MG said:
Steve Staples, director of the Rideau Institute, said some are enticed by flashy ads, the prospect of steady employment or the chance to help out fellow Canadians in emergencies. He believes the Canadian Forces should find other roles for those who don't want to fight in Afghanistan.
"They thought they were signing up to help Canada, not fight someone else's war in the Middle East," he said.
OK, I'm coming to this thread a bit late; however, I must reply to "Mr." Staples. His bias shows when he says
They thought they were signing up to help Canada, not fight someone else's war in the Middle East. If you're not deployable, and if you "don't want to fight" in Afghanistan, well, then, we DO have other roles for them to fill. It's called CSLI (Civvie Street Light Infantry). In other words: get out. We need every person we have to do whatever job we tell them to do. This is a volunteer army, and if they don't like it, that's too bad. Just as the army doesn't get to choose which wars to fight, neither do the soldiers get that right of choice.
MG said:
Scott Taylor, a former soldier who now publishes Esprit de Corps magazine, said some resist deployment because they aren't psychologically or physically ready for combat or because they get cold feet.
Many signed up to learn a trade or because they thought it would be an adventurous career path -- not to fight a war.
"There was a long time when unless you were in the infantry, you wouldn't be doing any front-line stuff where there might be some danger," he said. "So it was kind of like a lifetime of training for a war you never thought was going to happen."
I don't know where to begin. First of all, joining the ARMED forces for a trade (which is fine) but then being surprised that there may be danger involved? PUTZ! Why then did even postal clerks get weapons training? I mean, really....
As for that BS line that "only the infantry" are in the front line stuff, I suggest to "Mr." Taylor that he reach back, WAAAAY back into his memory and recall those around him during his brief tenure in the military. Those tanks weren't manned by infantrymen: they were manned by crewmen. The FOO? Artillery
officer, if you could imagine that! The echelon? Armourers, vehicle techs, maintainers of all stripes! All in the A1 ech, which was, even back in Germany, a mere "tactical bound" behind them fightin' troops in the infantry! And lets not forget the Admin Clerk who doubled as the company clerk! Oh, and I suppose that the then Private Taylor never ate anything while in the field. For if it were hard rats, then some supply tech somewhere did something about that, and if it were fresh, then we're talking cooks!
I recall a recruiting pamphlet from the 1970's. On the cover was a sergeant from The RCR, standing alone in a field ("You stand alone"). Opening up the pamphlet that same sergeant (in the same pose) was now surrounded by everything from tanks to techs ("But you're never alone"). Even in that era, the focus was on WARFIGHTING. Yes, the cold war was on, but the message was clear: you may join for trades training, but in the end, you are a SOLDIER, part of a team.
Sorry for my rant. I'm off to have a coffee....
EDIT: just to say that I've had my meds (coffee and smoke) and to add this "inspirational photo"