Canada has set aside two bunkers at military bases amid  global uncertainty, North Korean threat
        Threat of a North Korean missile striking Canada prompts  officials to adopt a Cold War defensive posture
        A missile is launched during a long- and medium-range  ballistic rocket launch drill in this undated photo released by North Korea's  state news agency in August. The most recent test launch by North Korea saw the  country fire missiles that could reach any city in the continental United  States. 
    
    
        (Korean Central News Agency via Reuters)
    
    
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        They are nightmare scenarios ripped straight out of Hollywood  thrillers.
        But rising global tension, notably over North Korea, has  prompted federal officials to review and in some cases revise a series of  critical contingency plans, including one that involves the evacuation of the  federal cabinet to a secure military base outside of Ottawa.
        The Privy Council Office, the bureaucratic wing of the Prime  Minister's Office, drafted an agreement with National Defence a year ago to  open up bunkers on two military bases should the National Capital Region become  "unviable," according to documents obtained by CBC News under access  to information legislation.
        Each location is classified in the heavily redacted briefing  dated Aug. 2, 2016, and only referred to as "Alpha and Bravo sites."
        The agreement is part of the federal government's overall  plan for the "Continuity of Constitutional Government," which aims to  "ensure minimal or no interruption to the availability of critical  services" during an emergency or natural disaster in Ottawa.
        The federal government has long had contingency plans, known  internally as CONPLANS, for a variety of emergencies running the gamut between  earthquakes and floods through terrorism to full-scale war.
        What is different lately, according to experts, is that  officials are being forced to think more often in Cold War terms, particularly  when it comes to the threat of a North Korean missile striking Canada, either  as an accident or by design.
        On Tuesday, Pyongyang tested the Hwasong-15 intercontinental  missile, which the regime of Kim Jong-un claims can be tipped with a  "super-large heavy warhead" and is capable of striking anywhere on  the continental United States.
        Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan was asked Wednesday what  would happen should a missile land in Canada.
        "When it comes to any type of foreign threats, we take  them extremely seriously," he said. "We've been looking at North  Korea right from the beginning when I was given this portfolio. I am very  mindful of the country's missile testing that they have been doing. We believe  that the diplomatic solution is the way to go, because I think that there is  hope for it."
        Pyongyang likely preparing even more dramatic  demonstrations, say experts
    
    
        The notion that Canada could be hit by incoming missiles was  part of the Cold War defence mindset and planning, which disappeared in the  early 1990s, said Andrew Rasiulis, a defence expert with the Canadian Global  Affairs Institute.
        "After the Cold War was over, we stopped thinking about  those things. It fell off the radar, so to speak," said Rasiulis, a former  senior official at National Defence who once ran the Directorate of Nuclear and  Arms Control Policy. "At the time, it was really a whole cultural  shift."
        At the height of the standoff with the former Soviet Union,  the Canadian military had a series of bunkers to which the federal cabinet  could retreat, including the so-called Diefenbunker, near Carp, Ont.
        There was also the deep underground complex at Canadian  Forces Base North Bay and another centre at the now-decommissioned military  base in Calgary.
        Rasiulis said a whole generation of public servants have not  had to think in those cataclysmic terms and had not even begun to consider it  as late as 2014 when he retired.
        And that's why he considers the revision of continuity of  government plan so significant. But Rasiulis said he considers the likelihood  of Canada being struck by a North Korean missile to be low.
        The thinking, however, over the last generation was, if  there was thought of a nuclear event, it would be a terrorist dirty bomb, not a  missile or missiles that could wipe out entire cities and result in tens of  thousands of casualties.
        Although on the surface they may not seem related, Rasiulis  said the Russian annexation of Crimea and the lone-wolf, ISIS-inspired  terrorist attack on Parliament Hill, both of which occurred three years ago,  appear to have convinced officials that the capital was vulnerable.
        Sean Maloney, a professor at the Royal Military College of  Canada and a Cold War expert, said he believes the issue is bigger than just  whether there are contingency plans to keep the government operating. He  questions what sort of civil preparedness is going on.
        A nuclear blast brings with it an electromagnetic pulse that  would fry power grids over a much wider area than just the radius of the blast.  That, in turn, would take down not only businesses but public infrastructure,  such as water and sewage plants.
        "That is just the start of the problem," said  Maloney. "People have not thought that through and they don't want to  discuss it because it's too overwhelming for them."
        He said during the Cold War, there was also a sense of  "lethargy" because people were resigned to the fact that once the  missiles started flying everything would be over.
        Maintaining the power elite
        Maloney wrote a paper in the late 1990s about the federal  government's contingency plans in the event of a thermonuclear war with the  Soviet Union.
        It was entitled Dr. Strangelove Visits Canada, referring to  the 1960s Stanley Kubrick comedy about what could happen if the wrong person  pushed the wrong button.
        Some of the issues raised in his paper could find new life  in this new era of uncertainty.
        "Critics of civil defence programs argued that  protecting government leaders in shelters and not providing similar facilities  to the population as a whole was 'undemocratic,' [and] designed to maintain the  power elite," said Maloney who added the current plan to reconstitute the  government "sounds very 1950s."
        The government of former prime minister John Diefenbaker  conducted the first large-scale training exercise for its contingency plan to  evacuate Ottawa in December 1959.
        It saw one North Star transport plane and one Labrador  helicopter put on 30-minute standby to evacuate senior government ministers and  officials from the east side of the lawn on Parliament Hill to the air base in  nearby Rockcliffe.
        Other officials were to have been transported by bus out of  the city.
        By Murray Brewster, CBC News Posted: Nov 29, 2017
         
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