Colin Parkinson
Army.ca Myth
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Time to arm the Snowbirds to defend our cities 8)
Boeing shutting down C-17 military transport production early
http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/04/07/3137516/boeing-shutting-down-c-17-military.html
Boeing, however, is shutting down C-17 production in June 2015, leaving only 10 unsold “white tails” available from which Algeria could make a purchase.
“I’m hoping Algeria can get through their process. I would like to have Algeria as a C-17 customer. I’m just concerned that their process will not allow them to move quick enough,” says Paul Oliver, Boeing’s vice-president for business development in the Middle East and Africa, speaking at the Africa Aerospace and Defence show.
Several other countries are lining up to claim the white tails, although no deals have been signed yet.
“We’re seeing a lot of our existing customers who now realise the line is going away, so they’re coming in and buying them up,” Oliver says.
In July, Boeing Defense, Space & Security chief executive Chris Chadwick said he expected to see deals close within the next six months.
Oliver says he “thinks” new orders will be placed for the white-tail C-17s soon.
“We’ve got aircraft available, but that number… [is] decreasing rapidly,” he says.
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Among the relatively large nations of human history [only quite recently in terms of population] Canada is almost unique in one respect: We don’t strictly speaking need a military. There has not been a direct existential threat to Canada in more than a century. The only nation capable of invading is the one nation that would never try. Our security has been underwritten by either Britain or the United States for over two centuries. Tomorrow we could dispense with the whole of the Canadian Forces and, leaving aside the communities in which our few military bases are located, I doubt anyone would notice.
…Just ask the Americans to protect our borders, including the Arctic, and deal with the loss of sovereignty and national dignity. That’s a course, which I suspect, most on the Canadian Left would want to pursue if they thought it politically practical. [I'm not so sure if the course were formal; our left is anti-American to its bowels.] It isn’t practical because it would offend ordinary Canadians perceptions of Canada as a serious country. Like it or not serious countries need a military. Even if it is increasingly seen as a token force…
Canada without a military is not unlike that feckless heir. A country that would live off the efforts of other nations too honourable and responsible. Nations that understand the need for a common defence of the free world. Instead we would be a nation free to morally preen over the decisions of the Great Powers, without the necessity of having to be blamed for the consequences. The security bum of the Western world. That’s a vision which, unfortunately, appeals to many on the Left. As a matter of self-respect Canada needs a military commensurate with its wealth and good fortune in the world. In the life of nations honour is just as important as guns and butter.
http://godscopybook.blogs.com/gpb/2014/10/macho-man.html
All of the above maybe.Kirkhill said:Does this indicate problems at Treasury Board (intentional or otherwise)? A failure of the system at large? Or simply a failure of the individual departments to fully understand the approval cycle?
No.Kirkhill said:Would another document solve the problem ...
Maybe, but we do have some PMs and PDs who are too long on a given file and become too emotionally invested in the developed product as opposed to the required capabilityKirkhill said:... would fewer Project Managers with longer tenures be a contributor to the solution?
If the Tories really loved the military so much, it wouldn’t be systematically underfunded
Michael Den Tandt
National Post
13 Nov 2014
Question: For how much longer can the federal Conservatives shamble along with a national defence and procurement posture that is disjointed, underfunded, poorly understood, chronically secretive and increasingly, obviously unequal to the challenges at hand?
This week at the G20 in Brisbane, Australia, Prime Minister Stephen Harper will wax combative about the growing list of strategic and security brushfires faced by the global club of pluralistic democracies, of which Canada purports to be an important member.
Chances are good that, when Harper speaks, his peers will pay some attention. Agree with him or disagree, there is no misunderstanding the PM’s positions vis-à-vis the theocracy in Iran, or Hamas, or Israelis’ right to live in peace and security, or the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aggressions in Ukraine.
Those afflicted with Harper Derangement Syndrome, which many days seems to include most of my Twitter feed, have persuaded themselves that this foreign policy is demonstrably un-Canadian and harmful to the country’s international reputation. I see little evidence abroad to support this view.
During a decade in Afghanistan Canada earned a reputation as a serious country with a serious military, willing and able to fight when necessary and build when possible. The Royal Canadian Air Force’s involvement in the campaign against Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), though comprised of just six aging CF-18s, is an attempt to sustain that reputation
But how much longer can this hold, when the military’s budget is dwindling – defence spending is projected to fall below $19-billion this year, down from a high of $23-billion 2011 — and procurement is being arranged, to all appearances, on the back of a napkin? To call the current defence rebuild a shambles understates matters. Unless there are dramatic changes soon, it’s fair to ask whether Canada will even be able to field a capable military in a few years’ time.
