Good post PJ D-Dog. I agree with you on your opinion on the issue of commisioning from the ranks:
There is a general sense in the officer world in the CF that, if an officer cadet has been in the ranks for too long prior to commissioning, then there is a confusion in his loyalty. While enlisted, he needs to be loyal to the enlisted side of the house. Once commissioned, he needs to be loyal to other officers. That is why, in my opinion, they would rather take a civilian off the street and turn him into an officer with zero prior military experience.
The problem, of course, is that it is misguided loyalty: the only loyalty should be to the CF, and the people of Canada, our employers. Officers and NCO's have a duty to serve the CF and the people of Canada, and to ensure that the needs of our soldiers are looked after. Unfortunately, at all rank levels, the needs of the individual usually win out over the people they command. Careerism is too rampant. Rocking the boat is frowned upon, and it is beaten into people at the beginning of their career. This is where I can see that "they" would prefer to start with a blank canvas: a young impressionable OCdt (or Pte or Cpl to be molded into a MCpl) and mold them into what they want: someone who will do what they are told, without the worry of their "protege" questioning whether what they are told to do is right: just do it. While that is somewhat what the military is about (following orders), I think the ability to know when to disobey an order, and complete the mission in the interest of our employer (the CF and the people of Canada) is more important. There is nothing worse than the prospect of people blindly following orders (Nazi Germany ring any bells? "Why did you assist with the Final Solution?" "Ve vere just following orders!!!"). While I have faith that the CF would never undertake anything near as repulsive as that, the thought of people having more interest in their own careers, or just to look after themselves and their cronies is equally repugnant.
I have seen a few soldiers go forward and do UTPNCM or CFR. Some turned out to be decent enough officers, some very good. Some however....... Let's just say that the lower the rank (or rather the less amount of real experience in the ranks) didn't translate into making a superior quality officer. Some probably wouldn't have ever made it past Cpl.... or Pte for that matter.
Having said that, I would rather see an officer class that has come up from the ranks, so that there is a greater appreciation for what it means to be a "soldier": the shit jobs, the long boring routines, the frustration of watching people who are clearly out of their element be in charge of them (and possibly endanger their lives in battle). Face it: the amount of time that officers spend doing field time, the "grunt work", etc on Phase trg is next to nothing compared to what a Pte would do in their 3 years in a unit, let alone a Cpl or MCpl (or higher). During the first few years of a soldiers career, they learn a lot about the basics, and start to pick up from their superiors, for better or worse, different styles of leadership and dealing with problems. This is where they should look to form the offier corps: a soldier who can perform well, deal with stress, has the ability to perform basic problem solving, using initiative, following orders, etc. I think the current method of plucking people from high school (based on academics), pushing them through BOTC, giving them 4 (or more) years of free education, CAP( the old Ph 2), DP1 (what was Ph3 and 4) and then hoping for the best is a poor use of resources. If they were to spend more time "cultivating" their prospects (watching within the Regiments for soldiers with all the abilities required, and then giving them the "goodies": free education and officer trg) they would end up with a better product, and the CF and Canada would be better for it. We would lose a lot of good soldiers who would "defect" to the officer world, but that is a wrong way of looking at it, as the CF would be the winner over all. A lot of people wouldn't want to be officers anyway (myself included), so they could go on to become the NCO corps.
None of what I suggest is new: I believe the Roman army did this, and police forces, fire fighters, etc do something similar. I'm not sure where our current method originated, but I think it may have outlived it's usefulness. We can't rely on blind luck (ie take a kid out of high school, give him the absolute basics (BOTC, CAP, Phase trg) and hope that they will be an effective leader). I know that there have been quite a few good officers come of it, but how about the piss poor ones? As I suggested, I know of soldiers who CFR'ed or went through UTPNCM and were poison officers, but that is probably more indicative of who they want to be officers (blind obedience, lack of initiative) and then allow to go through those programs, than that of soldiers who SHOULD be pushed to become an officer. Unless I am totally "out of 'er", there is a "glass ceiling" for any officer who comes up from the ranks: the rank of major (and usually only captain). The "ring knockers" and old boy network are more concerned with protecting their cronies from their alma mater than letting one of the "unwashed masses" come into command roles. The days of thinking that officers are "better" are over, people. It's not like the days of nobility and peasants. Yes, officers (generally) have a better education than the soldiers who they are in command of, but it's not like they are a higher life form (sorry to burst anyones bubble here). There are a lot of highly intelligent soldiers out there, many of whom would make excellent officers, but there are too many factors that stop them: the prospect of becoming "one of them" (the us vs them mentality which is bred in both corps (NCO and officer), the aforementioned glass ceiling, being seen as a "mustang" from above (having too strong of a will, opinionated, too much experience and dealings with the "lower class"). I'm probably just rhyming off the reasons why I wouldn't want to become an officer, but there it is.
I don't think there should be a big division between any of the "classes": jr ranks, Snr NCO's, and officers. Due to the way we have been modeled on an antiquated system, that's the case now, where some officers feel that they are an officer by birthright, and some Sr NCO's feel that they have no obligation to serve anybody but themselves and their buddies (usually above). I'm not saying that we shouldn't respect officers or Sr NCO's, who have earned the right to be there, but to make sure that respect flows downwards to the soldiers who we are in charge of, and remember what it was to be one of them (which, again many MCpl's and Sr NCOs seem to forget, probably because their time as a Jr rank was too fleeting) and also because the majority of officers have no concept of this, because they never were in the soldiers position.
Al