
On Canada’s new military drones, forget Hollywood’s take, Vance urges
OTTAWA — Public perceptions about armed drones have been clouded by Hollywood, Canada’s top soldier said Thursday as he insisted the Canadian Armed Forces won’t be using its stealthy new technology for so-called black-ops missions like assassinations.
“The fact that they’re armed, I think people have this idea, kind of a Hollywood view of assassination by that,” Gen. Jonathan Vance, the chief of the defence staff, said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
“That’s not the business we’re in. Can I underline that? Double bold it, make it big font? This is not the business that we’re talking about. And this policy is not that.”
The Liberal government’s long-awaited new defence policy, released Wednesday, said Canada’s military would be authorized for the first time to purchase and use armed drones, also known as unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs.