Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jul 2007 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2007 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://thechronicleherald.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Chris Lambie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) FRIGATE TAKES PART IN SECRET DRUG OPERATION A Halifax-based warship has spent the past few weeks carrying out a hush-hush drug surveillance operation in the Caribbean. HMCS Fredericton's presence in the region only came to light when Prime Minister Stephen Harper was photographed Thursday inspecting the frigate's crew in Barbados. "That really characterizes the Canadian approach to this type of thing. We're pretty low-profile that way and as much as we'd like to blow our own horn and stuff like that, it's pretty sensitive," said Maj. Sue Gray, a military spokeswoman. "Obviously, for operational security reasons, you don't want people who would . . . want to bring drugs into the country, whether they're Canadians or not, you certainly don't want to tip them off as to what you're doing." The frigate had been participating in surveillance operations with the U.S. Joint Interagency Task Force South, which conducts counter-drug operations, Maj. Gray said. "Their whole aim is to conduct surveillance operations against drug smuggling into their waters or in past their borders," Maj. Gray said Friday. "Naturally, of course, we have the same concerns. We don't want drugs coming into our country. So we contribute to that overall effort." The major couldn't say whether the frigate crew had helped track down any drug smugglers. "We don't normally talk about the specifics in that much detail in that kind of operation," she said. The Canadian military also provided a CP-140 Aurora aircraft for the mission, dubbed Op Caribe. "We usually fly it from here or sometimes I would think it would park at Key West," Maj. Gray said. The United Kingdom, the Netherlands, France and Spain also play a role in the drug surveillance missions, which take place several times a year, she said. The Fredericton played a role in a massive drug sting last year off the west coast of Africa that netted 22.5 tonnes of hashish destined for the Canadian market. It acted as the escort vessel for a ship carrying undercover RCMP officers, who made the drug buy. That operation was conducted under strict measures aimed at keeping the drug sting secret. Sailors who got to make telephone calls home from the ship for compassionate reasons were supervised. The ship's 217 crew members were allowed to write e-mails to their families, but they couldn't send them from their own computer desktops; instead, the messages were collected and presumably monitored before being sent out twice a day. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath