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  • What's next for Canada's military

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    Jan 11 2015


    What's next for Canada's military

    Chris Kilford

    Published on: January 11, 2015Last Updated: January 11, 2015 7:00 AM EST

    When the current mission in Iraq eventually ends it likely won't be
    our last in the region.

    Then again, making predictions can be a risky business as I found out
    in 2006 as the acting director of a new future security analysis team
    in National Defence Headquarters. There were about 10 of us in all -
    civilian and military, with various backgrounds and academic
    qualifications. Our main focus was to figure out where, when and why
    the Canadian military might deploy internationally during the next 20
    years. By analyzing various possibilities, the idea was to then
    recommend what new equipment, people skills, doctrine, etc. the
    military would need to meet the challenges envisaged.

    As George Savile, Marquess of Halifax once said, "the best
    qualification of a prophet is to have a good memory." To this end, the
    team pored back over previous military deployments and the causes
    leading to them. We also analyzed more contemporary issues ranging
    from climate change to demographic trends and along the way discovered
    that those in the forecasting industry often got it wrong.

    For example, few had imagined the total collapse of the Soviet Union
    or that supporting the Afghan mujahideen would have such far-reaching
    consequences later on. On the other hand, once up and running, it was
    the Middle East and the fringes of the former Soviet Union that
    attracted our greatest interest. In the post-1945 period, for example,
    Canadian troops had repeatedly deployed to the Middle East for
    peacekeeping and combat.

    Indeed, when I arrived in Turkey as Canada's defence attaché in the
    summer of 2011, our military was busily involved helping rid Libya of
    Muammar Gaddafi. Just after I left Ankara in July 2014, others were on
    their way to Kuwait or heading to Lithuania for a Baltic air policing
    mission. In between, the navy busily patrolled the region on
    anti-piracy/anti-terrorism missions and in support of NATO operations
    in the Mediterranean and Black Sea. Last month, Canada took command of
    Combined Task Force 150, a naval counter-terrorism task force located
    in Bahrain.

    In the region where I worked there were plenty of other potential
    flash-points as well. Turkey was occupying a large portion of Cyprus
    after some 40 years. Ethnic Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan had
    seized control of the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan
    in the early 1990s. Today, along the Armenian and Azerbaijani border,
    the two sides are dug-in much like it was in Europe during the First
    World War. In 2008, Georgia and Russia went to war and in 2014, Russia
    annexed Crimea. Furthermore, and much to the annoyance of Georgia,
    their breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia are recognized
    as independent countries by a small handful of states but in
    particular, Russia. Meanwhile, the spillover from the civil war in
    Syria has led to refugee, economic and political challenges for Iraq,
    Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.

    As for the rest of the world, there will always be missions that
    seemingly come out of the blue from natural disasters to more menacing
    affairs.

    Given the vagaries of Middle Eastern politics, however, I would
    venture that our men and women in uniform will be serving in and
    around the region well into the future.

    Tensions with Russia will also persist, meaning that NATO will call on
    our assistance more and more.

    The good news, if there is any, is that Ottawa established a military
    operational support hub with a range of support services in Germany in
    2009. Moreover, and in what turned out to be a very timely decision,
    Canada signed a new memorandum of understanding with Kuwait in May
    2014 for a second hub. Both hubs, I suspect, will be far busier than
    their proponents ever imagined.

    Dr. Chris Kilford (then Colonel Kilford) served as Canada's Defence
    Attaché to Turkey from 2011-2014. He recently became a fellow with the
    Queen's Centre for International and Defence Policy.

    http://ottawacitizen.com/news/national/chris-kilford-whats-next-for-canadas-military




    From: A. Papazian
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