Nah, just open it up to the market and it will sort it out.
That's an old wives' tale, like the notion that if you build a better mouse-trap the world will beat a path to your door.
I used to think all those platitudes until I went into business for myself and discovered that the marketplace has the IQ of a plenaria.
You know plenaria... those worm-like things that can be trained to move in different directions with strobing lights if they can be conditioned to think there's food where lights strobe.
It was really depressing to learn the hard way that it didn't matter what there was to offer, and that ultimately it was going to be up to marketing and sales-guys, and how well they could strobe the mind of the client.
The free-market does *not* work when people don't understand what they are buying.
They might be able to pick a good tomato, although even that's being subverted by Monsanto's genetic moding of tomatoes that travel well and look nice but have no taste nor nutrients, but most people do *not* have the knowledge to know how to buy a good computer or pick good software, leaving them utterly vulnerable to the strobe-lighting of sales and marketing. You should see what kind of technology actually exists in the skunk works versus what's being flogged in the market-place.
In any case, all was not lost when it was finally learned that there does exist a market for stuff that really works, namely DND. They do their due-diligence because it really does matter to them in a mortally vital way for stuff to work as advertized.
So let's imagine privatizing the forces, such that soldiers get their job-description changed to mercenary, and generals report to shareholders instead of government.
Do you really want to pay your tax-dollars to a private defense force when it is in their shareholders' interest to have the soldiers - I mean mercenaries - equipped as cheaply as possible?
For that matter, if you're a fighter, do you really want to sign up and become a soldier - I mean sign an all-rights-surrendered waiver to become a mercenary - for an organization ultimately ruled by shareholders who get higher profits when they equip you with cheaper weapons and gear?
I am more than happy to pull out of the UN and their global government ideals.
Well, in case you're curious why Canada sent jets to Libya...
It used to be that the UN mandate was to prevent big wars between nations, but the UN was strictly forbidden from meddling in the internal affairs of sovereign states. If leadership of a nation wanted to kill it's own people, that was declared to be none of the UN's business.
Then a Canadian general watched a genocidal massacre in Rwanda. He begged for authorization to intervene, but was blocked by the politicians because Ottawa would not intervene unilaterally and would only participate if it was a UN operation, but the UN charter didn't allow for meddling in Rwanda because it was classified as an internal affair.
So Canadian Loyd Axworthy started lobbying, and over a long process managed to get the UN charter changed to allow the UN to meddle in internal affairs should a government start slaughtering its own people.
That change to the UN mandate is what gave the UN license to attack Gaddafi's forces in order to stop him from killing his own people.
Because it was Canada to spear-head the change to the UN charter enabling the attack on Gaddafi, you better believe Canada had to be there if that charter-change was going to actually be used.