ArmyRick
Army.ca Veteran
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Your forgetting politicians have their election COA (which can be throw away COAs as well)Its COA 4, right after the throw away COA

Your forgetting politicians have their election COA (which can be throw away COAs as well)Its COA 4, right after the throw away COA
FGH. They were on Nan Red.1 Hussars? My grandfather was Regina Rifles and mentioned the great support the Hussars gave them on NAN GREEN.
That begs the question then of what the fuck have we done with the last four years.We can't count on 5 years of intense full-time training for the "militia" to be prepared to fight the next war...
The troops that landed at Dieppe, Sicily, and Normandy were full-time professionals by the time their boots touched enemy soil. Even the troops sent to Hing Kong had been full-time training/working for at least a year before the battle.
That begs the question then of what the fuck have we done with the last four years.
A bit of confusion here. In late 1943, Canada had a surplus of Officers and the Brits where under strength. CANLOAN was a program to have Cdn Offrs volunteer with British Regiments for the duration.And CANLOAN allowed Canadian Army officers to serve temporarily with British units for experience.
We can't count on 5 years of intense full-time training for the "militia" to be prepared to fight the next war...
If there had been no bomber offensive from 1941 to 1944, while Germany was reduced by the terrible war of attrition in the east, would it have been possible for the Allies to justify the interminable delay before opening the Second Front in Europe?"
Churchill thwarted proposals for a D-Day in 1942, then for 1943. He was determined that when the Allies landed in France, it should be under conditions of overwhelming advantage. There must be no great campaign of attrition, such as would inevitable against an unbroken German army.
The bombers could enable the Western Allies to delay aggressively, while Russia fought the huge battles that broke the Wehrmacht , that caused Hitler by June 1944 to deploy 156 divisions in the East, against 50 in France and the Low Countries.
Neither the Russians or Americans could flatly be told that Churchill proposed no D-Day for years to come.
Bomber Command's 56,000 dead would represent, at the end, the lowest possible stake that Churchill could have been seen to throw on the tables of Europe, when the Russians were counting their dead in the millions.
That begs the question then of what the fuck have we done with the last four years.
Which is kinda the point of the "Drive to Divisional" (c) model. Looks like the plan is to put our big kid pants on finally.The common foundation of all the kvetching is that Canada has allowed its forces to become too small to retain and perpetuate the formal and institutional knowledge required for formation warfare.
We can still have the kind of force that needs to tag along and be nurtured and protected by a larger ally for a couple of years before really getting stuck in, or we can grow a useful "army that you have", or we can just ignore everything on the list of crises that would require either solution.
Let’s be very aware the next big war could very well see 2 of the 3 super powers against us and 1 that plans to sit on the sidelines. The war will be short and tactically nuclear almost from day 1. It almost has to be for any side to gain any sort of early decisive advantage.
And it’s going to happen.
That's going from diapers to shorts. "Field army" is long pants. And the same is needed for air and naval capabilities.Which is kinda the point of the "Drive to Divisional" (c) model. Looks like the plan is to put our big kid pants on finally.
Read this about D-Day...
Churchill spent treasure and employed technology rather than spending blood.
He saved lives but broke the bank and the Empire.
It will be seen that the enemy has irretrievably lost 1,000,000 man years. This represents no less than 36 per cent of the industrial effort that would have been put out by these towns if they had remained unmolested. ... Expressing these losses in another way, 2,400,000,000 man-hours have been lost for an expenditure of 116,500 tons of bombs claimed dropped, and this amounts to an average return for every ton of bombs dropped of 20,500 lost man-hours, or rather more than one quarter of the time spent in building a Lancaster. ... This being so, a Lancaster has only to go to a German city once to wipe off its own capital cost, and the results of all subsequent sorties will be clear profit."
A profit vs loss calculation,
Air Staff Intelligence Report, February 19, 1944
Bomber Command lost 56,000 men
The US 8th Air Force lost another 26,000.
Total of 82,000 men - permanently
Germany was denied 1,000,000 man years over 4 years.
Each dead allied airman denied Germany 12 man years of labour - not necessarily 12 dead workers. Just 12 workers that were out of work for one year, or 3 workers that were out of work for 4 years.
Air Marshal Harris RAF to General Ira Eaker USAAF.You destroy a factory, and they rebuild it. In six weeks they are in operation again. I kill all their workmen, it takes 21 years to provide new ones."
I will speak frankly about whether we bomb single military targets or whole cities. Obviously we prefer to hit factories, shipyards, and railways. It damages Hitler's war machine most. But those people who work in these plants live close to them. Therefore, we hit your houses and you. We regret the necessity for this.