• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

The CF After Afghanistan - Missions, Roles & Capabilities

Another piece worth the read in, gasp, the Toronto Star:

Why trade Kandahar for Kinshasa?
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/columns/article/797728--cohn-why-trade-kandahar-for-kinshasa

...Canada's military and political circles are abuzz about what to do with our battle-hardened soldiers, who by next year will be all kitted up with nowhere to go. With a rapidly approaching mid-2011 deadline set by Parliament to start pulling out of Afghanistan, an exit strategy is slowly firming up while a redeployment strategy would move some of those troops to Congo...

We are not just weary of the fight, but leery of the moral ambiguities: our wavering Afghan allies, the widespread torture, and the loss of 142 soldiers so far. But why hopscotch from Afghanistan's minefields to Congo's killing fields where similar moral quagmires await us?

UN peacekeepers are backing the Congolese army as it tries to wipe out rebels guilty of atrocities in a region where 5 million people have died during a decade of fighting. But the army is also guilty of torture and atrocities. The government of President Joseph Kabila is racked by endemic corruption and political treachery. And Kabila wants the UN force to leave later this year...

Congo is now the UN's biggest peacekeeping operation, with more than 22,000 troops from neighbouring African nations. Yet it remains a disorganized force that can't stop the slaughter. Peacekeepers were warned last year by UN legal advisers not to participate in Congolese army operations against rebels if they anticipated human rights abuses, which is precisely what happened.

    The fledgling Congo mission would surely benefit from having Canada's outgoing army commander, Lt.-Gen. Andrew Leslie, helm the force, as Ottawa is quietly proposing. But if that opens the floodgates to a larger deployment, Canadians need to ask some hard questions.

After years of lonely slogging in Afghanistan without sufficient Western backup, why leave at the very time that American and British soldiers are finally providing a critical mass — and then jump to an under-resourced Congo mission? If our politicians lack the courage [emphasis added] to convince Canadians that our help is needed in Afghanistan, how are they going to persuade people that Congo is worth fighting and dying for?

Canada can't be everywhere. Despite our fondness for the moral certainties of peacekeeping, we must be mindful of our national interests [emphasis added].

We have deep entanglements in Afghanistan, and heavy obligations to nearby Haiti in its hour of need. Before we rush in to save Congo, we have unfinished business to take care of, and old promises to keep [emphasis added].

We seem to be rushing to pack up in Afghanistan because public support has collapsed; yet despite the Governor General's trip to Congo this week, do Canadians really have the appetite for casualties in Congo, and a willingness to dance with its dictator? From Kandahar to Kinshasa, and from Karzai to Kabila, it sounds like a hopscotch strategy from benighted Afghanistan to Africa's heart of darkness.

Quite. Though I'm sure the calculation is very few Canadian dead indeed in any Congo effort.

Mark
Ottawa
 
MarkOttawa said:
I'm sure the calculation is very few Canadian dead indeed in any Congo effort.
Let's hope the rebel factions don't want to take over a major airport or something ....
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100405/wl_africa_afp/drcongounrestarmyun_20100405121314
....again.
 
A UN Congo mission for the CF? And local realities--why even bother thinking about it?  From The Economist (quotes out of sequence):
http://www.economist.com/world/middle-east/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15912838

...Congo’s rulers say they are fed up with being castigated by foreigners and want to be accorded the dignity due to a sovereign country rather than accept the humiliation of what they say amounts to an indefinite international “trusteeship”. So the government says the UN’s peacekeepers should start leaving in June, when the country is to mark the 50th anniversary of its independence from Belgium. All UN troops, says the government, should be gone by the middle of next year, before Congo’s next scheduled elections.

The UN Security Council, which oversees peacekeeping, may bow to some of the government’s demands. The latest plan is to withdraw some 2,000 peacekeepers from about a third of the country’s provinces, including Équateur, by the end of June and to remove the whole lot by August next year—after the hoped-for election. The Security Council is expected to vote next month to extend the peacekeeping mandate for another year, alongside a plan for a speedy exit [emphasis added]...

Huh?

More, with which we would necessarily be associated should we go in any substantial way:

...
In the past four years the UN mission has tried to help improve governance and security. But standards are still abysmal. Congolese soldiers and rebels habitually rape hapless civilians. Corruption is rife, the courts rotten. The UN reckons that 70% of the country’s prisoners, most of them kept in vile conditions, have yet to be tried...

