The new Liberal government should massively expand the country's part-time military force and overhaul its mandate, a Senate committee heard Monday.
John Selkirk, a retired lieutenant-colonel and a member of the group Reserves 2000, said there should be at least 45,000 army reservists and their roles should be re-oriented towards to responding to domestic emergencies, including natural disasters and even cyberattacks.
He wouldn't speculate on how many air force and naval reservists the country might need.
Such an increase would be dramatic in light of the fact there are only 21,000 part-time members of all three branches of the military on the books at the moment, which is about 19 per cent less than their assigned strength.
The traditional role of reservists has been to fill out the ranks of regular force units headed overseas for operations and peacekeeping missions, but Selkirk said he believes future threats to the nation's security will come at home, in the form of terrorism and weather-related emergencies.
"Today, we feel the real threat to our way of life, if you wish, is a domestic threat and the disruption it would cause would require a tremendous amount of consequence management," he said.
"And although we have large security forces, they are nowhere near large enough to provide that consequence management on a 24/7 basis." ...