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Article 5. 7 just says that NATO doesn't supersede the UN.MilEME09 said:Given Article 7...
Article 5. 7 just says that NATO doesn't supersede the UN.MilEME09 said:Given Article 7...
MilEME09 said:I'm not saying those troops don't deserve arty support but realistically, we have 37 M777's, lets say five are used as training aids at the various schools. 32 guns is only 8 batteries to cover 3 CMBG's, the math doesn't sound like we have assets we can afford to loose.
Lightguns said:If the balloon goes up, we will have two choices: join the coalition to liberate Latvia or; negotiate for the release of our troops being held in a gulag in Siberia.
Eye In The Sky said:???
You reasoning is all ****ed up in my mind - kit shouldn't sit around *state-side* that should be deployed into a theatre/mission. Mission is what we are supposed to be about. Home and garrison/hanger/jetty life is about training for the mission (where ever it may be). We have a small navy, and a small LRP fleet for the size of the country and coasts we have, yet (some of) those assets are deployed outside Canada almost continuously.
MilEME09 said:All I'm saying is that battery would be more useful in my opinion in the follow up force, that said I am not an expert on strategic military planning.
V @cezarysta-#NATO #EFP in #Baltics tripwire indeed
https://twitter.com/Mark3Ds/status/852620068416630789
The Abilities of the British, French, and German Armies to Generate and Sustain Armored Brigades in the Baltics
https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR1629.html
Jeremiah Cushman @jdcushman
Jeremiah Cushman Retweeted Tuomo Rusila
Is a fight in the Baltics going to be conventional for more than a few days?
Tuomo Rusila @tuomorusila
"ground units are undermanned, overextended and lack equipment"
Report: Europe’s armies too slow for a Baltic clash https://www.stripes.com/news/report-europe-s-armies-too-slow-for-a-baltic-clash-1.463325#.WO-G-y2xSI_.twitter …
MarkOttawa said:What "follow-up" force from Canada? How/when might it ever arrive? Where would it deploy? Not likely Latvia.
Mark
Ottawa
YZT580 said:The odds of a follow-on group from Canada range from remote to non-existent. How would we get them there? On our C-17s you say, so who flies escort? By ship, you say? Whose, says I? And what will the opposing subs be doing in the meantime. We don't have a merchant navy to draw on and we don't have the navy to protect them. You had better hope that the Brits, French and Germans can do better in getting reinforcements on scene than they say they can because that Canadian group on site will be the only Canucks on site for a significant length of time.
YZT580 said:The odds of a follow-on group from Canada range from remote to non-existent. How would we get them there? On our C-17s you say, so who flies escort? By ship, you say? Whose, says I? And what will the opposing subs be doing in the meantime. We don't have a merchant navy to draw on and we don't have the navy to protect them. You had better hope that the Brits, French and Germans can do better in getting reinforcements on scene than they say they can because that Canadian group on site will be the only Canucks on site for a significant length of time.
Eye In The Sky said:*Red Storm Rising* Battle of the Atlantic scenario; USN and NATO work to keep the SLOCs open so reinforcements can make it. Better reinforce Iceland quick. :nod:
As Canada prepares to stand up a multi-national NATO battle group here this summer, army commanders have come up with a plan to prevent their soldiers being exploited by the Kremlin via “honey pots,” “gentlemen’s clubs” and other such temptations: hockey, hockey and more hockey.
The plan is for the 450 Canadian troops bound for Latvia as part of a tripwire against Russian aggression to be confined to their base, about a half-hour drive northeast of Riga, for the first few months after they arrive. This is partly because there will be much work to be done before the unit can be declared combat-ready. But there are also grave concerns that Russia will try to undermine the Canadian mission by attacking it with “kompromat” and “dezinformatsiya,” as it has already done with a similar NATO enhanced forward-presence battle group from Germany which is up and running in neighbouring Lithuania.
Even after the newcomers, mostly drawn from 1 Battalion, Princess Patricias Canadian Light Infantry, are certified sometime in August as operationally effective, they will be allowed off base only on “supervised cultural days,” the commander, Lt.-Col. Wade Rutland, said after leading a live-fire exercise last week involving other NATO forces training in Latvia. Those excursions may include visits to museums, theatres, parks and restaurants.
But the centrepiece of the leisure activities will be hockey games against each other and against Latvian military and civilian teams at the four rinks near the base the Canadians will share with the Latvian army and a small number of soldiers from Albania, Italy, Spain, Slovenia and Poland.
“There will be no 48-hour weekend passes,” the colonel said, referring to the good old days during the Cold War when Canadians stood watch against the Red Army in Germany.
German troops in Lithuania have already been targeted twice by Russian propagandists through what has become known as “hybrid warfare.” Within days of their arrival emails claiming German troops had raped an underage Lithuanian girl were sent to a leading Lithuanian politician and reported on by local media outlets. Police investigated and concluded that there was no evidence at all to support such a claim. More recently a photo-shopped image of the German commander, Lt.-Col. Christoph Huber, appeared on a blog along with the fiction that he was a Russian spy who was “not loyal to NATO or to Lithuania, but is a strong supporter of Russian policy.”
Russia circulated similar fabrications when it seized Crimea from Ukraine. “We are taking it very seriously,” Rutland said. Every effort would be made to keep soldiers “on the straight path.”
The Canadian soldiers’ familiarization process for the mission has already begun with a series of detailed briefings about ways Russia may attempt to embarrass them.
Chief Warrant Officer Michael Forest, who has just spent three weeks in Latvia, is to be responsible for ensuring discipline. “We are educating our leadership to look for certain things and to try to avoid those situations where a provocation could happen,” the sergeant-major said. Because “a bright light will be shining on us all the time, we are going to set the conditions through policy. If you go for a pizza there will be a fire team, you will not be alone.”
Col. Ilmars Lejins, the Latvian infantry brigade commander assigned to work closely with Canadians said “the short answer is that we can expect many things” from Russia’s prolific propaganda machine. “Will it happen that there will be a Canadian with two heads and four eyes rampaging around Riga? Of course, there will be ‘news’ like that,” Lejins said. “How do you combat things like that? The first thing is to talk to each other and have common sense. Ask yourself if that is reliable. What the military will do, the Latvians and the Canadian Forces, will be to have a very straightforward two-way conversation with the press and Latvian citizens.” ...
milnews.ca said:This on how the troops can spend down time & what to expect - highlights mine ...
Fabius said:I am very skeptical of what the military is trying to achieve by confining the Cdn portion of the BG to the base.
If they think that will halt the Russian IO attempts, they will, I believe, be proven badly wrong. The IO campaign is not based in facts so what does it matter from a Russian perspective if the Canadians are or are not confined to the base. The best that can be achieved in this context is the Canadian military saying “Nope, not us. All our troops were confined to base.” Not sure that is actually something that should be counted as an effective counter.
I believe that confining the troops to the base and not allowing them to socialize with the population they are there to protect is actually counterproductive. First let’s remember that Latvia is a modern European country and they are a stable, fairly prosperous NATO ally. They are not hostile, even if a segment of their population may hold pro-Russian sentiments. To move our forces in and establish a FOB mentality given that context seems stupid and incredibility risk adverse to the point of self-defeating. An effective counter to the IO campaign is having the troops involved and present doing routine things that people do so that the population sees Canadian soldiers going about their affairs (official or otherwise). In doing so the population would get to know the Canadians to various degrees and would then in their own social networks discount and discredit the Russian IO. However that concept is not tidy or clean and does come with its own risks. Sadly it’s apparently not something that we are able to accept or implement.
I wonder what the other contributing countries to the Latvian BG are doing in this area.