I seem to recall a whole bunch of mindless bumf that had to be digested that took up valuable scarce hours on Wednesdays and Weekends.
I too recall disorganized training there. I think I went through the introduction to the FNC1 lecture three times because of instructor changes and new students dropping in who hadn't had the lecture before.
For example - soldier shows up on Wednesday night. Gets a 5 minute confirmatory test to determine if the weapon and safety drills are well understood and spends the next hour and a half with the weapon on a range or simulator and half an hour stripping, cleaning and assembling the weapon and returning it to stores. Half an hour on adm and prep work for the upcoming monthly weekend exercise.
The problem is when Gunner Bloggins shows up and hasn't done the reading. You suddenly have a split class where someone has to take Bloggins aside and clue him in and hopefully get that done in time for him still to get to the aim of today's lesson.
IMHO the CA needs to make important distinction between our (US) Orbat and the Canadian.
While we are returning to the Div as generally the basic maneuver element, Canada cannot do that simply due to size.
If you want to x3 the CA then that would make sense.
Canada to me needs to have the Bde as the basic element, for it cannot field a homogeneous Div.
I kind of agree but ...
I think you need to consider the following:
1. What is the largest entity you think Canada may need to generate at the worst state and build that. Personally with 40,000 plus soldiers we should aim to a field a division as our worst case entity.
2. Even if all we deploy is a brigade in a worst case scenario it will undoubtably be employed within the framework of an allied division (If anyone will even take us on and not stuff us into a Corps reserve role again).
3. The worst case entity should be capable of deploying smaller entities for lower end missions or day-to-day peacetime missions.
Staying with the artillery example you could have:
a. a divisional artillery brigade organized and trained to hive off a CS regiment together with its logistic support train to an independently deployed manoeuvre brigade; or
b. organic BCT artillery battalions and the BSBs support element which can be aggregated into a Canadian or allied pre-existing divisional artillery brigade headquarters.
The key is to be able to have doctrine and a methodology to transform easily, one way or the other, as the mission scales up or down.
@FJAG I don’t see the ARNG changing from the BCT simply as it allows then to train as a combined arms formation outside the Regular Army. If there where to break up towards a supported Div, the collective training model would suffer (IMHO).
I disagree to the extent that manoeuvre units rarely train in peacetime with their fires delivery elements or CSS. They do need train constantly with their FSO/FSCC and FO/FOO elements. In my 16 years with the guns I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times guns fired live on exercise in support of a battalion (aside from fire power demonstrations). BCs and FOOs on the other hand were with their battalions often as well as training at other times with the guns in live fire. So far my interviews for the Afghanistan books confirms that even in predeployment training in the early years for Kandahar there were few opportunities taken to integrate live artillery fire into routine manoeuvre training.
Canada needs to conceptually, maybe even organizationally, separate the FSO/FSCCand FO/FOO dets from the fires delivery elements and their logistics trains. In any event, there needs to be a functional Div Arty headquarters and divisional support element where guns and CSS can be plugged into.
In a perfect world we would use live fires and CSS on all bn and bde exercises but we really don't other than as exceptions rather than the rule.
All that to say I have no problem with keeping the CS regiment (whether RegF or ARes) with the BCT as long as there is a mechanism to group the guns and the CSS into a pre-existing division and divisional arty HQ and sustainment system. Those BCT artillery battalions need to be technically "managed" by the arty bde HQ and should exercise frequently as divisional fire support. Regardless of how we deploy for major conflict, as either a Canadian brigade or a Canadian division, a Canadian artillery battalion will need to slot into either a Canadian or coalition divisional framework. That doesn't happen overnight. Our data communications systems, our staff systems and our logistics systems right now are not optimized for that. That takes time and practice to get right.
I say we go ahead and make everyone's head explode and just have a Royal Canadian Regiment of Infantry. 1st Battalion, 2nd Battalion.....12th Battalion, etc.
No! Hell, No! I do not want to see another screwed up unification/integration boondoggle! Head has exploded.