My fingers are starting to cramp:
Sassy, i'm not claiming to be an expert on the military, Canada or the World, however I do tend to think I have things in perspective. I have never claimed the Airborne was next to Sainthood, but then again it's a Regiment that has been dogged by propoganda and 1/2 truths. As for drug testing, that was a small portion of the unit (much like everything they're blamed for), my father and friends that have served with the Airborne were never tested upon. As for the soldier who returned from Bosnia, yes it does happen, especially back then when PTSD wasn't widely accepted and seen as a form of weakness. These days we are trained to recognize PTSD in its base form and help those affected by it. That said not everyone who does a tour becomes what you've described. Granted awful things are seen and they will haunt a person, but not everyone snaps.
"They were walking by and noticed the British Military and they became angry because all of their life ills where the British Military's fault. So they started to pelt them with rocks, stones and anything else they could hurl. Inocents, I don't think so. Frankly I would of shot the little snots.
The point i've been trying to make. Innocent is a relative term. Why would you toss rocks at armed soldiers? That's like toss rocks at a grizzly bear. Not overly smart is it?
My entire conversation has been on the entire group dynamics of the Airborne, not the sub-group involved in the Somalia affair. The conditions that led to the actions within that group were based within the regiment as a whole. This is why had it not been that group in Somalia, the risk was present of a similar or worse incident occuring at a different date.
I beg to differ. You cannot deem every aspect of a Regiment as being the same. The actions in 1 Commando cannot be carried over to 2 Commando and vice versa. Each Commando was run as it's own entity, which is why the Airborne was a great organization. The failure came from the CO and his inability to manage his subordinates, and to a lesser extent his inability to properly communicate the rules of engagement while in Somalia. The panel that sat on the Somalia inquiry came to the conclusion that the whole incident was the result of Matchee being sent overseas, Even though his pre-deployment psych profile suggested otherwise. He was deemed unfit for overseas service yet his platoon OC still signed off on him going. A failure right there, in that particular Commando. Can that be blammed on the other two Commandos in the Regiment? No, of course not. The Airborne itself was not flawed, members in it were, and those flaws were not identified due to a lack of proper supervision. You never did answer my question however, why was the Airborne still disbanded if the Regiment was completely retooled from top to bottom? You speak of issues in the whole Regiment, yet fail to even describe one of them, let alone all. What were these Regimental wide problems? What were these issues that affected every trooper? The problems that
ACTUALLY existed, which were identified and corrected no longer dogged the Regiment. If anything the Regiment was better than it had ever been, and with things heating up in The Former Yugoslavia it would have made perfect sense to keep a skilled Regiment like the Airborne around. End statement; unless you can give me
ONE example of a Regimental epidemic that was cause for total disbandment, i'll assume you have nothing and are just basing your entire argument on what you saw in the media and your disdane for a Regiment you don't understand.
Yes, upholding the "western standard" as commanded is part of your "job descriptio", but one must recognize the indoctorination methodologies employed to ensure that such commands are upheld.
Give me an example of indoctorination that occurs in the Canadian Forces?
Consider again what the airborne was, and how the members were conditioned to do their role. Now look at some of the secondary roles they were placed in. It was a mismatching of unit to assignment. This happens too often within the CF because it often attempts to be something it is not so it "makes sacrifices".
Ok i'm looking at the 'Borne and i'm not seeing what you're talking about. The Airborne had excellent soldiers whose chief domestic responsibility was the defense of the arctic. A role they were suited for due to their para-deployment capabilites in to a remote region of Canada. Partner the Airborne with the Canadian Rangers and you've got an excellent Northern watchdog. In regards to their secondary roles, I fail to take issue with that either. Their chief secondary role was counter-terrorism. What's wrong with having highly fit, highly trained men at your disposal to assist the RCMP SERT at handling terrorist issues? I'd like to point out that the British 22nd Regiment, otherwise known as the SAS, in the U.K. is a soley military unit whose
PRIMARY role domestically in the U.K. is counter-terrorism. So why are the SAS fit for counter-terrorist duties while the Airborne wasn't?
I didn't claim that the CF does not function for the security of Canada. I said that that what some pass off as being "security" is not. You are correct, i do not respect the "men in uniform". I do not respect any military servicemen for in the end no matter what military one is with, they are all the same. My position comes from both a philosophical and an experiential position. When expected to prepare humans to die for senseless reasons at the whim of warheads my stomach turns. When (as much as you don't like the word) expected to indoctorinate soldiers so they can be good little robots I felt I was a hypocrite. When I would think through the scenarios of people on the "other side" doing the same thing, for such petty purposes, i cried inside. The devaluation of life is the path to our assured destruction.
That's your right to feel that way, however as i've said time and time again warfare has forged this nation. Without warfare this nation would be nothing. You assume that the military devaluates life. You're wrong. Yes we come to accept that sometimes people die, but we also accept that they were taking doing the most noble thing a human being can do. Protecting others. Your bad experiences or hippyistic (I made that word up) attitude may cloud your ability to recognize what i'm saying, but that doesn't change the fact that thousdands of Canadians wear the uniform to protect our way of life. Without the men and women of the CF our international acclaim woudn't exist, nor, perhaps, would the Country I love so much. I'm just sorry you don't respect the people who put themselves in harms way for the betterment of society.
