(Damn title was to long lol)
By land, by sea: If Canada wants to build a rapid reaction force the answer is simple
The Airborne Regiment
CREDIT: Pat McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen
In recent years, many senior officers and even government officials are coming to realize the potential value of the role the now-disbanded Airborne Regiment played in the Canadian Forces.
Chris Wattie
The Ottawa Citizen
Saturday, October 09, 2004
Canadian defence planners and military strategists have been wrestling with the idea of some kind of rapid reaction force for decades, a large body of soldiers that can be sent quickly to a crisis zone anywhere in the world.
The troops would intervene in humanitarian crises, rescue Canadian citizens caught up in a civil war or natural disaster, or capture and hold an airport in a combat zone until Canadian or allied reinforcements can be flown in.
Major-General Brian Vernon, a retired army officer, believes he has the answer: the Canadian Airborne Regiment.
"If they want a strategically transportable, combat capable force of, let's say 1,000 to 1,100 men, then you want the Airborne Regiment," says Maj.-Gen. Vernon, who served with the now disbanded regiment for seven of his 39-year military career.
"Although you probably couldn't call it that," he adds quickly.
The very name of the now disbanded unit has been anathema to successive defence ministers and senior military officers since the regiment was stricken from the army's rolls in 1995 in the wake of the Somalia scandal.
But in recent years, Maj.-Gen. Vernon says that many senior officers and even government officials are coming to realize the potential value of the role the Airborne played in the Canadian Forces.
"To make that initial assault ... to get our guys in there quickly, then what you want is something that's going to look a lot like the Airborne Regiment," he says. "Imagine if we'd had them available to get to (Canadian General) Romeo Dallaire in Rwanda or in Afghanistan, should our troops over there get into serious trouble."
"These (airborne) forces can be very, very useful ... The French have proven that over and over again with their Force d'Intervention, which is based on their 10th Parachute Division."
He says the government appears to be trying to fill that role by expanding JTF-2, the Canadian Forces' secretive commando unit.
In 2001, as part of its response to the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington, the federal government boosted JTF-2's budget by $119-million in order to double the size of the anti-terrorist force. But the unit has so far been unable to attract enough qualified applicants to reach its goal of 600 commandos, even after lowering its rigorous standards.
"I think it's doomed to failure -- our army isn't big enough to support that many special forces," says Maj.-Gen. Vernon.
As well, he says the training and work done by anti-terrorism or special forces units such as JTF-2 is not particularly well-suited to the role he envisions for a future airborne force.
"My professional opinion is that it has to be nothing smaller than a battalion ... big enough to be self-sufficient and pack a reasonable punch, and small enough to be easily transported and affordable."
Major-General Lewis MacKenzie, the now retired head of UN forces during the siege of Sarajevo, agrees it is time the Canadian army got back into the air.
He envisions a parachute battalion forming part of a much larger force that is "air deployable" into whatever international hot-spot that the federal government decides to send them.
"By which I mean they can fit their kit into whatever aircraft we have to transport them."
The heart of such a "light brigade" would be a parachute infantry battalion along the lines of the Airborne Regiment. "But I would call it First Canadian Parachute Battalion," Maj.-Gen. MacKenzie says. "For historical reasons." (First Canadian Parachute Battalion was the airborne unit that jumped into Normandy on the night before D-Day, during the Second World War).
"You need guys with their kit all packed, ready to go the moment the balloon goes up."
Maj.-Gen. MacKenzie says that the best argument for reforming the Airborne Regiment and a supporting "followup" brigade is the flexibility such a unit would give the government in responding to international crises.
"Seventy-two hours after someone in Ottawa sends out the call, an airborne regiment could be in the planes and on their way. That gives the government a phenomenally effective tool."
But Maj.-Gen. Vernon says it would be relatively simple to reform the Airborne Regiment -- under whatever name is eventually chosen.
"There are still enough experienced NCOs around from the Airborne Regiment that you have a good nucleus to form the unit around. It wouldn't take any time at all, once the decision's made."
What might take some time is acquiring the right aircraft to get the paratroopers there and to support them with air strikes or supply drops once they land. The air force's workhorse fleet of CC-130 Hercules is almost 40 years old and is plagued by maintenance problems that ground up to two-thirds of the planes at a time.
But the biggest hurdle to overcome might be the unfortunate legacy of the former Airborne Regiment which still looms large in the minds of government leaders, says Maj.-Gen. MacKenzie. "It's possible to sell this idea to the public," he says. "But I don't see any politician taking that risk."
© The Ottawa Citizen 2004
http://www.canada.com/national/features/tugofwar/story.html?id=27c69f1c-936e-439b-a497-23151a8b2af2&page=1