will answer them by default, embedding a strategic posture into procurement language before the country has consciously decided what that posture should be.
That is why the phrase “limited periods” matters. It is not merely a technical qualifier buried in a procurement document. It is the visible trace of a strategic question Canada has yet to resolve, and the point at which the design of the fleet may begin determining Canada’s Arctic posture before Canada has fully decided what that posture is meant to be beneath the ice.
- This article was published by Geopolitical Monitor.com





