As opposed to all the wars inside Canada?
See my response to
@FJAG
I and several others here have noted that Canada is in the enviable location of having only one other country it shares a land border with, and that country is also a major security guarantor.
I agree.
But I bring your attention to Adam Smith:
It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.
To rephrase:
It is not from the benevolence of the United States, that we expect our defence, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.
From here on I find we are in virtual agreement.
My point on the population centers as focus areas doesn’t ignore the smaller towns.
Good.
I just don’t see the ability to put a BN in those towns.
Agreed - and Sam Hughes would have said much the same although he wanted to be able to raise a battalion from a small town in an emergency. A bit different than establishing a permanent battalion. The regimental system appealed to civic pride and fostered competition between towns. And even if only a platoon paraded on a regular basis, in 10 years time a battalion of soldiers had passed through those doors and received some rudimentary training. They were also more engaged taxpayers.
Maybe a company or Platoon, but it needs to tied to a larger entity.
Agreed
As well the PRes weeknight training won’t work in some areas, as while I do think some personnel will put up with a 45min one way drive for 3hrs, not everyone will, and anything longer will see even fewer people have interest.
How about driving two and a half hours each way from Lethbridge to Calgary every Wednesday night? I have personal knowledge of that lifestyle. And I wasn't getting paid for travel hours or gas. There are people that will engage their passions, to use an overused word.
Having said that idiots of that sort are in the minority.
And trips of that sort, to receive a 40 minute lecture from a hockey player on the benefits of brushing my teeth, are totally unnecessary now. Those PER objectives could be managed far more effectively on-line. What can't be managed on-line is the social connections necessary to build a cohesive unit from a group of individuals. That requires meeting physically. And that is the time and place for those activities that can't be reduced to listening to a lecture and writing a test.
That Wednesday night meeting in a local armoury for physical training, for range work, for section battle drills, for cleaning weapons and yes, having a beer and sausage afterwards, is a key part of that effort
I do think Canada’s current basing structure is extremely inadequate. The ‘super base’ concept was significantly selfish to the Regular Army in theory, and in practice just a bad idea.
Agreed.
Edmonton to me sticks out a terrible location. Part of that is I didn’t like the city, but not having a real training area as part of it was also a major annoyance. I accept that Calgary was losing Sarcee, but Petawawa just crosses the Highway, and Valcartier has one integral as well.
Geographically the loss of BC bases made a huge hole. One that I believe needs to be corrected.
Southern Ontario is another area that should have some sort of reasonable base and training area, and I don’t consider Border or Meaford to be significant in that respect.
Saskatchewan is fairly devoid of Army presence, as is Southern Alberta and Western Ontario.
Agreed across the board - especially the bit about Edmonton. There is a reason I picked Calgary over Edmonton when I moved out west.
I’m of the opinion a LIB should be able to find a home somewhere on the BC coast and another near Merritt, with other units as well, that could provide a tether for satellite sub units as spokes around the wagon wheel.
Mech units should have a footprint in Wainwright, Southern Alberta, across the Prairies.
Assuming that 6-7 Maneuver Brigades is what Canada is able to provide using Canada’s geography should be a focus for those - and the related other structures.
Here we seem to be in partial agreement.
I believe that all soldiering starts with Infantry skills and that Infantry skills can be taught locally with very little specialized equipment. Boots, helmet and rifle form the minimum requirements.
I also believe that Mechanized Infantry is/was just Infantry riding in an armoured truck, as opposed to riding in an unarmoured truck, or a boat, or a helicopter. Or even falling out an aircraft. All of those are means to deliver an infantry battalion to battle where the fight is conducted on the same terms in every case.
I make a clear, in my mind, differentiation between Infantry and Armoured Infantry/Dragoons/Panzer Grenadiers. They have always had to work under constraints that the Infantry didn't have to worry about - short carbines for horses and vehicles, small sections for armoured vehicles etc.
So, to my way of thinking, small companies of infantry scattered around the country with an integral transport section/platoon, which in practice results in a range of capabilities not dissimilar to a light cavalry squadron, is a good basis for organizing a Militia which can be used as a Reserve. Paid or Unpaid.
For the more technical trades - their situations are different and I would have said that the Artillery has special needs - but as the trade moves towards "two men and a coffee pot" staring at video screens while playing with their joysticks I question how much range time operators, as opposed to technicians, need to keep up their skills. Perhaps on-line simulators, coupled with a realworld training aid at the armouries and three or four weekend range camps a year would meet the requirement. I don't know but I don't think the gunners need to be pounding rounds down range every Wednesday night and two weekends a month.
Add in containerization of weapons systems, remote control of the weapons and on-board diagnostics and simulations then I think that the 70 to 90% solution for the Artillery is within its grasp. And TEWTs for C2 development are becoming a more realistic alternative.
Beyond that - a tech is a tech in both the civilian and the uniformed world. And they are hired for the skills they acquire from schooling and experience. The CAF needs to bring some of those onboard to manage the equipment. It also needs to prepared to send its equipment to technicians who may or may not be uniformed. And if turnaround times with civilian maintenance is too long then that needs to be managed with inventory control, warehousing and, when necessary, more equipment to make sure that what is necessary is on hand.