Excellent book on logistics is coming out in a week or two:
As anyone in a battle group can tell you, an armoured vehicle without ammunition or diesel is little more than one of the world's most expensive radios.
Getting those commodities to a fighting force in the field -- along with food, water, repair vehicles and the other necessities of life in combat -- is the job of the logistics corps.
A new book by a Royal Military College grad who was in charge of supply for Canada's mission in Afghanistan in 2006 paints a stark picture of the decline of that branch.
Lt.-Col. John Conrad, who graduated from RMC in 1987 and who has had several postings here since, will publish his memoir of the campaign next month.
"Combat logistics is not sexy and it is certainly not overcomplicated, but it will reach out and cut your throat if it is taken for granted in times of war," he writes inWhat The Thunder Said -- Reflections Of A Canadian Officer in Kandahar.
"And cut it did in Afghanistan in the early summer of 2006."
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