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Divining the right role, capabilities, structure, and Regimental System for Canada's Army Reserves

SRidders said:
I think you are mistaking stagnation with other nation states catching up from a period in history (WW1 and WW2) that crippled them or drastically changed their political systems. Innovation today happens in the pharmaceutical and supply chain management sector (not easily visible to the naked eye).

Absolutely you can argue that the world wars crippled the economies of Europe, I would agree with that. I would argue that those economies had recovered and in the majority of cases improved from pre-war conditions by the mid-70's.

Would you not say that there is innovation around the world in much more than the pharmaceutical sector and supply chain management systems?

I think materials innovation is also quite relevant, from synthetic clothing materials to actual building materials. An example off the top of my head, technological innovation of being able to mass produce curved glass has started to influence the smartphone world.

SRidders said:
It's expensive to have your fingers on all corners of the planet at all times. At the infancy of the current global economy, it was profitable to send out your armed forces to force you economic will in all major makets. As China and other emerging world powers caught up via developing economies, they naturally regained their influence over their immediate spheres of influence. The USA was no longer the default power and it would cost them too much to retain that power. So, they started to retract a lot of influence and concentrated on specific regions. This is where we are seeing a major battle for influence, namely the Middle East.

I would compare this to the historical colonization efforts. Historically it was profitable to send out armies to colonize technologically backwards people and exploit them and their land. As these new lands were gradually industrialized the populations (whether native or with immigrant roots) became less willing to have colonial overlords. While I will concede that in modern times there is much less direct colonialism (in the form of the host nation having very limited sovereignty) I think that there is a lot of hidden economic colonialism with more economically powerful countries having significant influence within an economically weaker country.

I would compare the modern day US to the British Empire when it started the decline from the world's pre-eminent global power (the period of which lasted for a much shorter timeframe than that of the current US global dominance).

SRidders said:
This is Historically accurate if you look at it from a broad perspective. However, current world actors are too intertwined economically to truly inflict the historical destabilisation you are talking about. China would never go to war with the USA unless it was economically to their advantage. Nato would not institute blanket sanctions on Russia as Europe is too intertwined with their energy sector. If we ever saw a retraction of the current global economy, then your senario could happen. However, we're all done if that happens.

Your scenario involves all actors being truly rational, which I would argue is not always the case.

Historically the vast majority of wars were fought due to economic tendencies, the seizing of land for resources or control over trade routes, the sacking of large cities for riches. etc. I would agree that open warfare of the scale seen in the World Wars will not happen in the near future, however I think proxies wars such as Vietnam and Korea are a severely increasing concern.

And now that this topic has been significantly derailed I will end my post... (Perhaps when the new staff are appointed we could get a thread split)
 
Bird_Gunner45 said:
No EXISTENTIAL threats.

Do you think that, also, for the US?  We're pretty close to them after all.

*I think you use the term existential threat more literally than I do?  It could be argued any nation/state with nuclear weapons poses a possible existential threat, IMO.  But, I could be off on my understanding of the word/context.
 
I would also call any country with territorial claims against us a potential threat.

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Flavus101 said:
Absolutely you can argue that the world wars crippled the economies of Europe, I would agree with that. I would argue that those economies had recovered and in the majority of cases improved from pre-war conditions by the mid-70's.

Would you not say that there is innovation around the world in much more than the pharmaceutical sector and supply chain management systems?

I think materials innovation is also quite relevant, from synthetic clothing materials to actual building materials. An example off the top of my head, technological innovation of being able to mass produce curved glass has started to influence the smartphone world.

I am going to guess that SR was responding to your statement "I think that Western civilization has become stagnant and lacking in innovation and drive (not counting the yearly iPhone or other gadget release)" which read as fairly categorical, by offering one are in which innovation has continued, not necessarily implying that it was the only field in which innovation thrived. 

On the other hand, I can agree with you on the political front. There has been a degree of ossification; a tendency which has, in my view been encouraged, by entrenched interests that consider the last 70 years to have been a disaster.  Liberal Democracy was not popular on the continent prior to May 8 1945.  And just because governments "surrendered", people didn't.

Flavus101 said:
I would compare this to the historical colonization efforts. Historically it was profitable to send out armies to colonize technologically backwards people and exploit them and their land. As these new lands were gradually industrialized the populations (whether native or with immigrant roots) became less willing to have colonial overlords. While I will concede that in modern times there is much less direct colonialism (in the form of the host nation having very limited sovereignty) I think that there is a lot of hidden economic colonialism with more economically powerful countries having significant influence within an economically weaker country.

I would compare the modern day US to the British Empire when it started the decline from the world's pre-eminent global power (the period of which lasted for a much shorter time frame than that of the current US global dominance).

Actually, Ferguson's Empire will give a good read of the other view of Empire.  Britain's most successful Empire happened before the Empire was "Nationalized".  The East India Company was self financing and raised its own security forces from its local clients. 

