GO!!! said:
Dare,
Please provide some evidence of your "concptual notion" working in practice. If you are familiar with endnotes to source your claim, I will follow up. If you've seen it, documentation should'nt be too hard to come by.
Please reread what I have written. Especially the part where I mention my belief is made upon first hand personal experiences.
The MND is perhaps the least qualified person qualified to state what, exactly soldiers are to do, as the authority to do that is vested in the CDS, and to some extent, the DMND. Also, a source of where the MND made the statement regarding "diplomats" would be nice - see above.
I'm not sure how the MND's position on something in his jurisdiction is "unqualified", but anyways, this is something I can provide citations for..
"The authority of command and technical proficiency,once considered adequate for Cold War-era leader development, are not enough in today's environment. The CF needs a new type of military professional and leader, one in whom the qualities of the warrior-technician are supplemented with the skills of the soldier-diplomat. The CF needs leaders â “ both commis-sioned and non-commissioned â “ who are broadly educated, who understand this new interconnected and volatile world, and who are expert in conflict resolution in its broadest sense â “ from traditional warfighting to humanitarian and nation-building interventions."
http://www.cda-acd.forces.gc.ca/CFLI/engraph/leadership/doc/DND_Conceptual_e.pdf
Search through it. In fact, you might want to read it. It's quite well made.
Stamped official, copyrighted to Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, 2005 with the forward written and material approved by The Man, himself, but you can carry on with your delusion that the CDS is above authority.
Here is the Minister's position. One of the many times he has mentioned it.
http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/newsroom/view_news_e.asp?id=1577
"The men and women of the Canadian Forces have always been part warrior, part diplomat, and part aid worker. Some argue this diminishes the â Å“warrior ethicâ ? or renders our troops less effective on the battlefield. Frankly, I disagree. Because, as I have said, in today's world our soldiers must be capable of not just winning wars, but also of contributing to conditions which make it possible for us to secure the peace."
Your statements as to what veterans of past and recent conflicts fought for are lacking in substance without either interviewing an accurate cross section of those veterans or being one yourself, and knowing what it means.
Oh please.. what I have said is selfevident. Unless there is a ghost army out there readying for war for the right of corporal punishment, veterens didn't fight for that. They fought for freedom. A theme, I believe, you'll find quite commonly used. And you know it.
I noticed you did'nt argue with my statement that you had never been deployed though, so you are building a profile for us after all. Keep up the good work.
I don't argue with many things, I hesitated driving down this course in the first place, but you can make a game of it if you like.
I'm no longer interested in talking about it. You know what they say about one who assumes?.. enjoy your profiling. :
I'm going to read that manual, it's quite interesting.