Infanteer said:
If we developed any capability like this for Canada, it would be expeditionary as well.
I apologize for being unclear.
Of course any Battle Group, air element and ships that would be deployed in any Canadian amphibious force would be out on an expedition. In the case of the Marine Corps, I was referring to the fact that the totality of the Corps (all 200 thousand or so and 40 thousand reservists) is entirely dedicated to being deployed as an expeditionary force. The MAGTF is the structure they use to do this. It is scalable and, while you appear to have seen it at the Battalion Landing Team level, I do not know in which scale you saw it. The Marines can deploy a MAGTF that is only at the Expeditionary Unit level [MEU(SOC)] of approx. 2500 all the way up to a Expeditionary Force of approx. 100,000 based on multiple Marine Divisions. When a Marine Division ships out, you are hard pressed to find anyone left in uniform on the base. And being an integrated force, they carry and control
internally to the Corps their stores, administration, air support, armour and artillery, etc.
This is where my comparison to the whole CF came from: The Corps need not look outside its own structure for anything as it is already integrated. Even the ships of the "Gator" Navy are by their nature already separated from the main fleet and assigned to support the Marines on an ongoing basis. The only thing left out, but which in any event does not require specific amphibious training, is the provision where circumstances warrant of escort vessels to the Marine force being deployed.
Purely on a side note here, as I don't know if this was the case in the Army or Air Force before Afghanistan, in the Navy, we have been working under the TF/TG/TU/TE system ever since the end of the cold war - so the corporate knowledge of such organizational structure is well entrenched by now.
Infanteer said:
there is a great amount of unique planning and logistics that requires a degree of corporate knowledge. This isn't something that comes immediately following the purchase of an amphibious vessel.
First here, between the time we "purchase" any such ship and it hits the water and become available to the Navy, we are talking four to five years. I can guarantee you we can develop the knowledge required in that time frame. The Australians are doing it, so are the Italians and the Spaniards. I'd like to think our military is just as smart and professional.
Second of all, we must include concept of operation in here and distinguish (again) from the Americans. The US has a "forward deployed" policy for its armed forces. As such, the US Marines have, at any given moment, between four and eight MEU(SOC) deployed around the world onboard amphibious groups. The Marines on those ships live onboard for months at a time without a specific mission or tasking and the stores they carry must last them that long plus "combat" consumption rate even if hostility start on the last day. These stores must be carried with the amphibious group and, without knowing the exact order in which they will be required, must be easily reachable usually in reverse order they are required (least likely used buried at the back, most likely used in front).
In Canada, we do not permanently forward deploy, and just like the French, Italian, British and Australians, the natural state of any amphibious ship would be alongside Halifax or Esquimalt except for short sailings on training and exercises. The soldiers would not be embarked unless they were being sailed to a specific exercise or actual operation, for which they would have trained in advance. The Army's logistics personnel would have planned their projection for consumption of stores in both quantities and order of consumption. They would then meet with their Navy counterpart who would be responsible for storing the items onboard the amphibious ship in reverse order of expected use. At that point it becomes a cargo handling exercise and the Navy already knows how to do that. Moreover, by the time we get phibs, many Sea logistics officers and MARS officers can be run through the US Marines Combat Logistics Officer course or the Amphibious Assault Staff Officer course. When I retired ten years ago, the Navy regularly sent officers on those courses, even reserve officers, and we did not even envisaged having phibs in those days. They were just considered "good to know" courses - just in case.
So, on the small scale that would exist in Canada, and with the more limited embarked time for Canadian soldiers only for specific exercises or operation, many of the complexities that attach to the US Marines methods would not be required. When US Marines deploy, without specific task, for four to six months, they become part of the ship's crew, thus the need to come under the XO, and must take part in constant drills and phys. ed. training to keep their edge, and their command element must , when tasked while at sea, do its own planning of the operation.
Canadians embarked only to and from their landing area on a specific mission would be acting more like passengers (though liaison between the Adjutant and the Coxn's staff and Regulating PO would be necessary for the maintenance of good order and safety of the soldiers) and their command element would be sailing with its mission plan already "in the pocket".
In fact, with ships like the Mistral or Canberra that are equipped with "plug-and-play" ready Embarked Force HQ and ops room for a staff of about 100, the likely organization of a Canadian amphibious operation would likely see an embarked Task Force Commander (either a Commodore or a Brigadier General) and her staff in overall command, with the Battle Group as one Task Group, the amphibious ship another Task Group, the air element as another TG, the integrated logistics group another and finally, any escort ships as a final TG.
We already have all the knowledge to organize something like that. We just need to practice it from time to time (just like a "Division HQ", I guess).
I note your interesting tag line, infanteer. And I bid all here to think of the same for any Canadian amphibious capability: Don't overcomplicate it.