Things went down hill with the arrival of the Methodists and the desire to "Improve" the locals.  All of a sudden Britain had to send in "White" troops to protect the Methodists.  Things got worse when Britain started exporting its unemployed to Canada, Australia and South Africa.  The Hudson's Bay Company, like the East India Company, had a good thing going with the locals.  The locals sold pelts and got Axminster blankets and were satisfied.  The HBC were not fans of the Settlers as the folks around the Red River in Manitoba will tell you.

Trade empires, the empires of Clive, Raffles, Jardine and Mathieson, and Radishes and Gooseberries were actually quite profitable. Settlers were a millstone.  Little England made money.

Flavus101 said:
Your scenario involves all actors being truly rational, which I would argue is not always the case.

Historically the vast majority of wars were fought due to economic tendencies, the seizing of land for resources or control over trade routes, the sacking of large cities for riches. etc. I would agree that open warfare of the scale seen in the World Wars will not happen in the near future, however I think proxies wars such as Vietnam and Korea are a severely increasing concern.

And now that this topic has been significantly derailed I will end my post... (Perhaps when the new staff are appointed we could get a thread split)

Rational actors are rare.  And even those that are rational may base their rationale on entirely different criteria than mine and appear irrational.  I deal with dietary laws in my line of trade. 

The best safeguard for human survival, in my opinion, is variety.  Inbred monocultures are very vulnerable to singular events.  Weeds, mongrels and nomads as well as multivarious plantings will always survive.  And to accommodate the differences well, I eat rump roast while others eat brisket - everybody is happy and none of the cow goes to waste.

Accommodation.
 
MilEME09 said:
I would also call any country with territorial claims against us a potential threat.

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Including Scotland, FFS  ::)

http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/scotland-as-canada-s-11th-province-author-says-it-s-a-good-idea-1.3375160
 
MilEME09 said:
I would also call any country with territorial claims against us a potential threat.

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Are you talking about the United States (the Beaufort Sea triangle) and Denmark (Hans Island) or are there other territorial disputes that I'm not tracking?
 
daftandbarmy said:
Including Scotland, FFS  ::)

http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/scotland-as-canada-s-11th-province-author-says-it-s-a-good-idea-1.3375160

In the name of patience!  NOOOOO! 
 
Eye In The Sky said:
Do you think that, also, for the US?  We're pretty close to them after all.

*I think you use the term existential threat more literally than I do?  It could be argued any nation/state with nuclear weapons poses a possible existential threat, IMO.  But, I could be off on my understanding of the word/context.

existential= pertaining to existence

No nation/group is going to make Canada, the US, NATO, etc etc etc "not exist". The current world order created in the post-WW2 era out of Bretton woods, the Marshall Plan, the UN, etc also isn't in any threat of not existing within the current time.

That is all to back to original point that there is no "boogey man" to justify spending money on a large standing military for Canada, particularly in the reserves. As a middle power, Canada (like most middle powers historically) will serve its interests by assisting in maintenance of the current world order from which it prospers. This means small scale expeditionary units deploying to theatres where the US feels its interests (not existence) are at stake, including, GASP, UN Peacekeeping operations where said interests are at stake. This is how it's been since 1945 and how it will remain for the foreseeable future.
 
Ack.  Thanks for the reply, as I thought, you were using it in a context fairly significantly more literal and absolute than I do.

Its interesting, the differences in opinions.  (1) don't spend money on reserves, fund a small, capable standing force or (2) reduce the standing force size and rely on a reserve force that is expanded, as it is cheaper day to day that way.  Something like that.  I, personally, lean towards (1) so I think we support the same argument.

Cheers!
 
Ostrozac said:
Are you talking about the United States (the Beaufort Sea triangle) and Denmark (Hans Island) or are there other territorial disputes that I'm not tracking?

Just missed Russia,

20141220_IRM937.png
 
Eye In The Sky said:
Ack.  Thanks for the reply, as I thought, you were using it in a context fairly significantly more literal and absolute than I do.

Its interesting, the differences in opinions.  (1) don't spend money on reserves, fund a small, capable standing force or (2) reduce the standing force size and rely on a reserve force that is expanded, as it is cheaper day to day that way.  Something like that.  I, personally, lean towards (1) so I think we support the same argument.

Cheers!

We are in violent agreement.... I dont think that having undeployable "territorial brigade groups" does anything to assist in our actual national defence. To me, the reserves should be fully there to augment the regular force and do disaster assistance. The days of large standing armies, based largely on trained reserves (though this wasn't the case in the British system) are over. We need to let them go, focus money on where it needs to be (assisting the major powers in maintaining the current world order) and stop living in a fantasy world where WW2/WW1 are the key elements
 
Bird_Gunner45 said:
We need to let them go, focus money on where it needs to be (assisting the major powers in maintaining the current world order) and stop living in a fantasy world where WW2/WW1 are the key elements

So, like, does that mean the Navy will stop focusing their efforts on building a force whose main effort is to escort convoys across the Atlantic, too?  ;)
 
daftandbarmy said:
So, like, does that mean the Navy will stop focusing their efforts on building a force whose main effort is to escort convoys across the Atlantic, too?  ;)

That's not, like, their main effort. The Canadian navy should, IMHO, focus on drug/smuggling interdiction and inter-operability with the USN and NATO
 
Wasnt our cold war role keeping the north atlantic free from soviet subs? Thus our ASW forcus

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Eye In The Sky said:
or (2) reduce the standing force size and rely on a reserve force that is expanded, as it is cheaper day to day that way.

