I've been keeping somewhat quiet on this thread because I just don't know enough of the facts to be spouting off one way or another. This is a fact driven case. The "legal" and "administrative" aspects are relatively clear. DAOD 2008-6 Internet Publishing is quite direct in responsibilities. One should note article 4.3 and 4.4, however:
Exclusions
4.3 Internet sites that publicize the activities of informal associations or informal groups of DND employees, CF members, dependents or other affiliated individuals do not fall within the scope of this DAOD.
4.4 DND employees and CF members involved in creating or maintaining these unofficial sites must ensure that these sites are in no way understood to officially represent DND or the CAF.
This leaves a big factual question as to whether Blue Hackle crossed the line into "official" or not. I expect there are several hundred opinions on that already, all of them formed without adequate knowledge of the totality of the facts.
I'll add to that, again, we have nothing but glib rumours about what action has been taken in the past to control, manage, correct, investigate etc etc the activities of this group. Without that, IMHO, it's entirely premature to jump on either side of the band wagon. By all means we can debate in purely hypothetical and academic terms as to what is proper and improper, but applying that to these circumstances, a few garish pictures notwithstanding, is jumping to conclusions without all the facts.
Honestly, my concerns run more to the reactions of our senior leadership. Again, I do not know all the facts but I think CAF has a knee jerk reaction to suspending people when a hint of impropriety is raised. That has an immediate and devastating effect on an individual because true or not, it immediately paints them with a veneer of impropriety. They'll never be able to wash that off regardless of how innocent or minimally responsibly they might be. I don't know if there is a reason why a suspension was considered necessary in order to properly conduct the investigation, but my gut tells me it wasn't. I've been involved in investigations where at the beginning there was a question of whether command or leadership was part of the problem but generally that does not need a suspension while the investigation is ongoing. My gut tells me it wasn't necessary here based on the few facts that I do have.
But my issue really isn't with a few morons who have created a problem for the army with their sophomoric posts. In every organization you will find these. Nor is it with the ultimate command responsibility issue as to whether or not and how this web site was to be policed. I haven't seen it and, based on everything I have heard here from folks who have over the years, you would need to see the totality of it to make a proper assessment. I can see it falling on either side of the line as to how "official" it is and I simply do not know enough to make the call. My issue is really with how the CAF's leadership responds to this incident.
Rory Fowler used to be a legal officer with the Office of the JAG. He started life in the PPCLI and eventually retired as LCol in the JAG. He runs a blog on many military related topics and issued one on this incident.
@dapaterson already published the link, as did
@Blackadder1916 a few minutes ago but I'll repeat it here anyway.
“Something must be done!” 13 July 2025 This blog is brought to you by the letters “F” (for “fear”) and “A” (for “appearances”) – or, alternatively, the letter “O” (for “optics”), although I‘m not a fan of the use of the term “optics” when what we really mean are “appearances” – and by the...
roryfowlerlaw.com
I know Rory and at times I agree with him and at times I see his views as a bit extreme but I'll say this, he's been much closer to where they make the sausages in DND and has much more insight than me into the inner workings of the CAF on these types of issues.
I'll note that the word "woke" never appears in his article but essentially that's the problem we have in general. Since Somalia, the CAF has been a favourite whipping boy of the media and, of course, any negative media attention creates problems for our military leaders with its government, particulalry a government that since 2017 has been a master at virtue signalling.
I'm not as concerned as Rory about the "unfairness" that he sees in the summary hearings because IMHO, the summary hearing process has been stripped down to making COs and Delegated Os virtually powerless anyway so that the system is largely ignored. (and if you question that, take a look at the JAG reports of summary hearings - they dropped from nearly 2,000 summary trials for 2009, the year I left the branch, to 492 this last year. Courts martial stayed relatively steady from 56 in 2009 to 46 last year. Somewhere or other - all things being equal - some 1,500 cases a year are getting swept under the rug)
I am concerned about how the CAF's leadership is addressing the general structure and application of discipline in the CAF. On the one hand its fearful to act and thereby fails to do it when called for (and in many cases because the CAF doesn't give leadership the right tools to use). On the other hand it jumps in with two jackboots when a "woke" or "pseudo-woke" issue arises and leadership feels necessary to project what it considers the appropriate "appearance." In some respects its the quality of the leaders themselves. In others its because the CAFs public affairs system is marginally competent at best. Crisis management and messaging is entirely reactive and poorly reactive at that. Throwing a token body to the wolves has become part and parcel to their repertoire.
$0.02 Rant ends.
