I figured it would be safer than picking one existing Regiment over the others...there's no winning in cap badge wars! I'm agnostic on naming....each Battalion could have a different Regimental affiliation as long as I'm concerned.Gutsy move resurrecting that upstart newbie regiment The Canadian Guards but relegating much older and more illustrious reserve units (including all the highland ones) to the dustbin of the supplementary order of battle. That aside, some good ideas though.
The layout I provided is just a rough sketch of general structure. As mentioned there would be enough "unassigned" Reserve Service Battalions to form together into Battalions for the CCSB and the Artillery Brigade.I won't reargue the issue of symmetric v asymmetric brigades except to say I'm a diehard asymmetric brigade advocate.
I've long been a fan of a western division and an eastern division and getting rid of two of the existing ones.
It looks to me like all the brigade headquarters and their signals squadrons are Reg F which is a good idea to be able to generate sustainable deployed brigade headquarters. Each of the artillery and CSS brigades could use those and a service battalion as well - there should be enough reserve units and personnel around which those can be formed from. I like the use of hybrid service battalions so that there is a capability within the reserve brigade to provide proper supply and maintenance functions especially if one starts equipping those brigades seriously.
The star(s) above the Divisions/Brigades is just a carryover from the original Wikipedia force structure diagram that I copied from. I'm not proposing any changes to existing ranks.Incidentally I'm vehemently opposed to established Class B positions. If a position merits full-time service it should be a Reg F PY. Class Bs are temporary jobs - or were meant to be. They are being dreadfully abused to create additional full-time positions on a permanent basis over and above the Reg F establishment. Besides, if you contract the 10 Res F brigades and 130 some odd units to four brigade headquarters and 20 - 25 some odd units, you'll have a slew of Reg F RSS to reallocate.
Not sure if the star above the brigade symbols is because you are suggesting they should become a one star command or not. Personally I think that they should remain a colonel's command. Adding a battalion does not merit a rank upgrade. On top of that, if the two divisions are not deployable entities and just force generation formations (which is how I see them) then I think that they do not merit a two star either. A BGen should be more than enough. Leave 1 Cdn Div with a two star because he may actually need to use both of them and is running a proper (more or less) divisional staff structure.
Again, I'm agnostic on where the specific equipment is located....the diagram provided is just a potential framework on which to base a final structure. There's been debate on this thread as to the best location for the tanks but if the West is determined by the tankers to be the best location then put them in the West along with the LAV battalions and put the Light battalions in Petawawa (or Valcartier/Gagetown if the Eastern Division is determined to be the best location).I'll let tankers chime in on whether or not Petawawa is the best place for tanks. In my mind, most of Petawawa is impassable forest whose only value for tanks is as a ricochet trace. One way or the other the tank regiment should be on whatever base that also has two mech battalions and a cavalry regiment because that will give you the ability to train up combined arms battlegroups and a heavy brigade capability. I think that you really need Gagetown or Wainwright/Suffield for tanks and you probably don't want to put a tank regiment and two mech battalions into Gagetown with the schools there. So in that respect I'd put the tank regiment, a cavalry regiment and two mech battalions into Edmonton and move the two light battalions to Petawawa where they can be a bit chummier with the SOF folks. And yes; I'd call the two light battalions PPCLI because "light".
I see several options for the extra LAVs made available from the restructuring.Just another observation. You've allocated four mech battalions but we have gear for six. Any plan for those extra LAVs?
Agreed. Individual training could be centralized in Battalion/Brigade training depots so the Reserve units can focus on collective training.I have this thing for wanting to see BTLs dealt with. I like the term "depot battalion" but "Security Force Capacity Building" is more in vogue. They're obviously not identical but much of what a depot battalion does with recruit intake and BTL training of both regular and reserve personnel could fit into an SFCB's mandate if properly organized, geographically dispersed and augmented by reserve personnel during peak summer training periods. Your elimination of one Reg F infantry battalion (together with PY savings from the two divisional headquarters) should provide enough Reg F PYs to staff the cadre of two (an eastern and a western) hybrid SFCB battalions.
