I'll believe it when I see it.
You can't get me again on this one. I floated that as an idea after one of @Kirkhill's earlier posts and was roundly bitch-slapped.A well paid and treated (by third world standards) Foreign Legion based outside of Canada. There is your added bayonets. Teach the Canadian troops to be the specialists to provide the bayonets with more teeth, comms, etc.
Very Mandolorian.....You are correct. This is the way.
Very Mandolorian.....
However I beg to differ. If you want to have a seat at the table you put your money where your mouth is. Yes it is a risk, but it needs to be considered.
Boots on the ground however are a concrete example of commitment to a host nation.Respectfully, there is more to having a place at the table than having grunts in holes in far off places.
There were more dangerous jobs than being infantry in WW2 and they were in the air or on or under the sea. And id like to point out that those most dangerous of jobs in WW2 we're dedicated to logistics or destroying logistics.
I'm not so sure he even wanted that. He was hoping the CATP and material production would safely keep Canadian home and Quebec quiet.Funny enough, concentrating on Air forces and Naval forces was the plan of William Lyon Mackenzie King in WWII and it is only the fact that all European powers dissolved before Germany, except the UK, that forced his hand into building up the army too.
Agree. A drop of crude or a raw log should not leave this country.Probably should have been done years ago.
The whole PET Rips Off Canada should have been a large refinery program as well.
Boots on the ground however are a concrete example of commitment to a host nation.
That cannot be dismissed or downplayed.
Agree. A drop of crude or a raw log should not leave this country.
I simply don't buy that.
And geopolitically- those boots should be contributed such to get a flag on the map. Those the arguments. Let's accept them- they're good arguments.Boots on the ground however are a concrete example of commitment to a host nation.
That cannot be dismissed or downplayed.
Then no one will convince you. The real fact is unless we plan on having a carrier strike group on both coasts, any Naval or Air commitment is a token gesture. Boots on the ground has been the measure of commitment to an area for thousands of years, even after the invention of sail. Those guns only reach so far inland.I simply don't buy that.
Then no one will convince you. The real fact is unless we plan on having a carrier strike group on both coasts, any Naval or Air commitment is a token gesture. Boots on the ground has been the measure of commitment to an area for thousands of years, even after the invention of sail. Those guns only reach so far inland.
Trump may actually convince the rest of the world that it needs to prepare for a world without the US being there to help.Trump is now calling for 5% GDP expenditure for NATO members from his speech today at Davos.
Then no one will convince you. The real fact is unless we plan on having a carrier strike group on both coasts, any Naval or Air commitment is a token gesture. Boots on the ground has been the measure of commitment to an area for thousands of years, even after the invention of sail. Those guns only reach so far inland.
The problem of commitment is a serious issue.If Canada was interested in operating independently of allies, taking on operations and force projecting by ourselves, I could see and perhaps agree with your sentiment.
Reality is the opposite of that.
If I remember correctly it was all forced but he ironically pushed for an early heavy emphasis on pers going to the air force and navy. The irony was that those who did serve overseas with those two services suffered higher casualties ratios then other ground troops and that later they didnt shift the manpower to the army when it needed it leaving a significant portion of the RCAF for example having never left the country.I'm not so sure he even wanted that. He was hoping the CATP and material production would safely keep Canadian home and Quebec quiet.
The problem of commitment is a serious issue.
An RCN TG can just sail away when it gets a bit hot, and fighters can be home in time to tuck the kids in if things go south. Troops on the ground mean Canadians will die if the GoC waffles. That matters to allies, because troops dying pointlessly makes the politicians look bad.
i.e. If the troops are there when the bullets fly, Canada is there for the long haul.
Why would Canadian soldiers dying beside allied forces in defence of our national interests be any more "pointless" than the lives that would be lost from Canadian ships being sunk or Canadian aircraft being shot down in defence of our national interests?I would argue having soldiers die for the sake of international clout is having them die pointlessly.