The UN has been training and supporting Congo’s regular forces. It supplies them with food, firepower and transport. The government says its army has improved...

The UN’s senior representatives in Congo would have preferred the withdrawal to have been spread over three years. The French head of a fact-finding delegation due to visit Congo has warned against a “premature” exit. It is questionable whether Congo’s army, which is estimated to number from 130,000 to 155,000, will be able to keep the peace on its own. It is a barely trained amalgam of more than 40 militias. About 60,000 regular soldiers have reached retirement or are close to it but the government has not paid them off. Lobbies such as the Brussels-based International Crisis Group say the government has squandered the help it has been getting from abroad and that the country risks becoming ungovernable all over again...

Lovely, eh? And don't it all sound a lot like why a lot of people decry the Afghan mission?

Mark
Ottawa
 
From a Torch post:

CF for Congo: Pressure builds
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/04/cf-for-congo-pressure-builds.html

This is really starting to look like a well-orchestrated campaign. It would certainly seem that well-placed people in Ottawa are hard at it; a combination of the government and the CF/Army (if the latter are involved shameful and shameless)?..

this hot off the Net (UN officials do not go public as below without some sort of green light):

UN asks Canada for help in the Congo
UN official uses GG's visit to issue direct appeal to Ottawa...

Now read this Montreal Gazette editorial (via Norman's Spectator):

Congo is a quagmire Canada should avoid...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Afstan, Congo, R2P: 'The phrase "stick a fork in it" comes to mind'--excerpts from a post by BruceR. at Flit  (do read it all)
http://www.snappingturtle.net/flit/archives/2010_04_20.html#006710
that gores all those who think doing what is really often fairly dirty work can be done squeakily-clean.  There's a real world out there folks in which being lilly human rights white simply ain't realistic if one actually wants to achieve something (cf. the Allies' alliance with Stalin during WW II); which does not mean one should not try being good guys as far as reasonably possible:

It's nice of Prof. Stephen Saideman to try and resurrect some form of a post-2011 Afghan mission in the opinion pages of the Globe,
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/canada-has-more-choices-than-all-or-nothing-in-afghanistan/article1539761/
but surely he's got to see that the ideas he proposes -- perpetuating the PRT and the OMLT presence -- are probably non-starters in the current detainee-allegations-laden realm of public opinion.

There are only two real jailors in Afghanistan. The NDS and American forces. Rightly or wrongly, it's hard to see public support swelling any time soon for any new Canadian mission that turned any detainees our forces were involved in taking over to either of them, unless certain outstanding issues could be said to have been resolved first. Both the OMLT and the PRT (in its police mentorship and other judicial reform aspects) have to work closely with Afghan security forces, including the NDS, and, if current headlines are any indication, their members would necessarily be accused of complicity, sooner or later, in any eventual reports of their excesses if either of those components were to be extended now.

(People like Prof. Saideman who still want to salvage something from this one might be better off advocating in their opinion pieces for a perpetuation of some form of air presence, seeing as it's somewhat harder to take detainees from a helicopter [glad Bruce mentioned air, more here and here].)
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/08/afghan-burdenkeep-on-runnin.html
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/04/un-congo-mission-for-cf-local-realities.html
   
The same concern of course would extend to any involvement in the UN's troubled Congo mission helping the Kabila government suppress its insurgency there, should it involve more than a handful of Canadian troops. Not only are Congo's troops certain to be even more, erm, unruly than their Afghan counterparts [more here]...
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/04/un-congo-mission-for-cf-local-realities.html

What we're really seeing here with the most recent detainee allegations (now in Britain, as well),
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/apr/19/torture-risk-taliban-british-accused
and the lack of good options in Congo, is the real-world limitations that always existed with the whole liberal-idealistic "Responsibility to Protect"/failed-states-intervention doctrine, as the level of military co-partnering with abusive state agencies that would be involved in any such "friendly" intervention seems to be simply inconsistent with Western countries' human rights obligations...

Mark
Ottawa
 
The Congo has finally been raised in the Commons. NDP foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar (a supporter of a new Canadian mission)
http://www.ndp.ca/press/dewar-congo-calling-will-canada-answer
asked in Question Period today if the government would support the UN's interest in having Lt.-Gen. Leslie take command of MONUC. Foreign affairs minister Lawrence Cannon confirmed that Canada has been asked by the UN (along with some other countries) to provide a new commander for the UN mission and that the government was considering the request.

Now that the cat is officially out of the bag will the government bring this--rather consequential--matter forward for debate in the Commons if it looks favourably on the request?

On the other hand, if the government declines, how will it explain its decision to the legion of Canadian lovers of UN peackeeping? Though MONUC is not "traditional peacekeeping" since it's under Chapter VII of the UN Charter [see 8. here], not Chapter VI, and is allowed to be quite forceful, including deadly.

Mark
Ottawa
 
Congo no go? But a minor go might just, er, grow
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/04/congo-no-go-but-minor-go-might-just-er.html

Mark
Ottawa
 
CBC: No Congo Mission for CF
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/04/cbc-no-congo-mission-for-cf.html

Mark
Ottawa
 
After Afghanistan: Peacekeepers or War makers?
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/05/after-afghanistan-peacekeepers-or-war.html

An intelligent discussion on TVO's The Agenda, in which Steve Staples is called out on the difference between UN "blue helmet" peacekeeping and its current Congo mission (which we appear to have avoided), and in which Janice Stein in surprisingly, er, robust. Video...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Afstan: Prime Minister as, er, brave (or is that principled?) as his Dutch counterpart?
http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2010/05/afstan-prime-minister-as-er-brave-as.html

Mark
Ottawa
 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, are some useful thoughts from historian (and occasional Army.ca contributor) Jack Granatstein:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/peacekeeping-if-necessary-but-not-necessarily-peacekeeping/article1580442/
Peacekeeping if necessary, but not necessarily peacekeeping
Participation should always depend on two things: Is it in our national interests and can the Canadian Forces do it?

J.L. Granatstein
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

With the Canadian Forces’ commitment in Afghanistan scheduled to conclude next year, should Canada turn its attention back to United Nations peacekeeping?

The Canadian Forces were good at the peacekeeping job, even if it never was a major priority of the government and the military, no matter what Canadians believed. Nor did UN peace operations ever absorb more than a small percentage of budgets or personnel.

Moreover, Canada did peace operations not out of altruism, but because they served Western interests, for example, at Suez in 1956, the Congo in 1960 and Cyprus in 1964. We did them because of our history: We had an expeditionary military with good logistics and communications, and not many other smaller states did. And we did them because the public liked peacekeeping – it did not divide Canadians the way the world wars had.

But today’s peace operations are much more robust, much more difficult enforcement operations than those Canada first undertook, and the UN’s record in dealing with peace enforcement is, if anything, much worse even than its spotty record in handling the more benign forms of peacekeeping. That is why the UN increasingly has subcontracted its operations to organizations such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Organization of African Unity. Sometimes, these organizations have fared well: NATO “resolved” the situation in the former Yugoslavia. But the OAU, its members’ militaries much less effective than NATO’s, has had no success in Darfur. Unfortunately, there is no sign that the UN itself will be able to mount effective operations at any time.

But that is not meant to suggest that Canada should stay out of all peace operations. The test to determine participation should always be twofold: our national interests and the capability of the Canadian Forces.

Our interests are clear. Canada must defend its territory, its people and its unity. It must work to strengthen the economic welfare of its citizens and, as a liberal democracy, it must co-operate with its friends in advancing freedom. These interests require that we focus first on our own territory, North America and the Western Hemisphere, and on areas of the world, such as the Middle East or Southwest Asia, where conflicts are likely to expand and threaten the globe. Alongside our national interests, we have humanitarian values that must be considered, as in Haiti, to cite one example.

But we can do nothing without a capable military. It has taken Herculean and expensive efforts to rebuild capacity. We now have a small, very capable army, navy and air force, but the operative word for all three is small. The 65,000-person Canadian Forces have been strained to the breaking point by the efforts involved in sustaining a 2,800-person force in Afghanistan. This is not good enough for a country of Canada’s power and standing, and if we want to be able to play a role in peace operations – or any other military operations – we are far from finished with the rebuilding of the forces. Numbers must be increased and new ships, aircraft and armoured vehicles must be acquired.