As mentioned previously, there are Reserve units that are not accounted for in the general proposed framework structure that could be used for various other necessary roles (Training Depots/Battalions, Transport Battalions, etc.). The "boundaries" between the Brigades/Divisions can/should be flexible to ensure that the required manning can be provided for the units required.One final note. I think the Prairies would be working flat out to fill the units you've assigned to them. On the other hand, I think Ontario has more to offer. It strikes me that the two reserve infantry brigades are roughly 5,500 each. The arty brigade strikes me as roughly 2,500 - 3,000 reservists if you add a sig sqn and service battalion. The CS brigade appears quite light on reservists. So even if you add in a BTL and SFCB capability, you still seem to be below authorized reserve strength for the Army and what the regions can generate. Personally I'd like to see more CSS/CS - a transport battalion with a HET and POL capability comes to mind; another GS engineer regiment (for that matter I would split 4 ESR into two hybrid ESRs (one in Gagetown and one in Ontario); a CBRN unit; provision for an MP battalion (I know - like field ambulances, not an army resource); maybe a special troops battalion that specialized in theatre level rear area support (financial, personal services, supply, legal etc - basically used to generate NSEs)
Heck...Patton had an entire imaginary Army Group in the lead up to D-Day so just consider this as our uniquely Canadian maskirovka!I'm still in shock people think there is room for 2 Div in an Army that isn't a Div...
Shakespeare had it wrong, starting with the Lawyers isn't nearly as effective as HQ's
Patton wasn't paying for the HQ...Heck...Patton had an entire imaginary Army Group in the lead up to D-Day so just consider this as our uniquely Canadian maskirovka!
So you are going armour and mech heavy in gagetown but you will move the armour and infantry school from gagetown to Suffield? Sounds like a CAF decision alrightPatton wasn't paying for the HQ...
I don't think ANY MECH/ARMOR should be in Edmonton - the transport to go anywhere is ridiculous.
Edmonton should be a Light Bde
Petawawa should be a Light Bde
Valcatraz isn't ideal either - but better than Pet or Ed.
So if you restructure the CF, anyway.
10 Reg Bn's and 5 20/80 Training/Sustainment Bn's.
1-2 PPCLI - Edmonton. 3 PPLCI becomes a Reserve 20/80
1-2 CDN Para - Petawawa 3 Can Para ditto
1-2 RCR - Gagetown 3 RCR ditto
1-2 Vandoo - Valcatraz. 3 R22eR ditto
1-2 Canadian Guard - Shilo. 3 CG ditto
PPCLI and Can Para Reg't are Light/Airborne/Airmobile. PPCLI getting Mountain Focus/Para Reg't gets Arctic
RCR Group is Heavy - Tank and Tracked IFV
R22eR and CG are LAV - wheeled Mechanized
Move ALL the Cbt Arms Schools to Suffield.
You kind of get 2 Div then.
I'm actually not shocked at all.I'm still in shock people think there is room for 2 Div in an Army that isn't a Div...
Shakespeare had it wrong, starting with the Lawyers isn't nearly as effective as HQ's
An actual option being discussed and or decided upon is whether the army creates a new additional Division HQ, to which will report all the CMBGs in their current configuration. This Div would be a high readiness Div...
So an actual option being discussed is add more HQ...
I just don’t get WTF we are thinking.
Noooooooooo!An actual option being discussed and or decided upon is whether the army creates a new additional Division HQ, to which will report all the CMBGs in their current configuration. This Div would be a high readiness Div...
So an actual option being discussed is add more HQ...
I just don’t get WTF we are thinking.
Well at least it’s COA 3 so obviously a throw away but nonetheless it’s indicative of the lack of imagination (to be kind) that exists.
From what I am seeing the official planning for F2025 has three options on the table.
Option 1. Rerole three Bns into ISR Battalions. ISR Bn belong to the CMBGs.
Option 2. Asymmetrical Bdes. Heavy/Light/Mech from West to East.
Option 3. HR Division with extant CMBG structures reporting to it. All other static Divisions remain with only PRES Bdes.
All COAs feature some reg/res adjustments within the CCSB.
One thing I do like is the attempt to define readiness and tie it to equipment and manning levels. Right now though that’s very draft and will need some hard decisions to be made. It’s also odd that the heavy forces seem to be drifting towards higher readiness levels than the light forces.
