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George Wallace said:I agree with SeaKing Tacco. It is not a military decision, per say, but a politically driven one. That "Kinder, Gentler Army" that the Lieberals have touted since Trudeau, and perpetuated by Chretien and Martin. It is evident in other purchases also, where we have gone with the "Chevy" instead of the "Cadillac". The "Chevy" is cheaper initially, but being of poorer quality, is more prone to break down, and more expensive in the long run to maintain.
The costs of becoming a 'Totally Wheeled Force', are going to come back and bite us. Not only are we going to be without the use of manoeuvrable and effective Armoured support, but also much of our Heavy Engineer support.
A friend of mine started his career as an officer in the Armoured Corps and then remustered into Logistics. One day, we were debating the utility of the MilCOTS truck purchase for the PRes. He insisted that it was cheaper in the long run to buy a vehicle and keep repairing it until it could no longer be repaired. Even if the vehicle in question had limited tactical utility. I've always thought that it made more sense to buy kit that is robust, lasts long, requires relatively infrequent maintenance, and most important, does the job you want it to with few compromises or limitations. As things stand now, the MilCOTS is being employed in a way it was not designed to be employed
I recognize that we can't afford to buy top-drawer kit in every instance for the Reserves. Or for the Regular Force. However, as you point out, it's this nickel-and-dime, lowest-bidder mentality that gets people killed, or renders you unable to properly do the job you set out to do. Freedom isn't free, yet Canadian military planners routinely fail to realize this in their quest to maintain a military without spending any real money.
What many fail to realize about the 'total wheeled force' is that at its root, it's comprised of what are basically armoured cars, with all their limitations in terms of survivability and mobility, to say nothing of firepower. I am not, as a matter of principle, against the use of armoured cars. They can be quite useful - when employed as liaison, recce, CP, and general support vehicles on reasonable roads. They can be used as APC's, in environments where you need to get infantry deployed quickly, and where the threat profile is low to moderate.
Even the Soviets, when they were planning for a hypothetical assault on NATO troops positioned in the Fulda Gap, recognized the limitations of the hordes of wheeled BTR-60s, BTR-70s and BTR-90 APC's they were planning to throw into battle. That recognition led them to decide to employ the vehicles as platforms that would carry follow-on troops for mop-up operations after the shock armies with their BMP1s, BMP2s and T72 tanks had done their work.
However, to hear current Canadian military planners talk, you'd think that they seriously believe that wheeled vehicles like the LAV and MGS can be deployed in a full-bore advance to contact against enemy troops in well-prepared defensive positions, armed to the teeth with all manner of anti-tank weapons. If they don't believe that, then they're committing a sin of omission by not telling Canadians that the only realistic roles the "Total Wheeled Force" (TWF) can fulfil are:
- rear-echelon and flank screening tasks for a larger, better-armed force
- security taskings in urban environments that have been pacified but in which a small risk of a recrudescence of violence exists
- follow-on formations supporting heavy brigades equipped with tanks, tracked IFV's and self-propelled howitzers
In other words, supporting roles within the confines of a US or UK-led coalition force. Given the Canadian Army's lack of organic transport assets, and currently established deployment time-frames (eg. typically D+90 or D+120), this almost necessarily means being relegated to a peripheral role. Sadly, that willingness to accept a peripheral role when Canada can do more, seems to operate in service of the fiction that Canada is first, foremost and always a peacekeeping nation, even when peacekeeping in the current strategic environment is no longer a realistic option.