Eye In The Sky
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That part, I would have some concerns about.
George Wallace said:News is coming out now that four Griffon helicopters are being sent to Iraq
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Canada in Iraq: CAF Looking to Deploy Griffons to Iraq
Written by: JDM, Canadian Forces Dispatch author
Last Updated: February 9, 2016 - 1:44 pm
With the dramatic shift in the Government of Canada's policy towards ISIS, and the change to Canada's contributions to the US-led Coalition against ISIS, Chief of Defence Staff Jonathan Vance provided some details in a technical briefing.
The total number of military personnel deployed will increase from the currently authorized 600, to 850. This adjustment will be seen in the required ground crew required for the CF-18s, which will be returning home, and the increase in the number of Special Forces trainers in Iraq.
While specific numbers of Special Forces have not been released, it is assumed that close to 200 Canadian Special Forces members will be in Norther Iraq working with the Kurdish Peshmerga within the coming months, as both Prime Minister Trudeau, and Minister of Defence Sajjan said clearly that the training commitment would triple.
For the Special Forces in Iraq, reporters asked the Prime Minister if the CAF will still be on the front lines of the fight against ISIS, and if they would still be marking targets for the remaining coalition partners in the air campaign. General Vance responded, "I want Canadians to know that we will be involved in engagements as we defend ourselves or those partners who we are working with.” Vance also indicated that Special Forces will continue to "mark ISIS targets" for the coalition. This is something that the US Special Forces members in Iraq are not currently able to do.
Minister Sajjan echoed Vance's statement, when he told CTV's Canada AM program, " This is a conflict zone - it comes with risks."
In yesterday's Press briefing the Prime Minister said that as part of Canada's new advise and assist role, Canada would be sending small arms and ammunition to Iraq. Vance indicated that Canada would be supplying machine guns and riffles to Iraqi forces, but did not specify who in particular. He also could not indicate how the arms will be sent legally to Iraq; as Iraq is not approved for arms export under the Automatic Weapons Country Control List.
A CAF Door Gunner mans his machine gun aboard a CH-146 Griffon over the desserts of Afghanistan (Undated DND Photo)
To help mitigate some of the risks, the DND Spokesman was quoted as indicating that, the CAF is looking at deploying 4 CH-146 Griffon Helicopters to Iraq. Daniel Le Bouthier, was quoted to Defence Watch as saying, "options are being explored to enhance in-theatre tactical transport, further analysis, coordination and discussions with our coalition partners is required before details regarding the deployment of Griffon helicopters can be finalized, though the current plan calls for 4 airframes."
No specifics as to what the Griffons would be used for. CANSOFCOM has their own Griffon Helicopters, but there is no public information as to what vehicles CANSOFCOM has deployed in theater already. The Griffons are expected to be used for Troop Transport, as well as Medi-Vac Capabilities within Norther Iraq.
PuckChaser said:What's the concern with helicopters, EITS?
It's absolutely a risky proposition, but so is a small team miles away from support, and that support gets there by road or we ask politely for someone else to help. Who's more valuable? Do we keep aircrews at home because of a manpad threat, and then expose those advisors to suicide bombers, ambush, etc? How do we balance it all out?Eye In The Sky said:Article Link [I know how old the article is]
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As I've said more than once in this thread, anyone who believes coalition aircrews are risk-free in this one is uninformed and incorrect.
Funny thing about the middle east. Even if you win, you don't win.Eye In The Sky said:ISIL is militarily defeated, their revenue generating ability destroyed, their credibility amongst those who 'follow' them non-existent, and the GoI is able to look after its own back yard again, can secure it's border and not start the crap Maliki did that he said he wouldn't do. (the last one...maybe, maybe not).
Short version.
I don't, personally, link "beating ISIL" to 'solving the REAL problem in the ME'. But it is one fight that has to happen and decisively IMO. The 'decisively' part is up to the Iraqi people, not the MESF ones.
PuckChaser said:It's absolutely a risky proposition, but so is a small team miles away from support, and that support gets there by road or we ask politely for someone else to help. Who's more valuable? Do we keep aircrews at home because of a manpad threat, and then expose those advisors to suicide bombers, ambush, etc? How do we balance it all out?
Altair said:Funny thing about the middle east. Even if you win, you don't win.
For arguments sake,should isil be defeated, who is left to fight assad?
On the flip side, should assad be defeated who is left to fight isil?
Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Eye In The Sky said:That part, I would have some concerns about.
PPCLI Guy said:There are, categorically, no refugees staying in DND facilities at this time.
Jed said:Are there any staying in PMQs that are not technically DND but are managed by arm's length contracts?
Syria: The Horror, The Horror
https://cgai3ds.wordpress.com/2016/02/09/mark-collins-syria-the-horror-the-horror/
Moral Dishonesty: The New, Improved Canadian Mission vs ISIS
https://cgai3ds.wordpress.com/2016/02/09/mark-collins-moral-dishonesty-the-new-improved-canadian-mission-vs-isis/
Jed said:Are there any staying in PMQs that are not technically DND but are managed by arm's length contracts?
... and PMQs do belong to DND. There is no "not technically" nor contract about it. CFHA is not a contracted service provider.PPCLI Guy said:No. No refugees whatsoever.