Some formal decisions should be made this fall though...
yeah when I read that my first thought was why would we keep all the other Div HQ's to manage the reserves, and IS? why create a new div and not just move all reg force under 1 div? we do not need a 6th Canadian Division, it sounds like more empire building to me. If anything all reserve's should be managed by a single Div HQ, and all IS/CDSG's should be under a single command acting at the size of a independent brigade HQ. This would create 1 full time Div, one Reserve Div, and a institutional support brigade to manage all infrastructure, bases etc.... Talking with people I am getting a sense for which COA is being favored but we will have to wait a few months for the final call.An actual option being discussed and or decided upon is whether the army creates a new additional Division HQ, to which will report all the CMBGs in their current configuration. This Div would be a high readiness Div...
So an actual option being discussed is add more HQ...
I just don’t get WTF we are thinking.
Not so odd when you consider that our major sustained deployed effort at this time is leading and participating in a multinational combined arms battalion.
Incidentally, just to add a point to the divisional headquarters issue above. Denmark has two asymmetric brigades and five CS/CSS regiments, and one reserve light infantry regiment but provides the bulk of the divisional headquarters for NATOs Multi-national Division North in Latvia.
This what I really don't get - why isn't the US Model looked at -- it seems to follow that 1 CMBG HQ would do better running a deployed 1 CMBG rather than a set piece HQ that just takes their stuff?What we tend to forget in the US context is that the US doesn't generally have continually existing Joint Task Force headquarters; it takes existing formation headquarters (army, navy or air force) and tasks them a "joint" or "combined joint" task force whereby the necessary supporting joint assets are grafted onto the existing formation headquarters. Thus HQ 10 Mountain Division (a force generator) was used to form CJTF 76 in Afghanistan (a force employer) the same way that HQ 82 Airborne Division was sent to Afghanistan to form CJTF 82. We tend to do the same with brigade headquarters. HQ 2 CMBG was tasked to provide the bde hq for TF 5-08 as Task Force Kandahar. But the plan turns very weak when we contemplate anything over a bde.
I still don't see the need for that many Bde HQ - as the CF can fully equip less than 3 Bde with actual modern war fighting equipment.Basically getting rid of 1 Cdn Div is a shell game as we still need the staff to fulfill the same functions, just within CJOC. I guess we would save ourselves a MGen (There's already 1 LGen, 2 MGen and a few BGens in CJOC). So if 1 Cdn Div's functions are subsumed in CJOC how do we deploy a Div HQ if we ever need one.
Simple, we reduce our four static div hqs to 2--one for western Canada and one for eastern Canada. We have over 40,000 personnel which is roughly the equivalent of two divisions. There are enough Reg F pers for roughly 3.5 brigades and enough reservists for 3 to 5 brigades (brigades vary in size from 2,500 to 5,000 depending on function) Therefore we only need 6 to 8 brigade headquarters in total.
You need an entire rework for the Reserves and equipping at the same level as the Reg force (which is still currently lacking) before that is a possibility.Currently our Res F Bde HQs have minor force generating capabilities and no force employment requirements except in domestic ops. Basically they are marginal performers. Their utility would be increased if they had a higher Reg F component to them and were organized completely identical to Reg F Bde HQs. This should be possible by concentrating the current level of RSS staff at bde level for ten bde hqs into 3-5 brigade hqs, adding other Class A positions and concentrating the 10 some odd Res F signals regiments into three to five brigade signals squadrons (with additional personnel for higher formation use).
Similarly, if 130 plus reserve units get concentrated into some 25-30 units with their RSS staff equally concentrated, then it should be possible for a Res bde to generate an occasional battle group (augmented by RSS or other Reg F personnel for specific positions and trades).
If that were the case, Res F brigade headquarters and battle groups could become deployable (just as ARNG brigades are) and the Army could easily sustain the continuous deployment of one brigade headquarters and a battlegroup (or even two) indefinitely with a mixture of Reg F and Res F deployments.
110% agreedThe last issue is surging the force. An Army should routinely be able to surge a large portion of its force in a crisis. Whether it will or not is, of course an uncertainty, but the capability should be there and routinely validated through exercises.
