- Reaction score
- 6,012
- Points
- 1,260
Sorry, but this was precisely what Group Captain (ret'd) Bill Lee, Defence Minister Paul Hellyer's chief of staff back in the mid 1960s, wanted: an "all-singing, all-dancing" military in which a person could join as <purple trade> and serve successive tours on a flying station, a warship and in an armoured regiment without any ( at least not much) further training. His "model" was, he said, the United States Marine Corps. He may well have not understood what he had seen and heard - he was, after all, a public relation officer (although he had been a RCAF navigator (serving with the RAF's Ferry Command) in WWII) - but that was his vision which, when coupled with Mr Hellyer's fairly obvious distaste for the RCN and the Canadian Army (both of which he saw as being far, far too British), and his fascination with Robert McNamara's "modern management" techniques, resulted in the CF we have today.Unification was never supposed to see this happen. Personnel Branches were an afterthought along with CF Greens and unified ranks.
The C&E Branch is slowly heaving it's final breaths and for good reason. Any common ground because "we all are communicators..." is no longer. The RCN hold onto their folks with fervor, the RCAF and the ATIS trade want back under Air Ops, the Sig Int folks want to run off with CFIOG, while the RCCS wants our heritage and traditions back entirely. There wasn't the pay off that was envisioned when this all kicked off.
Now factor the Log Branch and you'll see similar fault lines.
Not everything Paul Helllyer (and Bill Lee) did was wrong. A proper joint (unified) force was and remains a great idea. Integrated support agencies - like strategic communications (C²) networks and general hospitals work fine - but, I was told, back in the '60s by a mid-ranked officer who was "in the room," that the US told us (Hellyer, Lee and political and military staffs), formally, that what they called "purple suiting" (integration) was bound to fail. We went the integration route and called it unification.
We did unify some thing: Maritime Command and Mobile Command and Materiel Command were all unified. But we went a step - actually several steps farther: Training Command, for example, was both unified and integrated and my experience (admittedly limited by my own personal experience, but which included a tour at the school in the 1970s) indicated, to me, that while unification was a good idea integration was and remains a monumental failure.
Your former CO was right: a battalion or regimental Signal Officer needs to make the unit's C² system work. But I would argue that (s)he can only do that well enough if (s)he understands how the unit works, which means how and why its subunits and weapon systems work - in other words, only a trained soldier can be a good Army unit Signal Officer. Now, a Signal officer (or NCO) who is well enough trained to work, well, in an Army combat unit can also work, well enough, in a fixed (strategic) C² system but, I would suggest (s)he cannot go, without a lot off further training, and work well in an air defence warning and control system ... and vice versa. Bill Lee was wrong. Unification - joint commands and formations - was a good idea; integration - "purple suiting" and the "jolly green jumper" for everyone and so on - and everything that flowed from it has weakened us as a military force and those who continue to support it are happy with a second rate force.
(Parenthetically, a very few years ago - just pre-COVID - I listened as more than a couple of my retired RCN and RCAF friends (Joint Staff College classmates - a few being retired GOFOs) chatted about breaking up the "purple trades" - C&E and Log were high on their lists - and bringing them back into their single service environments for training and career management. I doubt they've stopped lobbying for that.)