I have been retired for so long that you must take all this with a whole bag of salt, but:
o It seems to me that the Canadian Navy Reserve is riding a winning horse with their reserve crewed minesweepers. There are, I am told by reliable sources, problems, including too few qualified reservists for 12 ships, each needing a crew of 30+ but I am also told that some officer positions, especially CO and XO, and some PO slots may go to regulars (and no, I don't know where they will find them in an already undermanned navy, but ...). The top of the navy is pleased with the ships and their crews and their entire reserve establishment; more than one senior serving naval officer has told me that he is now happy with the navy's 'total force' project;
o The British Army used to have many 'specialist' units in the Territorial Army. A special favourite of mine (about 40 years ago) were the Mercians â “ various reserve battalions and companies of the Cheshire, Staffordshire, Sherwood Foresters, and Worcestershire regiments who, as I discovered late on dark and stormy night, were assigned to defend the 1 (BR) Corps communications system and Rear Corps HQ. The units were specially organized, equipped and trained for these tasks â “ their organizations were 'tailored' to the organization of the (fairly vast) Signals establishment, the small, undermanned and essentially defenceless (without the Mercians) units of which occupied damned near every hilltop on the North German Plain; and
o Another favourite was a RAOC unit â “ I can't remember its designation - which I 'met' during Crusader/Spearpoint 80 â “ it was the army level NAAFI distribution unit, full of logistical specialists from the British consumer/retail sector. Good bunch of fellows who gave me a very good lunch while my vehicle was being repaired and convinced me that, once again, the Brits really were planning for war â “ the sports and social programmes being designed only to lull enemies and allies alike into the false sense that the Brits are all fun and games ...
I say let's have as many different kinds of reserves as the reserves themselves can muster â “ provided, only, that they make some military sense. I remain committed to the idea that about 75% of our current policies, plans and programmes will not stand the test of a major war; I am equally certain that neither I nor any of our serving generals know which are in that doomed to fail 75%. So: Let's try 'em all ... our reserves, it seems to me, are filled with boundless enthusiasm, incredible resilience and bags of initiative â “ we should exploit that.