- Reaction score
- 7,311
- Points
- 1,310
The problem is that we have relied on that "we can always mobilize a large conventional force...we did it before, right?" as a valid COA.Canada is essentially a country that needs expeditionary forces. Our defence is, fortunately, based on strengthening the deterrence capabilities of other countries.
Our last real domestic war was 1814 with scares in 1867 and 1870/71 and some internal bothers in 1837/8, 1869/70 and 1885.
The difficulty in "projecting a large conventional force from Canada to Europe" has been solved very well three times (WW1, WW2, and the Cold War). It is merely a problem looking for the right solution.
The real question is: if we're not prepared to project a large force, why do we even bother keeping one? Let's face it, the country is right now paying good dollars for a force that, in payroll numbers, is the size of one average full-time division and one average part-time division. ... And yet it is capability poor to the point where deploying a properly equipped battlegroup is a challenge. Does any of that make sense?
It's not.
In all 3 of our last big mobilizations, we showed up poorly equipped, poorly trained, and ready to fight the wars of tomorrow with yesterday's tech and tactics. Same can be said about Afghanistan.
We fiddle, dawdle, and piss away time, money, and effort in peace time and wonder why we are caught with our pants down the next time we are told "Gentlemen, Orders..."
It's gotten worse as warfare has become more technologically driven. Weapons systems are far more expensive, harder to produce, and need more time Instructing than generations prior.
Whatever happens in Force 2025, unless we're actively at War within a NATO context, we're still going to be chasing our tail.