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http://www.hfxnews.ca/news.aspx?storyID=29778
Friday, February 18, 2005
Stogran: cash crunch must stop
By Chris Lambie
Col. Pat Stogran says troops are suffering.
Canada is â Å“watering downâ ? its infantry for lack of cash, says the man who commanded Canada's first official combat mission in 50 years.
Col. Pat Stogran, who led this country's 850-member battalion for six months in Afghanistan three years ago, spoke in Halifax yesterday at a seminar organized by Dalhousie University's Centre for Foreign Policy Studies.
â Å“You have to have highly trained soldiers. We cannot continue to dismantle our army to the lowest common denominator because of fiscal problems, and send troops off to make a meaningful contribution,â ? Stogran told an audience of students, academics and military personnel.
Canadian success in Afghani-stan was largely because of senior troops who received their training during the Cold War, Stogran said.
Fears the future
â Å“We had a surge capacity. I fear for 10 years from now. Where are we going to be?â ? he said. â Å“Because our centre of gravity in the Canadian Forces is the training of our troops.â ?
The military is expecting a modest infusion of an extra $750-million in next weeks federal budget, but not enough to meet its massive operating shortfall or buy new ships and transport planes.
Stogran was highly critical of Ottawa's â Å“unconscionableâ ? plan to phase out Leopard tanks and replace them with the lighter armoured Stryker mobile gun system.
â Å“There's no way you can bolt as much protection on to eight wheels,â ? he said. â Å“So we're killing people.â ?
Stogran also slammed a military phenomenon he dubbed â Å“management over manoeuvre.â ?
â Å“I've got to say that the most demoralizing thing that has ever happened to me â †at the risk of being completely disloyal here â †was being posted to our National Defence headquarters after Afghanistan,â ? he said.
â Å“In the Canadian Forces now we have come to the point where managing what little resources we have is a far higher career determinant than manoeuvring in the face of an enemy.â ?
Raise eyebrows
In what's sure to raise a few sailors' eyebrows, Stogran told the crowd Canada should be re-thinking its â Å“blue waterâ ? navy.
â Å“These are fiscally constrained times,â ? he said.
[email protected]
He has got a pair.
Friday, February 18, 2005
Stogran: cash crunch must stop
By Chris Lambie
Col. Pat Stogran says troops are suffering.
Canada is â Å“watering downâ ? its infantry for lack of cash, says the man who commanded Canada's first official combat mission in 50 years.
Col. Pat Stogran, who led this country's 850-member battalion for six months in Afghanistan three years ago, spoke in Halifax yesterday at a seminar organized by Dalhousie University's Centre for Foreign Policy Studies.
â Å“You have to have highly trained soldiers. We cannot continue to dismantle our army to the lowest common denominator because of fiscal problems, and send troops off to make a meaningful contribution,â ? Stogran told an audience of students, academics and military personnel.
Canadian success in Afghani-stan was largely because of senior troops who received their training during the Cold War, Stogran said.
Fears the future
â Å“We had a surge capacity. I fear for 10 years from now. Where are we going to be?â ? he said. â Å“Because our centre of gravity in the Canadian Forces is the training of our troops.â ?
The military is expecting a modest infusion of an extra $750-million in next weeks federal budget, but not enough to meet its massive operating shortfall or buy new ships and transport planes.
Stogran was highly critical of Ottawa's â Å“unconscionableâ ? plan to phase out Leopard tanks and replace them with the lighter armoured Stryker mobile gun system.
â Å“There's no way you can bolt as much protection on to eight wheels,â ? he said. â Å“So we're killing people.â ?
Stogran also slammed a military phenomenon he dubbed â Å“management over manoeuvre.â ?
â Å“I've got to say that the most demoralizing thing that has ever happened to me â †at the risk of being completely disloyal here â †was being posted to our National Defence headquarters after Afghanistan,â ? he said.
â Å“In the Canadian Forces now we have come to the point where managing what little resources we have is a far higher career determinant than manoeuvring in the face of an enemy.â ?
Raise eyebrows
In what's sure to raise a few sailors' eyebrows, Stogran told the crowd Canada should be re-thinking its â Å“blue waterâ ? navy.
â Å“These are fiscally constrained times,â ? he said.
[email protected]
He has got a pair.


