a_majoor said:
Without trying to be insulting to officers or potential officer candidates, I would suggest the best way to check this "top heavy" progression would be to insist that all officers are CFRs. This would limit the pool of potential officers, ensure they are proportional to the branches and regiments they represent and also ensure they have some real world experience to guide them.
This is an interesting and, in my experience, much bandied-about argument. I tend to agree, actually. However, I would be concerned about the effect this would have on the rate at which we could produce officers. This might seem an odd comment; the whole point is to decrease the number of officers, I know. However, we would have to carefully determine the effect on our rate of officer production, to ensure that we don't overcompensate and leave ourselves with a leadership shortage at some future point, which would then take time to sort out. This is the situation we now face with Jr NCOs, thanks to well-intended but problematic changes to the way we train soldiers during their first 3-5 or so years (i.e. what we now call DPs 1 and 2).
As to eliminating the existing overage, the best way it could be managed in the CF would be to make the CDS a Lt Gen appointment, which would have a knock down effect on subordinate staffs. I would be interested to see calculations of the number of officer positions this could effect.
I have somewhat more difficulty with this one. Reducing our CDS to a 3-star will make him the equivalent of the commander of a component or a senior staff officer in many other militaries, some of whom are no larger and, in fact, may be smaller than ours. This will affect the "standing" of Canada in global military matters (all right, stop laughing...I'm making a serious point here). Believe it or not, Canada is still widely respected for its military acumen and contributions; this may have more to do with the quality and capabilties of our soldiers than higher-level factors we all know and love, but it
is there. So our CDS comes to the multinational table as a four-star, which gives him a degree of standing he wouldn't otherwise have (I have no doubt, as an aside, that any decent CDS would acknowledge a significant amount of that standing comes from him riding on the shoulders of Canadian soldiers, sailors and airmen, and their accomplishments, but again, it's there).
I would rather see a more carefully managed officer development system in place, with higher standards and, MUCH more significantly, more accountability. I'm afraid that for much of the military, the RCR motto of "Never pass a fault" are just nice-sounding words, with the result that we have too many personnel (officers and NCMs) advancing to levels they shouldn't.