Dariusz said:
Howdy,
does anybody know if General Natynczyk has some polish roots (ancestor wise)?....his name looks pretty polish to me?! :-X
Those hats are sharp, different, not “round” like the rest of the militaries, got myself one the last time I was in Poland.
here you will find some answer, you might not like this one
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Natynczyk ;D
or
qoute from site
General Walter J. Natynczyk CMM MSC CD[1] is the Chief of the Defence Staff of the Canadian Forces.
Born in Winnipeg in 1958, Natynczyk is the
son of a Polish father and
German mother. He and his two sisters grew up in Winnipeg's inner city.[2] He worked odd jobs as a Winnipeg Free Press paperboy and a hamburger flipper at a fast food establishment before embarking on his military career.
Natynczyk joined the Canadian Forces in August 1975. He attended Royal Roads Military College and Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean, graduating in 1979 with a degree in Business Administration (student # 12320). His formative years were spent on NATO duty in West Germany with The Royal Canadian Dragoons in troop command and staff appointments.
In 1983, Natynczyk assumed duties as a Squadron Commander at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario. In 1986, he commenced a five-year regimental tour in Petawawa, serving in several staff and squadron command appointments; this tour included six months of UN peacekeeping duties in Cyprus. On completion of Canadian Forces Command and Staff College, he served on the Army Staff in St. Hubert, Quebec.
In May 1994, Natynczyk embarked upon a year-long tour with the United Nations in the former Yugoslavia as Sector South-West Chief of Operations in Bosnia and Herzegovina within HQ 7 (UK) Armoured Brigade, then as the Chief of Land Operations, UNPROFOR HQ in Zagreb, Croatia. In June 1995, Natynczyk was assigned to the Vice Chief of the Defence Staff within National Defence HQ in Ottawa. He then commanded his regiment for two years, leading the Dragoons during domestic operations in the Ottawa region during the 1998 Ice Storm. Natynczyk returned to Bosnia in 1998 as the Canadian Contingent Commander. On his return to Ottawa, Ontario in March 1999, he was appointed J3 Plans and Operations during the period of deployments to Kosovo, Bosnia, East Timor and Eritrea.
Natynczyk attended the U.S. Army War College, and was subsequently appointed Deputy Commanding General, III Corps and Fort Hood. In January 2004, he deployed with III Corps to Baghdad, Iraq, serving first as the Deputy Director of Strategy, Policy and Plans, and subsequently as the Deputy Commanding General of the Multi-National Corps (Iraq) during Operation IRAQI Freedom. Natynczyk led the Corps' 35,000 soldiers, consisting of 10 separate brigades, stationed throughout the Iraq Theatre of Operations. [3]
Upon his return to Canada, he assumed command of the Land Force Doctrine and Training System. He was subsequently appointed Chief, Transformation, where he was responsible for implementation of the force restructuring and the enabling processes and policies.
Natynczyk was promoted to Lieutenant General (LGen), and assumed the responsibilities of the Vice Chief of the Defence Staff on 28 June, 2006.
On June 6, 2008, the Government of Canada named Natynczyk as the next Chief of the Defence Staff (CDS), replacing retiring General Rick Hillier[4]. Natynczyk was promoted to General, and installed as CDS on July 2, 2008.
Natynczyk is a father of three, all whom are in the military.[5].
end of qoute