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Understood, and in full agreement.
It is inexcusable that a Canadian MP could be so miss-informed as to believe that we are making a "drastic change in direction" and not recognize that we are just carrying on with the same job. However, because we have used dishonest vernacular to soften our image, it is our fault a a military that some in the public will believe her. This goes back to my earlier observation of how shocked the average citizen is about the violence involved in "peacekeeping." We should have dropped that term long ago. "Enforcers" may have been better but, personally, I think we should have just stuck with "soldiers.""We're sending in armed troops to kill people (in Afghanistan). This is a drastic change in direction,"
"I don't think anybody has consulted with the Canadian public."
Independent MP Carolyn Parrish
The Edmonton Journal has used language that is honest about our roll. Doesn't Ms. Parish come off a little goofy by being furious that Canadian soldiers are being asked to fill a traditional role of soldiers?Parrish is furious that neither Canadians nor their politicians have been consulted about what she calls the "new" role Canadian soldiers are being asked to carry out in Afghanistan, which could include killing the enemy, a traditional role of soldiers.
We know that it is incorrect to suggest that the use of lethal force is foreign to "peacekeepers." However, to the uniformed civilian, Ms. Parish's ignorance based arguments may seem valid.Ms. Parrish is furious that Canadians and their politicians have not been consulted about what she calls the new role Canadian soldiers are being asked to carry out in Afghanistan, a role that includes killing, which is not the traditional job of peacekeeping. She warns there will be outrage when Canadians in uniform return home "in body bags."
MCG said:It is inexcusable that a Canadian MP could be so miss-informed as to believe that we are making a "drastic change in direction" and not recognize that we are just carrying on with the same job. However, because we have used dishonest vernacular to soften our image, it is our fault a a military that some in the public will believe her. This goes back to my earlier observation of how shocked the average citizen is about the violence involved in "peacekeeping." We should have dropped that term long ago. "Enforcers" may have been better but, personally, I think we should have just stuck with "soldiers."
If the CF had always used the honest language of our current CDS, then the public would see Ms Parish's current act for its true stupidity. Unfortunately, because we have sugar coated our work, some people will believe her.
silentbutdeadly said:or better yet Ms Parrish lets have them not go into the Bad areas within our cities just incase they get killed hows that. So if our Police forse loses and friend in the line of duty, that must mean we have to take all the offiers off the street! So end my rant! haha
hahaha that is funny.48Highlander said:You've got the right idea now. In fact, as any leftie can tell you, the propper way to fight inner-city crime is to pull out the cops and send in aid-workers to distribute food and clothing. In addition to, ofcourse, petitioning the G8 to donate billions of dollars, and organizing rock concerts in Barrie to raise awareness of the problem.
The problem with that is the Canadian press would report those sentiments, from her, or anyone else they could find, as they represent the opinion they want to express. The CBC and the leftist journalists want to embrace social justice, rather than the justice system, and far prefer beating our swords into plowshares than extolling the virtues of our own "swordsmen". Our right wing publishers with to pursue a continued downsizing of government, slashing away at expensive capital costs like the purchase of new first rate military equipment, and shy from anything that might call for increased federal spending that might require increased taxes. Our limited military industry likewise doesn't want a credible threat against, or offensive opperations for our military as that might require hardware not made in Quebec or Ontario. It is in not in the interests of the press, their owners, their favourite sources, or the bought dogs of the "think tanks" to point out the facts of life to the Canadian public, too many people are doing too well off our happy defenceless ignorance.Hatchet Man said:hahaha that is funny.
But seriously we do we even give her the all this attention. She is just saying all this nonsense cause it gives her a chance to extend her 15 minutes. Before the "Bastards" comment she was just some no name backbencher from the 905, who has been riding the fortunes of the liberals since the 90s to a big fat pension. Now all we need to do is convince the CBC, The Star, Globe and Mail, and maybe the Post to stop giving her a platform.
Report critical of Canada's peacekeeping mission
Canadian Press
OTTAWA â †A highly critical report on a mission in Africa has raised questions about Canada's long-standing reputation as an effective peacekeeper.
Ottawa had little justification for sending military observers and others to a UN mission in Sierra Leone, says a Canadian Forces study on the seven-year operation.
And Canadian soldiers and reservists were so poorly matched to tasks that the British officers in command often had to find them low-level work.
"The problem is seen to be a lack of depth of experience or `operational maturity,' particularly in the case of reservists," says a lessons-learned report, obtained under the Access to Information Act.
"Often personnel without the necessary operational experience have been unobtrusively moved to less demanding positions more fitted to their real skills."
Training to prepare Canada's observers for the mission was so inadequate that they were given instructions on how to avoid landmine -- even though there was no landmine threat in Sierra Leone, says the study.
The problems have remained hidden because operations were in a remote area and involved only about 100 Canadian personnel in total over the years.
"The fact that these were small-scale missions likely discouraged detailed and searching analysis," wrote Lt.- Col. A.F. Robertson, author of the March 2005 report.
The UN first stepped into Sierra Leone in the 1990s to promote peace after an insurrection by the so-called Revolutionary United Front, which ultimately failed.
Canada became involved in 1999 when it agreed to send a commander and military observers to support a UN force made up of soldiers from at least nine countries.
Ottawa also sent soldiers to help train the Sierra Leone army. The Defence Department dubbed the contributions Operation Reptile, which ended in July, and Operation Sculpture, the training mission that continues.
In a recent publication, the Canadian Forces hailed Operation Reptile as a success, saying it made a positive impression on officials in other contributing military forces.
Robertson's report, however, questions whether Canada should even have participated, based on a checklist established in 1994 to determine whether Canadian troops should become involved in such peacekeeping missions.
The initial mandate in Sierra Leone was vague and unenforceable; there was no clear division of responsibilities between military and civilian authorities; the operational plan was "unworkable"; and at least one of the parties -- the Revolutionary United Front -- was opposed to the mission.
These were all contrary to Ottawa's checklist standards.
"The humanitarian disaster in Sierra Leone led Canada's commitment to two tasks, even though neither fully met published policy guidelines," the report concluded.
"In neither case is there any evidence that a review of the prospects of success, a risk-benefit analysis, an assessment of the national interest in the area, or an analysis of adherence to the . . . guidelines, was undertaken."
A peacekeeping school at Canadian Forces Base Kingston, Ont., briefed soldiers poorly for what awaited them in the tiny coastal state in West Africa.
"The cultural briefings were inadequate, and did not effectively prepare them for the social and security environment in Sierra Leone," says the study, based partly on interviews with returning soldiers.
Canada's international reputation as an effective peacekeeper dates from the 1956 Suez Crisis, when then-foreign affairs minister Lester B. Pearson helped broker a resolution.
Many governments have since tried to establish clear rules about which peacekeeping missions Canada should join, said Martin Rudd, a defence analyst with the Canadian Institute of Strategic Studies.
But governments too often ignore the criteria in an effort to help, or to be seen to be helping, when a crisis breaks out.
"The desire to do something often gets the better of them," Rudd said from Toronto.
"The tendency to want to take on so many missions can have serious implications" for military resources.
In addition to the Sierra Leone mission, Rudd cited the example of East Timor, where Canadian soldiers were sent in the fall of 1999 for six months when Australian forces were capable of doing the job themselves.
Canada often joins too many missions abroad, partly because peacekeeping has become part of the country's mythology, says a political science professor at the University of Calgary.
"We've bought into our own press clippings," said Rob Huebert, who is also associate director of the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies.
"We're doing it because we believe it's the Canadian way and peacekeeping is seen as an end rather than a means _ and that just creates all sorts of difficulties for our forces."
: Not worthy of comment...Michael Shannon said:Our "forte" is obviously the construction of comfortable camps.