9 Comments
User's avatar
JS's avatar

From punching about our weight during the two big Wars at the turn of the 20th Century to the 1980-1990's narrative of "peacekeepers" to today... We got it all wrong. A robust military with deployment capabilities and in-house expertise does not mean we are a colonial power or war-mongers. It means Canada takes its role as a global democratic leader seriously. And on top of it, we can call them when disaster strikes at home.

It is a typical story: everybody wants a better military, nobody wants to pay for it. Sigh.

Expand full comment
Cale Nicholson's avatar

For all of the tough talk from politicians about promoting Canada's sovereignty, that's not something other countries take seriously when they look at how multiple governments here have treated our national defense apparatus. Small wonder our NATO partners/allies don't really view us as a serious country. We're using CF-18's purchased in the 80's that are obselete and increasingly difficult to maintain, problem-plagued submarines that we purchased second-hand from the UK, just to name a few.

Expand full comment
J. Rock's avatar

Unfortunately skimping on military spending has always been an easy choice for politicians of all stripes. Unspecified future needs are easy to ignore in the short term...kind of like pandemic preparedness. Others here have pointed out the ridiculous lead times on military procurement. Also, we've been told for years that taking action on climate change is too expensive. How do we feel about that now? And this is just the beginning. It's like not fixing your roof when it first needs repair. Sure, you can wait but it's never going to be cheaper to remedy than it is now.

Expand full comment
Kathy Geer's avatar

Thanks for the education Matt. Search and

Rescue capacity is something I don’t often think about. Apparently neither does our government at any level. Another item in the long list of things we are NOT doing to be ready for climate change

Expand full comment
Geoff Price's avatar

It's just so unCanadian to focus on anything to do with the military, we've always just let our "friends" to the south handle things. Now we're facing crippling shortages across the board, increasing pushback from said friends, and a looming embarrassment on our northern coastlines as other countries bully our sovereignty and land away.

You would have thought this might have been an issue in the recent election. In any other country it would have been THE issue.

Expand full comment
ColdEye's avatar

excellent article, amongst the best I've read on your feed. and really well written!

Expand full comment
User's avatar
Comment deleted
Nov 18, 2021
Comment deleted
Expand full comment
Steve Schmidt's avatar

Who is your preferred partner for defence? And please don't tell me we should go it alone, we couldn't defend against Leichtenstein.

Expand full comment
J. Rock's avatar

It's possible for 2 things to be true at once. The US is our best partner AND their MIC is insane. They balked at spending money on climate in Biden's bills but they are about to increase the military budget by $37 billion to $778 billion!...for one year! Robert is right about the F 35. It's incredibly expensive and likely a lemon. People in the RCAF who support it (and other products) are likely to get post-military careers with Boeing. The arms industry is the biggest scam against taxpayers everywhere.

Expand full comment
User's avatar
Comment removed
Nov 18, 2021
Comment removed
Expand full comment
J. Rock's avatar

The US spends more on defence than the next 11 countries combined. That's insane.

Expand full comment