FJAG
Army.ca Legend
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MCG said:Sorry. You cannot absolve reserve leadership from any responsibility for the state of the reserve force. The regular force has not fought to retain or restore platoon-regiments for the glory of local fiefdoms.
I would also have to partially agree with Ostrozac. You cannot claim the PRes is cheaper (even man-for-man) while choosing to exclude the costs of infrastructure and the organizational structures. That being said, I don't know that the reserves do become more expensive when those overhead costs are included. I have neither done the math nor even seen the data.
Reserve leadership generally ends at the lieutenant colonel level with a smattering of colonels and the odd brigadier. It speaks very poorly of the RegF senior CF leadership if good ideas can be stymied by lower ranking officers and the odd politically connected civilian/retired hack. I sat on the Chief of Reserves and Cadets Council for over half a decade and failed to see anything other than reactive survival activities there as well. We certainly didn't generate any far reaching reform programs but mostly because we were sure that anything we brought forward would be shot down in flames.
I think the reality is that the RegF senior CF hasn't had a viable idea or plan for the reserves since the 1950s and has failed to garner any by-in from the reserves for any forward steps that would help and improve the overall force structure. In large part they are in the trenches fighting to protect the existing RegF PYs and budgets without any appetite to even consider whether a few thousand of those could be used to create a larger more efficient total force (and yes that would include legislative changes; a willingness to compulsorily mobilize and deploy reserve individuals, subunits etc; proper equipping, etc etc)
Sorry MCG. The RegF 2, 3 and 4 stars can't off load their responsibility to construct and lead a comprehensive effective total force by blaming a bunch of part timers sitting in the local armouries, who (while they might like their mess dinners and regimental kit) are doing their best (as they know it) to keep things moving along in a system that is daily becoming less and less defensible.
Old Sweat said:I am not sure there is any sort of attainable solution that will fix the force structure, especially as the political will, knowledge base and interest in expending political capital on an issue without a meaningful level of support is non-existent. Without political support at the highest level and the same from the public service, and that means money and lots of it, we are probably doomed to go through periodic bursts of wheel spinning that results in things like total force and 10/90 units and the like. And that goes for the regular force as well as the reserves and in all three services.
So what do we do? Maybe we making the best of a bad situation and maybe we can't expect more from a system that is designed to be not so good, but not all that bad. I suspect we have what the government and the public will accept and pay for because it is relatively cheap and doesn't get in serious trouble too often.
I don't think that we would see much political opposition to a plan to that would expand the total deployable force if it came with a zero budget increase. Back door political interference could be minimized if the plan is a good one and built with reserve buy in.
The very fact that we don't get into trouble very often is exactly why we could trade of RegF PYs for a larger deployable reserve/RegF force.
Back to what I said before; if the RegF objective is to squeeze every possible RegF PY out of the existing budget, and if the proposition is that in order to build up the reserves we need more funds, then we are dealing with a nonstarter.
:cheers: