Canadian Military Ill-Prepared For Peacekeeping Role: Report

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
44,800
7,297
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.getafteritmedia.com
Canadian Military Ill-Prepared For Peacekeeping Role: Report



OTTAWA — The Trudeau government has promised to get Canada back into the peacekeeping business, but a new report from two independent think tanks says the military is ill-prepared for the task.

The study by the Rideau Institute and the Centre for Policy Alternatives was penned by Walter Dorn, a professor at the Canadian Forces Staff College and one of Canada's leading experts in peacekeeping.

For the last decade, he says, the army has specialized in counter-insurgency warfare because of the combat mission in Kandahar and other skill sets — once second nature to Canadian training — were relegated to the back burner.

Dorn says the complexities of modern peace operations require in-depth training and education, on subjects including the procedures, capabilities and limitations of the United Nations.

He says Canada is currently far behind other nations in its readiness to support the United Nations and train for modern peacekeeping.

"Special skills, separate from those learned in Afghanistan and warfare training, would need to be (re)learned, including skills in negotiation, conflict management and resolution, as well as an understanding of UN procedures and past peacekeeping missions," said the report.

"Particularly important is learning effective co-operation with the non-military components of modern peacekeeping operations, including police, civil affairs personnel and humanitarians, as well as UN agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the local actors engaged in building a viable peace."

The focus of training at both the Canadian Forces Command College in Toronto and the army staff college in Kingston, Ont., is on "taking part in 'alliance' or NATO-style operations," Dorn concluded.



"At the higher (national security) level, the case studies and exercises on peacekeeping were dropped."

Both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan have said rather than sending a lot of soldiers, Canada can contribute equipment and expertise, such as commanders and headquarters contingents. But Dorn says the military regime provides less than a quarter of the peacekeeping instruction it did a decade ago.

The report recommends the reinstatement and updating of the many training programs and exercises that have been cut, and introducing new instruction that reflects the increasing complexity of modern peace operations.

"Canadian soldiers have served as superb peacekeepers in the past and can do so again, with some preparation," the report says.

Following the Somalia scandal of the mid-1990s in which a teenager was tortured and killed at the hands of Canadian soldiers, National Defence recognized the need for specialized training. It was implemented with success between 1995 and 2005, when the army went into Kandahar.

Dorn says while the number of personnel deployed in the field by the United Nations is now at an all-time high of more than 125,000, the number of Canadian soldiers involved in those operations has dwindled to an all-time low of 29 as of Dec. 31, 2015.

Source: Canadian Military Ill-Prepared For Peacekeeping Role: Report
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
95
48
USA
I think they should continue to stay out of the Peace Keeping role. They aren't going to be sent to Cyprus.
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
0
36
****, it's like going back in time to the 1990

Why did we elect this dip-$hit >.<
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
11,371
578
113
59
Alberta
Code for sending them to war zones while bragging about peace.
F_ck the UN and F_ck Peacekeeping. It's a waste of time and Canadian lives.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
6
36
The UN and its peacekeeping missions have changed pretty dramatically since the last decade or two of the twentieth century. Just in case the partisan types heap it on the Tories, the last big Canadian UN deployment was on the Liberal watch and that was to Somalia ... a disaster to our armed forces and to that of our allies. There is/was no peace to keep in Somalia and a million blue berets couldn't drain that swamp. We had a tiny force in Rwanda after that, one not supported by the Chretien government at the moment of need. By the next big deployment to Afghanistan, the Chretien government made no pretense of sending our troops as peacekeepers and by the time that the Martin Liberals sent our soldiers into Khandahar, blue berets were already a distant memory. The Tories didn't get us back into the peacekeeping business because they understood by then that they don't bloody work and when peacekeeping is needed most (Somalia, Rwanda) there is no peace to keep because the inhabitants of those places have no interest in peace.