MJP said:
That is patently wrong, SSE has clear outputs each elements has to be ready to FG. In addition we have NATO remits that we observe. The latter is is the reason 3 Div is punching back in Road to HR and then holding for a year as "NATO ready Bde" essentially. The argument might be made that the SSE outputs are not achievable but to say we have no end state or direction would be wrong.
I wouldn't say "patently wrong" at all.
While SSE has eight core missions, its requirement for concurrent operations does not call for a brigade, just two sustained and one time limited deployments of 500-1,500 troops and two sustained and one time limited deployment of 100-500 troops. Notionally if one stripped all the Air Force and Navy commitments out of that they could aggregate to a brigade sized deployment but you and I both know that wasn't the intent.
I'm not sure what 3 Div's idea of a "NATO ready brigade" is at all. There is no tasking for that within the SSE although I'll be the first to admit that the idea of 3 Div forming a "NATO ready brigade" is an excellent idea. However, I expect that when 1 CMBG reaches it's year of High Readiness then it will have two of it's battlegroups eaten up with the Latvian eFP Battlegroup rotations while the rest of the brigade is decimated and cannibalised to fill the other operational deployments. There will hardly be any "brigade" left to act as a "NATO ready brigade".
More importantly, if 3 Div does manage to cobble together enough disparate elements to actually form a brigade what is it's designated mission other than a generic "NATO" one and more importantly how will it get itself to wherever NATO needs it. What is the plan? Will the US supply shipping and air movements? Do we have civilian transport earmarked and available? Do we have liaison established with whatever division or corps we intend to deploy to?
Yes we do have NATO remits. Yes the SSE recognizes that Russia is a potential adversary and that we must be capable of "maintaining advanced conventional military capabilities that could be used in the event of a conflict with a “near-peer"". SSE is schizophrenic at best as between the hyperbole it spouts and the limited missions it assigns. However, there is no direction for a "NATO ready brigade". Far from it--all that is required is battlegroups. Even worse is that under the current readiness management system that we have, the equipment issues that we have, the personnel issues that we have, the ability to create such a brigade and to deploy it operationally is beyond our abilities. (Which is why I expect the SSE was written to only require battlegroups in the first place)
The trouble for me, and I expect for MilEME09 as well is that a "white Paper" like the SSE purports to be, should be aspirational. It should be an analysis of the country's security needs and a road map telling DND what it should build towards. SSE doesn't do that. It spouts the usual platitudes and then basically says "do the best you can with what you have - Oh and maybe there will be a few new ships and maybe, if you are really good, some new second hand fighters in the future." I exaggerate obviously. But not by much.
Canada has dug itself into a hole where for its annual investment of 20 plus billion dollars annually, it sees very few concrete defence outputs. Not only are we "failing" - we have in fact failed and are not even trying to fix the systemic problems that permeate the entire system. Rebranding (and recruiting) are but one sign.
:cheers: