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Easily satisfied because you have low expectations from your Govt can be a blessing I guess.
You are overly critical of Canada's WW2 effort, we tried our best.Easily satisfied because you have low expectations from your Govt can be a blessing I guess.
Iraq war 1, Afghanistan then.Don't know.....never been one to care about the past. History started in 1960 as far as I'm concerned....
Why wouldn't they? He's an infectious diseases physician and professor of medicine at the University of Calgary who also advises the World Health Organization.
I don't think that you've read a lot of Canadian military history or known too many veterans of that period, else you'd not write off this Country's contribution so casually. I've known a bunch of the latter, including a commando (who used to give us tips on silently knifing sentries when he got bored teaching the regular curriculum), a member of the Long Range Desert Group, a bomber Pilot shot down and captured, a Spitfire and later Mustang Pilot, and many more with more "average" experiences. There's a small but feisty ninety-six-year-old veteran of the D-Day landings, the Scheldt, and Holland living in my adoptive hometown of Stratford, Ontario that might like to differ with your opinion.We didn't have the biggest army, air force or navy. we didn't go island hoping in the pacific, or fight in Egypt. We had one beach on D-Day, not two like the USA and UK. We didn't produce the most sherman tanks, we didn't produce the most spitfires.
we did what we could, helped where we made a difference, and let the heavyweights duke it out for the most part.
Sure was. But we were a middle power, and didn't do the things I mentioned.I don't think that you've read a lot of Canadian military history or known too many veterans of that period, else you'd not write off this Country's contribution so casually. I've known a bunch of the latter, including a commando (who used to give us tips on silently knifing sentries when he got bored teaching the regular curriculum), a member of the Long Range Desert Group, a bomber Pilot shot down and captured, a Spitfire and later Mustang Pilot, and many more with more "average" experiences. There's a small but feisty ninety-six-year-old veteran of the D-Day landings, the Scheldt, and Holland living in my adoptive hometown of Stratford, Ontario that might like to differ with your opinion.
Canada was in the fight two years before the Americans, even though more movies were made about them.
Ten percent of the Canadian population served in the Armed Forces. Almost half of all aircrew in the RCAF, RAF, FAA, RAAF, and RNZAF were trained in Canada under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan - over 131000 in total. Another million people worked in war industries and two million in vital food production. Half of the British Army's transport vehicles were produced in Canada, and Canada produced more wheeled military vehicles than the Axis nations combined - about 800000. Only the US produced more. A furniture company in Stratford was heavily involved in Mosquito production, part of the effort that resulted in the manufacture of 14000 aircraft. A good deal of the uranium used in the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs was mined in the Northwest Territories and enriched in Port Hope, Ontario.
Canadian participation in the Battle of the Atlantic was absolutely crucial, with 165 million tons of cargo reaching Britain under Canadian escort and fifty-two U-boats sunk.
Canada's contribution to the Italian campaign - 1st Canadian Corps - was not insignificant, nor was its part in the bomber campaign over Germany.
The US population was 132 million. Nine percent served in WWII. The British population was 48 million. The combined population of 180 million controlled four of five beaches at Normandy, whereas that tiny population of 11 million only controlled one.
By war's end, the RCN was the world's third-largest navy and the RCAF the world's fourth-largest air force.
A lot of "duking it out" was done by this lightweight.
Absolutely, but others in absolute terms, did more.In two world wars, Korea and Afghanistan, not to mention various peacekeeping missions including The Medak Pocket Operation, Canada has punched well above its weight.
Ummmm, not fully manufacturing, but you do know we provided much of the enriched Uranium to the US, UK and France in the early nuclear days, right?But, we didn't have the capacity to produce Atomic bombs.
Ummmm, right. Which is why I was very careful to use the word "produce".Ummmm, not fully manufacturing, but you do know we provided much of the enriched Uranium to the US, UK and France in the early nuclear days, right?
Ummmm, not fully manufacturing, but you do know we provided much of the enriched Uranium to the US, UK and France in the early nuclear days, right?
No, that was “peaceful”...Cough India and Pakistan cough
Whatever... The US did Hiroshima and Nagasaki.We were doing nuclear prior to 1945...
No, that was “peaceful”...
I meant earlier that we were supplying weapons-grade U for the express purpose of supporting atomic weapons production.
we should have just taken the UNSC Permanent Seat when it was first offered and we were being such bad asses.
Not whatever...we supplied fuel to their program. Canada was a contributor to those events. The US didn’t do it 100% independently.Whatever... The US did Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
I wasn't meaning to derail, by point is Canada did what it could do, aided where it could, but nobody expected us to build a Canadian A Bomb, storm Iwo Jima, or land on multiple beaches in normandy.Not whatever...we supplied fuel to their program. Canada was a contributor to those events. The US didn’t do it 100% independently.