Armed forces must be suited for combat, not peacekeeping
Re: Stealthy warships are next wave for world's navies, June 28
(The Ottawa Citizen)
Regardless of the spin put on the subject by the Liberal party and others in the heat of an election campaign, Canada does not maintain armed forces, including new joint support ships, for peacekeeping operations.
Their primary mission, as for the rest of the Canadian Forces, will be to engage in and support combat operations overseas. Peacekeeping died at the end of the Cold War, and was interred in the midst of blood and failure at places such as Srebrenica and Mogadishu. It has been replaced by international security operations, such as those in Kabul, Afghanistan, where the troops have the authority to engage in combat to enforce their mandate.
Canada did engage in conventional combat operations in Kosovo in 1999 and in Afghanistan in 2002, operating under NATO in the former case, and with a U.S. coalition in the latter.
Perpetuating the myth of peacekeeping is not in the best interests of Canada or its armed forces. It creates the impression that Canada does not want to become involved in the tough jobs, and it stymies the Armed Forces in their attempts to obtain new equipment and otherwise keep up with rapid developments involving new threats and technology.
A. Sean Henry,
Ottawa,
Colonel (ret'd)