Not every UN operation is good; not every non-UN operation is bad. Some writers even suggest that everything touched by the United States must be bad. This is flatly wrong.

We should be willing to offer military assistance to peace operations if key conditions are met. There must be a strong political will to act at the UN. The host nation must agree to accept foreign soldiers on its soil and demonstrably want to resolve the crisis. There must be a clear exit strategy or a withdrawal date stated in advance by the UN or by the Canadian Parliament. The mission must serve Canada’s interests and, above all, our troops must be deployed with the equipment, training and numbers required to achieve the operation’s ends. Only if those conditions are met should the government of Canada send its men and women abroad.

In other words, let us not rely on platitudes and myths any more. We are not a moral superpower or divinely gifted peacekeepers. We ought never to make virtually automatic commitments to UN or other peace operations. We need hard-headed, realistic assessments of our situation and interests. Moreover, public backing is essential, and our elected representatives should be required to approve every significant deployment.

So, peace operations, yes. But only if it is something we can do and something that is right for us. The task of the Canadian government is to assess the factors involved carefully and to provide what is needed to make successful operations a certainty.

Historian J.L. Granatstein is senior research fellow at the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute.

Granatstein says, ”Our interests are clear. Canada must defend its territory, its people and its unity. It must work to strengthen the economic welfare of its citizens and, as a liberal democracy, it must co-operate with its friends in advancing freedom.” and, in the same paragraph, ”These interests require that we focus first on our own territory, North America and the Western Hemisphere, and on areas of the world, such as the Middle East or Southwest Asia, where conflicts are likely to expand and threaten the globe.”

I would grossly oversimplify our vital interests into two words: Peace and Prosperity; the two appear, to me, to be interrelated: peace is required for countries to become and remain prosperous* and prosperity seems to reduce the desire to risk wars.

The policy requirements Granatstein draws from his statement of interests are justifiable enough and are consistent with the policies of the government of the day.

Peacekeeping, of whatever flavour, remains problematical at a policy level: Pearsonian peacekeeping is dead and gone; it doesn’t matter that Canadians have a deep and abiding (and quite peculiar) affection for it; it was, as Granatstein correctly says, a relic of the Cold War – we did it, peacekeeping, because it was a way we could, economically, serve the best interests of the big, US led West; it was never about altruism; it was always about our best interests.

The new sorts of ‘robust’ peacekeeping are hard to manage: too hard for the United Nations which is institutionally inept. Subcontracting to NATO is a way out but, as I believe Afghanistan proves, NATO is not good at early 21st century operations. NATO is unable, in my view, top ‘see’ beyond its established purpose of using massive, technologically sophisticated, standardized force to defeat a huge, almost as sophisticated, aggressive foe. IF we ever come to fear e.g. China then NATO, transformed in the long dead SEATO or something, would be the way to go.

What is needed is a “coalition of the willing” with three tiers:

1. Tier 1: a small cadre of large, rich, sophisticated forces that can provide, above all, money and logistics to the force. The group must include the USA;

2. Tier 2: a medium sized group of troop contributing nations, this group may, on a case by case basis, include France, Spain, the UK and the US, but will, almost always, include e.g. Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, India, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, South Africa and so on;

3. Tier 3: a larger group of ‘spear carrier’ nations – selected according to theatre of operations.

The coalition needs a top level management team, especially to standardize e.g. C2, which, I suggest, groups like ABCA, AUSCANZUKUS and CCEB can provide. There needs to a political team added to those purely military groups, as NATO has, to do the subcontracting work with the UN.


----------
* There is an argument that a good war can instil prosperity; 1939-45 is often used as an example. It is not a case of cause and effect. Going to war did, indeed, help bring the Great Depression to an end and it did, also, spur unprecedented industrial and technological development, but so could many, many other arrays of socio-economic measures and they all could have done so in the 1930s and without sacrificing 60,000,000 people.
 
Iraq? Post at Unambiguously Ambidextrous:

UN good for something?
http://unambig.com/un-good-for-something/

One wonders if all those UN-loving Canadians would want us to take part is this possible peacekeeping mission:

"U.S. eyes UN peacekeepers for Iraq after 2011"...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Ottawa, military wonder what's next in Afghanistan
Murray Brewster
The Canadian Press
05 July 2010

The running gag in Ottawa lately is that the looming end of the Afghan war has left Canada with a pretty little army that's all dressed up with no place to go.