Would you be willing to define mostWith an Army of 40,000 plus we should be capable of surging a division of 15 to 20,000. We have most of the equipment for that already. The fact of the matter is that we cannot predict whether or not we might be required to do this at some point in time. Another fact is that it is our duty to be prepared to do it if that time should come. It is criminal negligence to not be prepared for extreme circumstances especially in light of the fact that the SSE recognizes clear threats that require deterrence of, and a capability to engage in full-spectrum operations with, a near peer. To say that we haven't needed to do it for thirty years and that the government doesn't require it is sheer sophistry and rationalization.
I'm still not sure why the static Div HQ exist - it just screams lack of focus on a Fighting Army to me - and thus is fat than can be butchered off to make room for more PY for the fighting forces.There are already more than enough staff amongst the four static divisional headquarters to easily create two deployable divisional headquarters which provide both the static day-to-day force generation role as well as a surge deployable hq as required. The key element missing is the equivalent of a divisional signals regiment which was subsumed into the CJSR. CJSR would need to be structured to be able to generate a single div sigs regt (augmented by designated reservists) which could take turns exercising with one or the other of the two div hqs and be prepared to deploy with one or the other as tasked.
Ah yes the great Svn Bn breakup and base side support aspects -- I return to the fact that the Bde's and Div (inc HQ's) need to be fully deployable (and supported while deployable) - I would happily blood let Mech Inf BN's of GIB PY's to bring up maintenance levels - as reservists can be thrown in the back of a LAV fairly easily - again would need a restructure of the CF reserve policies -Another element missing from the Army is a robust CS and CSS structure. The one CSS brigade Canada currently has, fills some vital functions but is inadequate as is witnessed by our inability to maintain much of our equipment and in particulalry the paucity of Res F equipment and that we are constantly having to rob bases, service battalions and even units when we deploy to form cobbled together NSEs which are barely able to sustain peacetime operations or low intensity conflicts. We need to seriously reorganize our CS and CSS systems. Of the 3 to 5 Res F brigades we could man with existing establishments, there is very little need to form more than three manoeuvre brigades and at least two should be CS or CSS. Together with a restructured CSSB, that would give Canada three such brigades which is still too low a ratio. In the US, the majority of brigades are CS and CSS. But even three such brigades (with a high Res F ratio) would provide Canada with a vastly more capable CS/CSS capability for day-to-day sustainable operations and also provide the support backbone required to surge a division.
The point here is that the Army, with its existing PYs and Res F authorized positions is capable of doing much more than it can and needs to reorganize to do it.
To me the Canadian Taxpayer is getting sold a bill of goods from the CF - the rate of return on the money invest in the CF for the outcome is absolutely tragic (I'm not to keen on my own rate of return down here either - but that's a different story).If we are capable of manning and deploying 6-8 brigades then two divisional headquarters are perfectly reasonable. I think that looking at the scope of what we have done in the past during Afghanistan (i.e. deploying just in battlegroups) and what is stated in the SSE is self limiting. The CF writes the SSE. The CF tells the government what it is capable of and the governments policy is built on that. It should be the other way around but in practical terms we haven't had a government in over 70 years that really understood defence. IMHO any defence force that tells a government that with over 20 billion a year and over a 120,000 employees that we can aim for nothing higher than a pair of battlegroups is misleading the government and setting extremely low goals for itself. Any military should be capable of surging a large force in extreme circumstances and in order to do so it must have the structure to do so relatively rapidly and exercise it routinely. We do not. We've built bureaucracies rather than combat capable headquarters. Sadly we do have the resources there; we just waste them.
That's what I think too. Unfortunately that was part of the general plug-and-play philosophy that came out of Future Force and the Army's transition. You can notice this with the TFK brigade headquarters deployments which operated on 9 month tours and the battle group deployments which ran on 6 month tours. There was always a partial out of sync with that with the Bde HQ commanding a battle group from its brigade for only part of the tour. In fact TFK 6-09 (Menard and 5 CMBG) led battlegroups from 1 PPCLI and 1 RCR. One can argue that an overlap assisted corporate memory from battle rotation to rotation but with 6 and 9 months cycles that only happened every second bde hq rotation. IMHO it was a sub optimal system. ARNG brigades on Op Phoenix, on the other hand) went with their entire brigades for the entire tour (albeit most battalions had augmentees from elsewhere in the Army)This what I really don't get - why isn't the US Model looked at -- it seems to follow that 1 CMBG HQ would do better running a deployed 1 CMBG rather than a set piece HQ that just takes their stuff?
Not quite accurate. US COMs are Unified Combatant Commands which have responsibility for all operations conducted within their geographic areas. They are the highest formation command elements (but can't be called corps). You are correct that they are assigned forces generated by others and when the operation is large enough could be a divisional or even a corps headquarters. For example V Corps has recently been reactivated at Fort Knox with a forward HQ in Poland to support EUCOM. In effect CJOC is Canada's unified combatant command for the conduct of operations anywhere in the world including within Canada.The various US COM's exist but as Corps/higher formations - CENTCOM, AFRICOM, SOUTHCOM, etc - but DIv and Corps get assigned to them for operations.
I tend to focus on two for three reasons. One, the number of soldiers and units is to large to be left willy nilly in a pool and require some command structure. Two, I tend to divide the force into two components with one component (the heavier one) focused on Europe while the second focuses on lighter, quicker reaction and OOTW type operations. Having separate overarching headquarters builds high level expertise and supervision of training etc at the brigade and below level. Three, while I believe that we don't have the ability to deploy more than one division, we should have two headquarters trained and prepared to deploy so that rotations can occur and a core will exist to form a second division if required. (consider it redundancy in the event of casualties if nothing else)I would suggest that unless the CF can field 2 Div fully deployed with troops, and equipment - that 1 Div HQ is sufficient - and CJOC suffices as the "Theatre" Command, in the event that the CF deploys an entire Div ( at that point - all the reserves will likely be mobilized and conscription returned - IMHO)
Again that's based on numbers of people that we have. At 40,000 + and 2,500 to 5,000 per brigade (take away schools and headquarters outside the brigades and BTL/ATLs) you end up with roughly 6-8 brigades. If we keep with the idea of deploying a bde hq with a battlegroup sized TF to provide the higher level functions, then you should have enough trained bde hq staffs to equal the battlegroup rotations. And, like you, I believe the supervising headquarters and the battlegroup should be folks that know each other and have trained together.I still don't see the need for that many Bde HQ - as the CF can fully equip less than 3 Bde with actual modern war fighting equipment.
When every solider has proper PPE, Dual Tube NV's (at least for cat arms) and a modern MFAL - then larger equipment, then I would be worried about more HQ beyond the Reg Force Bde HQ's - I won't be holding my breathe for even the Reg Bde's to be fully kitted though...
I agree 100% with that.You need an entire rework for the Reserves and equipping at the same level as the Reg force (which is still currently lacking) before that is a possibility.
There are, regretfully and unbelievably, far too many capability gaps with few solutions on the near horizon.Would you be willing to define most
We agree totally. IMHO, however, there is just enough equipment and personnel (both Reg F and Res F) to form those extra three to five Res F brigades into deployable and capable bde gp hqs (for that matter the current Reg F CCSB is also a static headquarters)I'm still not sure why the static Div HQ exist - it just screams lack of focus on a Fighting Army to me - and thus is fat than can be butchered off to make room for more PY for the fighting forces.
We basically agree. There are two types of maintainers. The ones you need to fix stuff during peacetime who work as full-timers everyday which should primarily be in units and at service battalion maintenance companies augmented by static workshops for heavy duty stuff. But. You also need to be able to surge maintainers for operations when stuff gets broken faster and more seriously. That's why I think there is a role for part-time maintainers in the Res F whose job is solely to learn to do their job (just like gunners and infantry) so they can fill in as augmentees or as theatre level maintainers on deployments while unit and service battalion maintainers do their jobs within their units.Ah yes the great Svn Bn breakup and base side support aspects -- I return to the fact that the Bde's and Div (inc HQ's) need to be fully deployable (and supported while deployable) - I would happily blood let Mech Inf BN's of GIB PY's to bring up maintenance levels - as reservists can be thrown in the back of a LAV fairly easily - again would need a restructure of the CF reserve policies -
My opinion exactly. $20+ billion per year and basically all the Army gets us is the equivalent of two deployed battlegroups. We could hire a mercenary force to provide that and save $5 billion per year even before we reduce the size of that obscenity of a National Defence Headquarters that populates Ottawa.To me the Canadian Taxpayer is getting sold a bill of goods from the CF - the rate of return on the money invest in the CF for the outcome is absolutely tragic (I'm not to keen on my own rate of return down here either - but that's a different story).
