- Reaction score
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- Points
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Heretic time...
I think that this is actually exactly the right question to be asking - along with a host of other like-minded questions. We need a Defence Policy that is based on a National Security Policy and a Foreign Affairs policy, precisely so that we can ask and answer those kinds of questions. Right now, we as an instituion are dysfunctionally inarticulate when it comes to defending our requirements - and mostly because we haven't put the necessary thought into the problem - in essence our arguments lack any kind of intellectual rigour. More importantly, whenever an "outsider" questions us, we turtle up right away, or mutter things like "you wouldn't understand you liberal pinko", and blame it all on Trudeau and the CBC etc etc etc.
I read a great opinion piece this morning (note that the Gazette piece was also an opinion piece - the journalistic standards are slightly different than for "straight" reporting) by Rick Anderson, a former Reform strategist:
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Co...906&call_pageid=968256290204&col=968350116795
Some highlights...
I think that we all agree that we need a review of our policy. The key point here is that we need to pick the priorities, fund those appropriately, and discard the rest.
Although I have high hopes fr the policy review, I fear that we will get exactly that - a something-for-everyone approach, that threatens no rice bowls.
Two key nuggets here - one is the "old think" that runs rampant in the military- a knee-jerk response to protect what we have, and always try to get newer and shinier versions of what we already have - all without putting much effort into re-thinking why we need those capabilities. A first principles review sure would be nice...
The second point refers to alternative vcollective security arrangements. Very intersting.
Yep. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
So I say "bring on the hard questions" - and lets to some hard thinking to come up with truly defensible answers.
Dave
The Heretic
I think that this is actually exactly the right question to be asking - along with a host of other like-minded questions. We need a Defence Policy that is based on a National Security Policy and a Foreign Affairs policy, precisely so that we can ask and answer those kinds of questions. Right now, we as an instituion are dysfunctionally inarticulate when it comes to defending our requirements - and mostly because we haven't put the necessary thought into the problem - in essence our arguments lack any kind of intellectual rigour. More importantly, whenever an "outsider" questions us, we turtle up right away, or mutter things like "you wouldn't understand you liberal pinko", and blame it all on Trudeau and the CBC etc etc etc.
I read a great opinion piece this morning (note that the Gazette piece was also an opinion piece - the journalistic standards are slightly different than for "straight" reporting) by Rick Anderson, a former Reform strategist:
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Co...906&call_pageid=968256290204&col=968350116795
Some highlights...
Canadians need a more frank discussion on the topic of military spending. Put the rhetoric aside â †people's lives are involved. So is a great deal of money, and our bona fides with other nations.
The tragedy of HMCS Chicoutimi highlights the need to knock off the lip service and align our military expectations with our military commitments. We acknowledge Canada's need to support its own defence and that of others to support international stability and peacekeeping, the rule of international law, the fight against those who violate it through terror or other means. But we leave most of this to others.
We are past due for a serious debate about this. And to start funding properly that which we deem a priority and stop pretending otherwise about the rest. We advertise ourselves as a "middle power," ready to accept important roles within NATO, NORAD and the United Nations, on peacekeeping missions and elsewhere. But our record suggests otherwise:
I think that we all agree that we need a review of our policy. The key point here is that we need to pick the priorities, fund those appropriately, and discard the rest.
The idea is to define our expectations, and bring those expectations and resources into sync, to match military expenditures with military commitments.
Doing this must be anchored in practical assessments of our foreign policy and defence interests, essential precursors to defining the missions and resources assigned to our military.
With luck, the reviews of foreign and defence policy underway within the Liberal government will avoid all-things-to-everyone platitudes and get down to specifics, informing an honest discussion that culminates in concrete decisions.
Although I have high hopes fr the policy review, I fear that we will get exactly that - a something-for-everyone approach, that threatens no rice bowls.
The defence debate is more than just about money. Earlier this year, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer challenged nations to "confront some rather traditional mindsets in their military establishments. There are still too many out there who are comfortable with old ways of doing business, and who prefer to run on the structures of the past rather than making the radical changes that real transformation means. The time has clearly come for us to challenge these traditionalist views."
For instance, offers Scheffer, let's "examine alternative options like, for example, common funding of essential capabilities, such as airlift or medical facilities ... is it outrageous to suggest that a group of nations come together to provide a NATO transport fleet of helicopters and aircraft ... could the same not be done for medical facilities as well? Or, could nations outsource to provide these specialized capabilities?"
Two key nuggets here - one is the "old think" that runs rampant in the military- a knee-jerk response to protect what we have, and always try to get newer and shinier versions of what we already have - all without putting much effort into re-thinking why we need those capabilities. A first principles review sure would be nice...
The second point refers to alternative vcollective security arrangements. Very intersting.
Updating thinking about Canada's modern military requirements and priorities involves forcing ourselves to confront two broad choices.
We can re-equip our military for an updated set of missions encompassing continental defence, search and rescue, peacekeeping, and other multilateral commitments. This means ramping up military spending pretty substantially â †just reaching NATO's average involves an extra $13 billion a year.
Or, we can choose the alternate path, continuing to withdraw from military commitments.
But we cannot do both
Yep. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
So I say "bring on the hard questions" - and lets to some hard thinking to come up with truly defensible answers.
Dave
The Heretic