You know, I often hear it mentioned that reserve forces are significantly cheaper than regular forces, but I've never seen any hard numbers to back that up, particularly when you factor in infrastructure. When I was on RSS duty I was briefly involved in the project that was looking at the future of reserve armouries in the city I was posted to, and what numbers I saw implied that both the cost of continuing to operate the ancient facilities and the cost of new replacement faculties were astronomical -- and all that cost is required to support relatively few part-time soldiers. Don't get me wrong, infrastructure for regulars is also expensive, but with units of 400-500 soldiers you can get some economy of scale for a building -- but my reserve unit was less than 100 all ranks.

I wonder what the actual cost breakdown is for a reserve unit -- between salary for the part-time soldiers, salary for the full-time support staff, training, equipment and infrastructure. And how that compares to the breakdown for a regular unit.
 
Bird_Gunner45 said:
The Canadian navy should, IMHO, focus on drug/smuggling interdiction...
If in doubt (ie - the absence of a current, coherent Defence White Paper), return to first principles.  A fleet optimized for constabulary duties cannot establish command of the seas.  We may as well paint Coast Guard hulls grey and task the RCN to focus on NavRes and Sea Cadets across the prairies.



 
Bird_Gunner45 said:
No physical EXISTENTIAL threats.

*cough*...CYBER...*cough*

Whether the CAF is the right tool, that remains to be seen, but Canada needs to think of security in more than just the physical plane.

Regards
G2G
 
Ostrozac said:
You know, I often hear it mentioned that reserve forces are significantly cheaper than regular forces, but I've never seen any hard numbers to back that up, particularly when you factor in infrastructure. When I was on RSS duty I was briefly involved in the project that was looking at the future of reserve armouries in the city I was posted to, and what numbers I saw implied that both the cost of continuing to operate the ancient facilities and the cost of new replacement faculties were astronomical -- and all that cost is required to support relatively few part-time soldiers. Don't get me wrong, infrastructure for regulars is also expensive, but with units of 400-500 soldiers you can get some economy of scale for a building -- but my reserve unit was less than 100 all ranks.

I wonder what the actual cost breakdown is for a reserve unit -- between salary for the part-time soldiers, salary for the full-time support staff, training, equipment and infrastructure. And how that compares to the breakdown for a regular unit.

The problem is the model of armouries that we use. If you take a look at National Guard and Reserve centers in the US (especially for smaller towns) you will find that the local infrastructure is design to support a company size organization  or a battalion headquarters and consists of a fenced parking lot (which generally has a company's worth of vehicles) and a smaller building which contains just enough office, training and assembly space. Larger centers have larger structures or complexes but again the size is generally tailored for fully manned entities. Not like here where battalions are authorized to company plus establishments and manned at company minus, platoon plus strengths. The big difference is that US NG units and subunits are established, manned and equipped to near Active Army levels because they are intended to be mobilized and deployed as complete entities.

Reserve units are cheaper on a man for man basis because individual reservists only receive 85% of the daily pay and benefits of a regular soldier and are not paid at a full 365 days a year basis as their regular counterparts but generally at a small fraction of that. So man for man they are definitely cheaper.

On the other hand reserve organization and headquarters (and to an extent infrastructure) fall far short of being efficient and effective. Nonetheless whatever shortcomings they do have has to be laid at the feet of the regular force leadership which for decades has refused to do anything to properly rejig the entire regular force and reserve structure to maximize both components' strengths and efficiencies. You can't fine tune a force that is fundamentally flawed. :2c:

:cheers:
 
FJAG said:
Nonetheless whatever shortcomings they do have has to be laid at the feet of the regular force leadership ...
Sorry.  You cannot absolve reserve leadership from any responsibility for the state of the reserve force.  The regular force has not fought to retain or restore platoon-regiments for the glory of local fiefdoms.

I would also have to partially agree with Ostrozac.  You cannot claim the PRes is cheaper (even man-for-man) while choosing to exclude the costs of infrastructure and the organizational structures.  That being said, I don't know that the reserves do become more expensive when those overhead costs are included.  I have neither done the math nor even seen the data.
 
I am not sure there is any sort of attainable solution that will fix the force structure, especially as the political will, knowledge base and interest in expending political capital on an issue without a meaningful level of support is non-existent. Without political support at the highest level and the same from the public service, and that means money and lots of it, we are probably doomed to go through periodic bursts of wheel spinning that results in things like total force and 10/90 units and the like. And that goes for the regular force as well as the reserves and in all three services.

So what do we do? Maybe we making the best of a bad situation and maybe we can't expect more from a system that is designed to be not so good, but not all that bad. I suspect we have what the government and the public will accept and pay for because it is relatively cheap and doesn't get in serious trouble too often.
 
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