Those in uniform don't consider it very funny.

The war transformed the Canadian military, the army in particular, with a lot of new equipment. But more importantly, it has forged a whole generation of soldiers and officers who've been tested in battle.

The questions of how, when and where the Canadian military should be employed after combat operations in Kandahar cease next summer is something that MPs and decision-makers have just begun to wrap their heads around.

And if recent hearings and a Senate committee report are any indication, it will be a long, excruciating debate.

The trauma of Afghanistan has just started to set in, and there are those on the policy side who say it will be a very, very long time before another federal government lets the army out to fight the way it has for the last four years in the bloody, arid fields and mountain passes of southwest Asia.

Poll after poll, focus group after focus group have screamed for a return to what Canadians see as their traditional role on the world stage - peacekeeping. And those are the surveys carried out by the Department of National Defence itself.

Retired major-general Lewis MacKenzie said Ottawa needs to be picky and choosy about the missions it undertakes in the future, regardless of whether its done under a UN or NATO flag.

The experience of being left "alone" in Kandahar by recalcitrant NATO partners is something that should not be forgotten.

"Every time I got into trouble in a UN operation, I always said to myself 'God, if only NATO was running this, I could do it right and have the resources,"' MacKenzie told MPs recently.

"Now I've discovered that NATO is a bigger debating society than the United Nations."

The sad reality is, in most of the world's trouble spots, the traditional Pearsonian form of peacekeeping - known as United Nations Chapter 6 interventions - are few and far between. More often, international forces end up plopped in between belligerents who are far from finished pummelling each other.

Canadians are much more enthusiastic for missions like the one to Haiti last winter, where the army, navy and air force pulled together to deliver a swift and efficient humanitarian operation in aid of the earthquake-shattered nation.

If last week's Canada Day celebrations on Parliament Hill were any example, the Conservative government is a willing convert to that kind of benign intervention.

The military's role in Haiti was showcased in a moving slide show presentation on giant screens in front of the Queen and an estimated 100,000 revellers.
 
Longish post drawing on article by Jack Granatstein today, with my own thoughts:

The Canadian Forces, war present, and future?
http://unambig.com/the-canadian-forces-war-present-and-future/

Mark
Ottawa
 
2011 is closer than we think; what next?

http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2010/08/11/jack-granatstein-life-after-afghanistan/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Jack Granatstein: Life after Afghanistan

Doug Schmidt / Postmedia News
NATO soldiers salute the casket of Canadian Captain Richard Leary at a ramp ceremony at Kandahar Airfield on June 4, 2008.
Comments Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Digg Reddit Buzz Email
National Post  August 11, 2010 – 10:00 am

The Harper government continues to give every indication that it means what it has repeatedly said: The Canadian military — its battle group, its trainers in Operational Mentor and Liaison Teams, and its soldiers in the Provincial Reconstruction Team in Kandahar — will be out of Afghanistan in 2011. The army has suffered casualties; it has tested its tactics and tried out its equipment in tough conditions. The Canadian Forces last year produced its first training manual on counter-insurgency operations, and there are already bureaucrats and military officers in Ottawa who are looking to Darfur or the Democratic Republic of Congo or other failed and failing states as places to hone the army’s edge further. But why?

First, there is no requirement that Canada do anything once the Canadian Forces is out of Afghanistan. We need not fight another war simply to employ the army anymore than we must take on a peacekeeping mission. An army can sit and train and rest and recuperate, and after the endless rotations of infantry battle groups to Kandahar, rest is what the army needs. Let the soldiers decompress and meet their families again.

Second, it would help in determining what the country was to do with its military if it knew what it wanted to do. The Harper government’s “Canada First Defence Strategy” declared that the first task of the Canadian Forces was the defence of Canada. That is the correct priority and there will be challenges aplenty to our sovereignty in the coming years, but what else must the CF do? What role should Canada play in the hemisphere, in Asia, in the world? Does Canada have an obligation to do its share of the global heavy lifting that is often required? What is the foreign policy into which the military must fit?

