Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
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Is there a point any more? What does the Res F provide that couldn't be provided by a Reg F capable of preparing roto 1 soldiers off the streets in 6 months?
Is there a point any more? What does the Res F provide that couldn't be provided by a Reg F capable of preparing roto 1 soldiers off the streets in 6 months?
Isn't part of the problem that the baby screams every time you try to change the water?I agree a whole lot. I'm a fan of the "regimental" system. One shouldn't throw out the baby with the bathwater but based on the reality of the system, we need to restructure the whole Army to make the most use of it.
For some reason after WW2 we decided each regiment was a sacred cow. Look at the history of a regiment before then and they’ll change names, roles, ect almost a dozen times. For example:I agree a whole lot. I'm a fan of the "regimental" system. One shouldn't throw out the baby with the bathwater but based on the reality of the system, we need to restructure the whole Army to make the most use of it.
I'm still tied into having hybrid RegF/ResF units that vary in ratios between high readiness units (100 RegF) to low readiness units (30 RegF/70ResF) with the more esoteric, use only in times of extreme emergency capabilities in the latter. In effect, reservists could expect to rise to being company OCs or CSMs at most. Make each ResF battalion a company with a RegF core and being a part of a 30/70 battalion commanded by a RegF CO and with one RegF company and 2 to 3 ResF companies. The battalion maintains one high readiness company and a headquarters and several low-readiness sub-units.
Besides restructure there also needs to be a fundamental retuning of ResF terms of service.
I simply can't see any other solution to solving the problem of providing effective leadership and resources to the ResF without such integration. Apparently, after 70 years of dicking around, the Army hasn't found a system either.
Name one element of the CAF that is successfully performing its primary role of effectively defending Canada and its interests?The parent organization doesn't need to be torn down. There are obviously parts that have to rebuilt.
Sorry I realized I left out my overall point. For some reason after WW2 we decided that the regiments existence was more important that that regiment filling a purpose for the CAF writ large. I do t know that I fully agree with @FJAG ’s 30/70s and 10/90s but I generally agree with the idea of giving an operational capacity to the reserves.
Name one element of the CAF that is successfully performing its primary role of effectively defending Canada and its interests?
Name one part of Canada currently occupied by a foreign invader.Name one element of the CAF that is successfully performing its primary role of effectively defending Canada and its interests?
Name one part of Canada currently occupied by a foreign invader.
Only that’s not really true is it ? We never had a mobilization plan. And I don’t see a “non conscript” army holding on to skeleton regiments without people. Even the British have amalgamated and adjusted structures time and time again since WW2.That's been the case for most non-conscript militaries for centuries, of course.
Their purpose was to, as economically as possible, ensure the sustainability of a nation wide framework to quickly scale up during mass mobilization. Our issue is, of course, that we haven't really changed our methodology since WW1...
Abstract
While Canadians have been called an "unmilitary people," Canada has played a significant role in many wars, from South Africa to Korea, and has been able to mobilize its resources to meet the demands of war. This paper concentrates entirely on the mobilization of military personnel: the process of moving armed forces from peacetime to wartime levels. Its analysis centers on the internal and external factors that influence force requirements and availability and on the means of filling the inevitable gaps between peacetime and wartime needs. Canada's mobilization policies are currently emerging from a period of neglect and must resolve the traditional tendencies of an unmilitary people with the demands of modern conventional war.
Canadian Military Mobilization on JSTOR
PETER F. DAWSON, Canadian Military Mobilization, Armed Forces & Society, Vol. 16, No. 1, A SPECIAL ISSUE: Canadian Defense policy: Challenges and Continuities (Fall 1989), pp. 37-57www.jstor.org
Only that’s not really true is it ? We never had a mobilization plan. And I don’t see a “non conscript” army holding on to skeleton regiments without people. Even the British have amalgamated and adjusted structures time and time again since WW2.
Short memory: QOR, the Canadian Guards, the Black Watch, FGH, 8th Canadian Hussars, 3 RCHA….Yes, and they mainly focused on amalgamating their (under recruited and anemic) Regular Force units, which we have never done IIRC.
300 troops in a Reg F battalion isn't much of a battalion, I'd suggest. Might be time to face the music ...
Short memory: QOR, the Canadian Guards, the Black Watch, FGH, 8th Canadian Hussars, 3 RCHA….
Don’t tell the London Scottish Regiment that. Reality is that having your reserves as Bns of your regular army Regiments allows for a much more flexible approach to things and the British tend to make the company as the centre of gravity for reserve formations with Coys dispersed. We could learn a lot from that.
I don’t disagree about our number of Bns, it is however pretty blatant what about ism
The army led the amalgamation effort, and it was across the army. Regular / TA / Reserve is just foolish. Do I think the reserves should be the centre of gravity of amalgamation? Yes. Why? Because a unit should be in charge multiple sub units, if there’s not ability to force generate a single sub unit, then why are we paying for it?I think the key principle they used in the UK was that the Reg F led the amalgamation effort, and the TA followed.
However, given the state of world affairs these days, the last thing we should be doing is shrinking IMHO!
Question reframing- name one element of the CAF that's delivering appropriate capability per dollar relative to comparable peer nationsHas the Canadian army failed to generate a task force for an operation in the last twenty years ?