Supposedly chastened after years of controversy over procurement, the government unveiled a new, “streamlined” approach to the file last February. The Defence department in June published its first new Defence Acquisition Guide. One cannot read this summary without coming away thunderstruck by the magnitude of the rust-out. The report may as well be stamped, “Everything here broken – and stay broken.”
For reasons that defy logic and the Conservatives’ own repeated promises, the F-35 Lightning II sole-source program is still twitching, requiring only a jolt of electricity from cabinet’s operations committee to set it staggering once again onto the political stage. The latest is a leaked Pentagon slide, entitled Canadian Aircraft Options Current Status, indicating a plan for Canada to buy four of the planes imminently. “Congressional notification letter being staffed through the F-35 Joint Program Office,” reads the Oct. 27 slide, citing timing of mid-November.
For the RCAF to own and operate just four F-35s would be akin to its owning and operating four Maseratis, and about as practical. The maintenance and training costs would be ruinous. Therefore more planes would be sure to follow; therefore this must be construed as yet another signal that, say what its civilian bosses might, DND simply will not accept any option other than its beloved F-35. But for political reasons, the Harper government cannot be seen to move forward with anything but a competition. The result will almost certainly be a furtherance of the status quo, which is paralysis.
Meantime, the Coast Guard’s three-season polar icebreaker – just one, mind you – is delayed. The Royal Canadian Navy’s joint supply ships are delayed; its Arctic Offshore Patrol vessels are too expensive for their allotted budget, according to the Parliamentary Budget Office; a purchase of new fixed-wing search and rescue craft, originally rolled out a decade ago, has receded into myth, like the Roman gods; and the biggest-ticket item of all, the $26-billion Canadian Surface Combatant shipbuilding program, is seized with uncertainty over whether shipboard systems contracts worth an estimated $16-billion will be put up for competition, or sole-sourced to DND’s favoured U.S. supplier, Lockheed-Martin.
Perhaps the biggest scandal of all, amid the near-constant drumbeat of Tory posturing about the “brave men and women in uniform,” is that services for veterans have been slashed, and not restored. Nine offices that served veterans specifically have been closed. Government spin maintains the level of service has actually increased; anyone who has ever lived through a downsizing will be skeptical, to say the least. Distinct offices for veterans are gone; these were staffed by people who had specific expertise useful in helping veterans, which is not readily available at a Service Canada booth.
The record shows, in sum, that the Harper Conservatives’ peans to the military are piffle, and have been for some time. During the post-Cold War era in the 1990s the former Liberal government got away with worse, because global threats then were less obvious. It is unclear how the Tories can perpetuate that sad-sack tradition now, while continuing to cast themselves as the soldier’s best friend.
If you held the federal pursestrings, how would you spend any surplus cash?
Job creation, 892 (18 %)
National defence, 879 (18 %)
Save for a rainy day, 672 (14 %)
Social services, 804 (16 %)
Tax breaks, 1250 (25 %)
Other, 454 (9 %)
No it did not. While much of the future money allocated in escalation has not been attributed in the in-year budgets, the baseline has continued to be escalated. For instance, the $2.7B cut for 2015 translates into a defence budget of $18.9B against $20B in 2013. The cut announced in dollar terms is against an escalated baseline.MCG said:The “funding escalator” disappeared five years ago.
Percent-of-GDP defence spending is one approach to broader policymaking, but it's not how the bullets and beans get bought. I promise you the $18.9B we're spending next year is still more than the $9.8B we got in 1998. The fact that this gov't isn't advertising that is a indication of their interest in restoring funding to the escalated baseline. Put another way, the government currently spends 8.7% of the total federal budget on defence, as opposed to 6.7% in '98 - an increase of 23%.Over the last half decade, funding has slid to lows unseen since the period between the World Wars.
http://army.ca/forums/threads/82898/post-1313325.html#msg1313325
hamiltongs said:Percent-of-GDP defence spending is one approach to broader policymaking, but it's not how the bullets and beans get bought. I promise you the $18.9B we're spending next year is still more than the $9.8B we got in 1998. The fact that this gov't isn't advertising that is a indication of their interest in restoring funding to the escalated baseline. Put another way, the government currently spends 8.7% of the total federal budget on defence, as opposed to 6.7% in '98 - an increase of 23%.
If they divorced the cost of capital upgrades from our budget, we would be fine. The problem is we have tens of billions of dollars worth of major purchases that need to be bought now. 5-10 ships, a couple of plane fleets, a couple vehicle fleets, etc.MilEME09 said:I would prefer we spend smarter and more efficiently, throwing money at DND won't solve our problems, management (Ie. NDHQ) needs to be cleaned up and stream lined. We could get a lot more done with the budget we already have, however the majority of it is lost now before it can be used by the department.