The reality is that the government, each and every government and not only the Harper government, has no idea what Canadian foreign policy is or should be, beyond the realization, as Eugene Lang and Eric Morse have noted, “that Canada is incapable militarily, diplomatically and politically of acting outside a multilateral coalition.” That is certainly true. The first requirement is that the government must know what it wants to do and, every bit as important, what it doesn’t want to do. Once that is decided, the Canadian Forces must prepare itself to carry out its tasks, whatever they may be.

And if the government cannot decide? Or leaves matters up to events to determine its course of action (which, after all, is the Canadian way)? Then the military must be flexible and must train for a range of contingencies ranging from benign peacekeeping through peacemaking and peace enforcement to counter-insurgency operations and all-out war. That is pretty much what the Canadian Forces has been doing and likely will continue to do, because that is what professional militaries do. They train to be prepared to do whatever their government orders. They present their hypotheses of future actions to the politicians and, depending on how persuasive they are in making their case, the government buys them equipment and adjusts their personnel numbers. If they get it right, they do well on operations; if they get it wrong, large numbers of Canada’s youth may die. Our record of forecasting historically has not been stellar, but happily Canadian soldiers have proved to be able to adapt and improvise and fight well if they are properly led.

The key is professionalism. A professional military is a necessity for Canada if we wish to prevent high casualty tolls and defeats, and nothing that has happened in the decade since the Afghanistan war began has disproved the requirement for professionalism. The nation’s soldiers demonstrated their skills in action from Tora Bora to Kabul and to Panjwai. That the Canadian Forces survived the bleak years of the 1990s verged on the miraculous but, thanks to the professionalism of its junior and senior leaders, it did. And in Afghanistan, once the government provided the equipment the soldiers needed to defeat a skilled, tenacious enemy, our battle groups prevailed in action.

As the end of the Afghan operation looms, the leadership of the Canadian Forces and the government must work together to maintain the professionalism of the military. The Canadian practice historically has been to let the military sink into irrelevance once the fight is over. No one should argue that we must fight somewhere tomorrow. But no one should believe that we may not need to fight somewhere the day after tomorrow. The task of the CF and the government is to ensure that Canada’s soldiers can do so — and do well — the next time the need arises.

Ottawa Citizen
J.L. Granatstein is a senior research fellow of the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute.
 
The piece actually was first out (published is so yesterday)  two days ago:
http://www.globalnews.ca/world/story.html?id=3375472

I had this to add:
http://unambig.com/the-canadian-forces-war-present-and-future/

'...Here’s the problem. It is the function of the government to identify for the military the general types of missions that they may be required to perform. It is then up to the military to tell the government what numbers and types of forces and equipments are required and roughly what they may cost. The government finally should make the decision about what capabilities it is ultimately willing to pay for.

But our recent governments, Liberal and Conservative, have been both unwilling and (more important) incapable to engage in the sort of serious, and politically fraught (some traditional missions may have to be ditched and there may be job losses somewhere), analytic thinking that is required for such an exercise. Sadly, the CF themselves have done little or nothing to encourage such thinking, each service being afraid that it may be gored in the process.

The Conservatives’ “Canada First Defence Strategy” is no strategy at all. It is essentially a shopping list, one that this government is in fact unlikely to be willing fully to pay for given the current budget crunch. Liberal shopping most likely would be even more constrained though.

Trying to maintain “combat-capable, flexible, multi-role” Canadian Forces for all three services along current lines is, to my mind, simply impossible for all those services to be effective and efficient, given the limited funding that our governments (both stripes) are willing to provide.

So, in other words, a true “defence strategy” would attempt to:

1) Outline how the government thinks the CF should be employed for national, and then international, purposes;

2) Outline what mix of service capabilities are required to fulfill those roles.

But that would require serious decisions with political and service consequences this government is not willing to make–nor are, I am sure, most Canadians. Will any Canadian government ever be so ready?

Meanwhile the Brits, unlike us, are going to do some real thinking on the matter…

The CF are trying to maintain or acquire too many capabilities (e.g. blue-water navy, submarines, all-purpose stealth fighters [more here, here and here]) that simply will not be affordable in my view…'

Mark
Ottawa
 
Post at Unambiguously Ambidextrous:

The ineffable delights of UN Peacekeeping, Congo section
http://unambig.com/the-ineffable-delights-of-un-peackeeping-congo-section/

Mark
Ottawa
 
Back
Top