I think our definition of "readiness" - especially "high readiness" is very much influenced by Ottawa's practice to risk aversion. I find it somewhat hypocritical that the Army has gone to such an extreme level of anal retentiveness with the states of training but at the same time has missed the mark totally at providing the troops with the equipment which they need to survive in a war. All of our governments' defence policy statements include a provision to be capable of high-intensity operations yet we do not have some very key equipment needed for that.Given the size of the Canadian Army, it is fairly inexcusable that there is not a possibility to have 1 entire Div on high readiness - even with a Bde deployed.
I'm curious if there is also a contractor / BCT available.View attachment 66390
View attachment 66391
From the US CBO Primer conveniently provided by FJAG previously.
1,000,000 "Man" Army
50% in Reserves
15% in Full-Time Institutional Overhead
15% in Full-Time Support Units
20% in Full-Time Combat Units
And note that the "Combat Units", the Brigade Combat Teams, include Combat Service Support troops as well
Or, putting it another way, each "Combat" PY in a BCT requires 3 "Support" PYs in addition.
32 BCTs at 4000 each = 128,000 PYs
32 BCTs at 5000 each = 160,000 PYs
Out of the 1,000,000 PY Army.
So, following the US model and working with Canadian Army numbers
23,000 + 19,000 + 3,300 = 45,000 PYs
- 23,000 members serve as full-time soldiers in the Regular Force
- 19,000 are part-time, volunteer soldiers in the Reserve Force
- including 5,300 Rangers who serve in sparsely settled northern, coastal and isolated areas of Canada
- 3,300 civilian employees who support the Army
- 63 Regular Force and 123 Reserve Force Units in 127 Communities
- 185 Ranger Patrols in 414 Communities
20% of 45,000 = 9,000 Combat PYs (2 US BCT equivalents)
15% of 45,000 = 6,800 BCT PYs (1.5 US BCT equivalents)
Divide 1.5 by 3 CMBGs and you get about half a BCT for each CMBG - and that sounds about right.
Off hand I would say that we are doing a great job of following the US model. A model with which the US is dissatisfied and is constantly trying to improve.
And a model that is currently trying to manage an increasingly long range, dispersed, battlefield.
I'm not sure how you can say "we are doing a great job of following the US model".View attachment 66390
View attachment 66391
From the US CBO Primer conveniently provided by FJAG previously.
1,000,000 "Man" Army
50% in Reserves
15% in Full-Time Institutional Overhead
15% in Full-Time Support Units
20% in Full-Time Combat Units
And note that the "Combat Units", the Brigade Combat Teams, include Combat Service Support troops as well
Or, putting it another way, each "Combat" PY in a BCT requires 3 "Support" PYs in addition.
32 BCTs at 4000 each = 128,000 PYs
32 BCTs at 5000 each = 160,000 PYs
Out of the 1,000,000 PY Army.
So, following the US model and working with Canadian Army numbers
23,000 + 19,000 + 3,300 = 45,000 PYs
- 23,000 members serve as full-time soldiers in the Regular Force
- 19,000 are part-time, volunteer soldiers in the Reserve Force
- including 5,300 Rangers who serve in sparsely settled northern, coastal and isolated areas of Canada
- 3,300 civilian employees who support the Army
- 63 Regular Force and 123 Reserve Force Units in 127 Communities
- 185 Ranger Patrols in 414 Communities
20% of 45,000 = 9,000 Combat PYs (2 US BCT equivalents)
15% of 45,000 = 6,800 BCT PYs (1.5 US BCT equivalents)
Divide 1.5 by 3 CMBGs and you get about half a BCT for each CMBG - and that sounds about right.
Off hand I would say that we are doing a great job of following the US model. A model with which the US is dissatisfied and is constantly trying to improve.
And a model that is currently trying to manage an increasingly long range, dispersed, battlefield.