Remember, it is not our role to tell others how to live.
Yes I agree, however in Afghanistan we were asked to come back. As you may or may not know, we pulled out of Afghanistan briefly in the summer of 2002. The Afghan Government asked us to come back and help them. We agreed, not only to help them, but because we analyzed the threat Afghanistan presented to our way of life and coupled with our ability to aid a fledgling Afghanistan, we have returned enmass. As a rejoinder to your claim that it's not our role to tell people how to live, yes i'll agree, however it
IS our role to decide how we live, and if that means going off to some far away land to engage some extremist whose agenda is the destruction of Western civilization, so be it.
Bad news for you; you can't force people to accept your help. If you come and help me with something, and I don't want your help, then you're not helping me. And if you should try to force your help onto me, then your setting yourself up for a fight. So obviously these people don't want that "protection" which is being forced onto them.
Actually those dorks throwing stones are heavily armed Brits don't have any concept of their place in the World. They're told at the mosque that the West is evil therefore they take it for the word of Allah. So they chuck stones at people they don't know, who are for the most part just doing their job. I have no sympathy for the "innocents" beaten by the Brits. I will however say I don't agree with it either. As soldiers their job is to uphold the law and represent their nations ideals. I highly doubt slapping some ignorant Iraq's around is high on the Brits agenda. In all I have empathy for the Brits and their actions, but as I said don't think it was the correct stance to adopt.
Whose fault, I don't know. But I do remember as a child taking swimming lessons. We were taught that, if the person we are rescuing from drowning clings to us, we swim downward to escape from him, because that's not where he wants to go. The same principle could have been applied here. If there was enough food for all, problem solved. If not, then perhaps there should not have been any food in the area at all, so as not to attract the people ther. But again, I don't know the situation there.
Yes you clearly don't understand the situation at all. Somalia wasn't about food, or drowing individuals. We were asked in to Somalia by the U.N., the Airborne deployed near Belet Huen and the people were so happy to see them that they cried. However militants from neighbouring tribes showed up and time and time again tried to raid the Canadian Camp. Many were shot and killed, some even run over by Iltis'. These people, more like poor excuses for people, deemed that because the Camp was on "their land" that they had every right to what contents lay within. Shidane Arone just happened to be one of hundreds of Somalies that tried to enter the Canadian Camp. He, unfortunately, was captured by Clayton Matchee. As a result he was beaten to death. I have never said I supported Matchee and Brown, quite the opposite really, however I do understand where it all came from. Imagine being in a land far away from home, trying to help people who shoot at you and steal from you. Eventually you could snap and take it to excess. Did what the Brits do fall in line with what happened in Somalia? Hell no, but it all stems from the same place, ingratefulness.
Well, going back to flipping the table, if the Canadian military had collapsed in war, and Canada was now occupied, would Canadians resort to suicide bombings? I doubt it; seems to be an Arab thing even I can't fully understand. But I'm sure gorilla activity would be going on everywhere. So how can we be angry at them rising up in violence when we all know damn well we'd do the same?
Yikes, you sure don't know much about what's really going on over there do you? First off let me point it, a Gorilla lives in a tree, a Guerrilla is a partisan, coming from the word guerra, or "little war". That said, over 80% of the insurgents in Iraq are not Iraqi citizens. They're extremeists from Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, etc etc, who are blinded by faith and have a grudge against the West. If over 50% of the insurgents are from outside Iraq's borders, they're not Guerillas. For the first few years many Iraqis supported the coalition, however due to an increase in insurgents targeting civilians, the residents have no place to direct their anger than at coalition troops. It's like in Afghanistan, a village in the moutains 2 hours North of Kandahar supports the coalition being in Afghanistan, however are forced to harbour insurgents when the coalition troops leave. Not a nice World we live in.
It would seem to me that there was more control then than now. And the UN opposed it, not to mention that the war was based on false pretenses.
Actually in terms of freedom in Iraq there is way more control. Granted yes it is a war zone, something that people fail to realize. The U.N. did not oppose the war at the begining, they simply sat there and watched.
What did Iraq have to do with 9/11?
First off, I hate that catch phrase "9/11". That said, I have never once claimed that Iraq had anything to do with the attack on New York. I have however said in these posts that Iraq has been on America's hit list as a threat to national security for years. The attacks on New York just allowed them to fast track their invasion.
Agreed. But if you also need to consider the cultural dynamic (One reason the US lost Vietnam and North Korea, and the USSR had lost Afghanistan). Technology will get you so far, but in the end, PR is required! Had the US thought it out, it could have established something along the lines of the Foreign Legion, with any Arab speaker, US or foreigner, could join.
The U.S. not only lost Vietnam due to PR issues, they lost because the vast majority of the troops they had fighting over there were pot-smoking draftees. As for North Korea, we didn't lose North Korea, in fact the war wasn't just in North Korea, in flowed back and forth along the 38t parallel. The war ended because China entered the war and the West realized that in order to defeat both Norea Korea and China it'd take years and years and cost millions of lives, something the World wasn't too keen on coming out of World War II less than a decade before. Lastly in regards to the Korean War, South Korea supported us fully, and the war was started by North Korea, not us. With regard to this "foreign legion" you speak of, how would that have helped the U.S. secure it's own nation against a myriad of threats?