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Eye In The Sky said:You missed the point; the average person cares more about the newest iGadget and selfie software - not AORs and naval capabilities.
No I did not miss the point, we are both saying the same things with different words.
"Actually, I don't think we are. We are under-equipped, under-funded and under-supported by the powers that be because their bosses (voters) don't give a crap about defence. I'd say that is 'on target, fire for effect'."
Well if the powers that be and their "bosses" have decided that they don't give a crap about defence (which is true) then I would say they must already feel the DND is over-funded, equipped with too much of the wrong stuff, and have more than the support they need to do the job tasked in the ministerial mandate, which is apparently to say nice things about defence and not do anything except promote gender equality, human rights etc. If follows that the resources on hand already clearly mis-match that mission. It is circuitous and never ending.
I am suggesting that until the circle is broken nothing will change except by disruption (i.e. nothing short of an attack of absolutely epic proportions that fundamentally changes the outlook of the part of the nation that puts political parties in power). The prospect of that is extremely remote, thankfully. In terms of magnitude, even loss of far off territory, seizure of valuable remote or coastal property that is resource rich, and even expulsion of a few thousand Canadians from their land may not even be enough to mobilize the appropriate reaction. Acting responsibly and prudently on defence matters in Canada is impossible because nobody really feels threatened enough to care about it. As Edward has pointed out, this has been the case for at least 65 years and there is NOTHING in the long term horizon to change that position. That includes climate change, the desires of the UN, and acres of marijuana burning during forest fire season.
Getting back to my earlier statements about the Mistrals, buying those ships would almost certainly have triggered a defence spending and resource allocation war between commands causing a military-bureaucratic cockup of such proportions that the only political way out would be to gleefully disband the entire goddamned thing because it would take an obscene amount of money to fix it. Do not underestimate the ability of the military to cut its own throat.