Wow, lots of belly aching going on here! :
Don't even know where to start. ??? While I agree that Camp Julien is "welfare creep run amok", if you have been on bases in Banja Luka, Sarajevo, even Bagram our Camp isn't all that different and pales in comparison. Even Camp Warehouse with its national cafe's is nice to take a break at (and 7 day a week shopping for DVDs). ISAF HQ is the same. So my point is, so what if Camp Julien has good amenities. If we were sitting in the middle of a defensive position for six months, we would still be complaining.
Yup, and some of these visitors go back to the ivory towers (where they can stuff their faces full with Tim Horton's, as only they can do) with the attitude "... it's not so bad ...".However, they overlook the fact that they were only there six days, not six months.
Mark, come on. The people you are slagging probably have alot more time overseas than you do. I refuse to believe that the people that come overseas come up with ways to screw troops around.
But, all of that aside, when I see the US Army types here in country for a year (with NO guarantee of a fixed repat date...), or when I attended a Portuguese African vets dinner in Winnipeg and listened to them talk about three years in theatre with no home leave, or when I hear about our troops in WWII deployed for years, I get a slight twinge of guilt.
PBI - Comparing apples and oranges (then and now). I salute all those who served overseas for up to six years without any leave at home, but we don't live in the 30s/40s anymore. The US approach is different from ours but which country has troops refusing to deploy overseas? We don't offer cosmetic surgery for our troops either to lure them to stay in. Should we?
1) There were a large number of no-hook privates in Camp Julien and NCOs and Officers I spoke to almost all told me stories about the new guys complaining about the living conditions. While, granted, it is like a prison and it is dangerous, its better than what I had in Kosovo and it was way better than Somalia or even many camps in Bosnia/Croatia early on. I am a little worried that these same soldiers might shut right down if deployed to a theatre without internet, wide-screen TVs and a CANEX.
Mortar Guy, this is my third tour and there are whiners on every one of them. It's human nature to whine. When I was deployed to Africa we didn't have any of the things you mentioned and we made do with what we had access to.
2) Even though the 'pointy end' has been greatly reduced for Rotos 2 onward, the NCE seems to have remained friggin massive! I saw an ORBAT for the Roto 2-3 NCE (I work in the LS so I see things like this) and I was shocked. Suffice it to say that it is at least as big as when we had 1800 troops in theatre. I do not understand why we require a 100+ man NCE for a Recce Sqn and Inf Coy. I would be willing to be that if they were living in recce tents, eating mostly IMPs, the NCE would be about 25 people.
To a certain extent you have fixed overhead for the NCE no matter how many troops you have in theatre. So, where do you want to cut? HSS, ASIC, NCCIS? How about the NCE proper? PSO, PAO, etc. I don't have any problem some of this stuff but other people in theatre would. You mention Recce and Inf, but what about all the other slices you don't quote (NSE, CANCAP, CFPSA, etc, etc, etc). Again, the actual NCE HQ proper is only about 40 personnel (cut out all the multinational staff (ie PBI), MPs, CIMIC, NCCIS, HSS, etc) and there really aren't very many to do all the national and in theatre liaison. Where do you want to cut? There is risk involved in each cut.
3) Recent the NCE Comd (Col Sirois?) told Peter Worthington that the aim of Canadians in theatre was to ensure that all Canadians got home safely (or words to that effect). I realize we should always strive to minimize casualties but we are not there just to minimize Canadian casualities - we could do that much better in Petawawa! Perhaps this is a reflection of the fortress mentality and I believe it is an indication that Op ATHENA has lost its focus and its raison d'etre. I sincerely hope the Col was misquoted because the last thing we need is to suck back into our protective shell in Afghanistan.
You should know better than to quote a reporter because you are only getting his limited perspective. LCol Sirois was the TFK COS on Roto 1, Col Ellis is the TFK Comd Roto 2. If you can tell me of anything Roto 2 has not done because it is deemed to risky I would be very interested in hearing it.
My point is everyone in an operational theater should bear some of the responsibility of force protection.
excoeitis - Everyone does have a responsibiltiy. Do you know how force protection is organized in Camp Julien?
WRT bringing civvies to theater - don't even get me started
Different thread to discuss.
[Excellent point; it once again validates the lingering idea I have that our military needs a complete overhaul (paradigm shift) in the way we view C2. I noticed the same thing on tour at the tail end of SFOR. The "divisional slice" is simply too large.
Maybe, but once again all of the personnel in one organization are not all related to Command and Control. They have line functions and are grouped into the NCE for organizational purposes (too small to be independent).
Now of this "warzone" tour is minimally manned - why do we have hundreds of civilian workers?
Kevin, the civilians are just not supporting Canadians, they are also supporting the hundreds of other occupants of Camp Julien.
For a tour that effectively only employs the Recce Sqn how can we justify the 700 pers not to mention the civilians? Having been there I could justify 350 some odd positions...
Kevin, smoke and mirrors. Our declared assets are about 20% of our contribution. What about all the other assets that support ISAF in terms of providing camp services, Force Protection in south Kabul, Role2+ Medical Facility, etc, etc that are not "declared". Canada is providing more than "just a recce sqn".
Apologize for the long post and I'll try to maintain oversite of this topic in order to respond.