Who Killed the Canadian Military?
by J.L. Granatstein ISBN: 0002006758
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Who Killed the Canadian Military? by Nathan GreenfieldJack Granatstein's Who Killed the Canadian Military? is more than
a history of the decline and rustout of a military that as late as
1966 boasted 3,826 aircraft (including cutting-edge Sea King
helicopters) as opposed to today's 328 aircraft-including those
same Sea Kings and CF-18 fighters whose avionics are a generation
out of date; the same can be said of the army and navy. Granatstein's
book is a convincing analysis of Canada's embrace of a delusional
foreign policy that equates knee jerk anti-Americanism with sovereignty
and forgets that in a Hobbesian world of international relations,
"power still comes primarily from the barrel of a gun"
and not from Steven Lewis's speeches about Canadian goodwill,
tolerance or humanitarianism.
Canadian foreign policy went awry, Granatstein believes, in 1957
when Mike Pearson won the Nobel Prize for cobbling together the UN
peacekeeping mission that ended the Suez crises. It's not that
Pearson didn't deserve it. Rather, it's that having won it, Canadians
almost at once changed their view of the country's military. Just
12 years earlier, we had fielded an armed forces of more than a
million men and women, fully 10% of the population, that fought in
Sicily, Italy, France and liberated the Low Countries. (Putting
aside the very few conscripts sent to fight in Europe at the end
of the war, ours was the only completely volunteer armed forces in
battle.) In 1955, the army alone totalled 50,000 (as compared to
54, 000 in all three forces today) and planes flew off HMCS
Magnificent.
At a stroke, all this (and Vimy too) was forgotten and the myth of
the nice Canadian peacekeeper was born. Pearson saw peacekeeping
through the prism of the Cold War. Since we had never been an
imperial power, our troops could be inserted into Suez, the Belgian
Congo, Cyprus, where in addition to monitoring lines of control,
our very presence kept the Soviets out. Publically, however, Canada
assumed the role of honest broker,' which morphed into a wannabe
neutral.
International "do-goodism" soon became outright
Anti-Americanism. After defending Diefenbaker's cancellation of the
Avro Arrow, Granatstein shows how Dief made anti-Americanism a
staple of Canadian politics. Dief did more than dismiss the evidence
John Kennedy's envoy brought to Ottawa to prove that there were
Soviet missiles in Cuba. He stood up in Parliament and said that
the UN should investigate the issue-and this with Soviet freighters
steaming for Cuba.
Dief lost the next election to Pearson's Liberals. But, as Granatstein
underscores, Dief's anti-Americanism helped him hold Pearson to a
minority government, and by virtue of this "spread the infection
[of Anti-Americanism] deep into the bone of the Liberal Party"-where,
as evidenced by MP Carolyn Parrish's famous "I hate those
bastards" comment before the Iraq War, it flourishes still.
Granatstein's critics will object that by refusing to say "Ready,
Aye, Ready" to the Americans, Diefenbaker and later Trudeau
and more recently Chretien augmented Canadian sovereignty. Rhetorically,
that's so: "Sovereignty' was the first defence buzzword in
Trudeau's time."
However, in the real world of international relations, argues this
military historian, sovereignty comes from having a seat at the
table-and the coin that buys that seat is the military assets you
bring. Canada's Second World War military reputation and her
well-balanced forces gave our diplomats enough weight to help nudge
the United States into NATO in 1949, which gave Canada access to
secret US intelligence. Eight years later, our air force was credible
enough to convince the Americans to enter NORAD and to make a
Canadian second in command. Today we have few assets to bring to
the table, where, according to Granatstein, all we can do is hear
what the Americans have decided about continental defence.
Even peacekeeping has become more rhetorical than real. Ottawa may
be the only city with a Peace Keeping monument, but internationally
Canada now ranks 34th in the provision of troops (with fewer than
20,000 men and women), behind such international powerhouses as
Bangladesh and Fiji. Nor has our government been honest about what
peacekeeping has become. In 1999, Chrtien equated peacekeeping with
Boy Scouting. It never was-though in its early years troops weren't
inserted until both sides had agreed to stop shooting. No such
agreements were obtained in Rwanda, Somalia or the former Yugoslavia.
By 1993, the Department of National Defence had grown so allergic
to the idea of a military that "kill[s] people and blow[s]
things up" that it suppressed news of the battle of Medak
Pocket, during which, without suffering casualties to itself, the
second battalion of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
killed 27 and wounded 130 other heavily armed Croatians bent on
"ethnic cleansing."
Two generations of under funding-which has left the armed forces
so badly equipped that ships despatched to the Persian Gulf in 2002
were outfitted with anti-aircraft guns borrowed from museums-is bad
enough. Sadly, this has been accompanied by policies that have
undermined the military's esprit de corps. Unifying postal and
intelligence services made sense. What in 1967 Defence Minister
Paul Hellyer didn't understand was that the "buttons and
bows" he disparaged symbolized something vitally important for
sailors, soldiers and air men and women who identified with the
traditions of their squadrons, corps, regiments or units. Next came
Trudeau's barely disguised view that "generals and their
soldiers were brutes and dolts." Mulroney failed to deliver
on promises of more money and men-and was unable to say "No"
to any UN request for troops, thus creating the unprecedented peace
time situation of soldiers deployed for as many as six months a
year.
More recently, there's been the impact of the Charter on military
policy. Granatstein is at pains to argue that he supports inclusion
of women in all roles in which they are physically suited, such as
fighter pilot. But, he argues, "few women can lug heavy
machine-guns and their belts of ammunition across country and fight
enemy infantry." A 19-year-old female must meet the same
physical requirements set for a 45-year-old male, a situation that
Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente suggested "is okay,
so long as the enemy troops are all 45-year-old men." Equally
absurd is the use of quotas to raise the number of visible minorities
in the Forces. First, he argues, there is no place for race-based
thinking in recruitment. Second, the claim that visible minorities
are under-represented in the Forces fails to take into account the
fact that the vast majority of visible minorities live in major
cities-population pools which produce a very small percentage of
the men and women in the Forces. And thirdly, a goodly proportion
of recent immigrants to Canada came from countries where the military
was something to be feared. Quotas backed up by Charter arguments
may be legal, but they reveal that the government views the army
as a "social acculturation agency" and not as a tool that
exists to project the state's power.
No doubt many on the left will view Granatstein's proposal that we
increase defence spending from 1.1% to 2.5% of our GDP as proof
that he's Donald Rumsfeld in mukluks. He's not. Three point two
percent of the American GDP goes to the Pentagon.
Granatstein's proposal is large, but the need is great. The Army
requires more than a billion dollars just to get its buildings back
into shape; hundreds of millions are needed to clean up environmental
hot spots on firing ranges. And jeeps, tanks and helicopters, and
a major support ship; and replacements for rusted out destroyers
and fast aging fighters; and tens of thousands of new soldiers,
sailors, aviators and militia men and women-all are needed. It's
not a choice between guns and the butter of health care and culture
and pensions, Granatstein argues; we can afford both. Rather, he
rightly claims, it's the choice of having a military that can defend
the country and count with our allies or accepting the ultimate in
colonialism-letting the Americans alone defend North America, the
largest part of which is our Dominion.
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