Art Eggleton | Ian Andrew Bell https://ianbell.com Ian Bell's opinions are his own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Ian Bell Sat, 20 Apr 2002 04:24:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://i0.wp.com/ianbell.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/cropped-electron-man.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Art Eggleton | Ian Andrew Bell https://ianbell.com 32 32 28174588 Canadians Are Pissed.. https://ianbell.com/2002/04/19/canadians-are-pissed/ Sat, 20 Apr 2002 04:24:45 +0000 https://ianbell.com/2002/04/19/canadians-are-pissed/ Most of the rage regarding the deaths of the Canadian soldiers who were attacked by a US F-16 in Afghanistan has been directed at the US government and George W. Bush. Most people concern themselves with the fact that Canadians probably shouldn’t even be there.

Bush’s conduct seems to have displayed where Canada lies on his agenda. He made no specific comment at all right after the event until this afternoon, and even then without showing sincere remorse. The fact of the matter is that in his government Canada is an also-ran that can be taken for granted..

The bitter pill for Canadians to swallow is that this is probably the truth.

When the anger dies down, maybe our gaze will turn North of the border. Can someone please explain to me the logic of conducting a live-fire exercise, in the dark of night, in the middle of a war zone? If Canadian soldiers still need training to brush up on their tactics when they’re actually stationed in the battle theatre, will they ever be ready?

Who’s the buffoon who ordered the exercise and didn’t ask the US to create a No-Fly zone around the area of the exercise, or to alert the AWACS controllers that all those tracer rounds are likely to be from Canadians shooting at practice dummies?

If Art Eggleton (Canada’s Defense Minister, formerly humiliated as Canada’s Justice Minister and other cabinet positions) has any balls at all he we cop to the Canadian military’s general lack of readiness for anything short of target practice (as the targets) and to the inexperience and arrogance of its commanders.

Sad as it is to say, Friendly Fire incidents are just as often the fault of the victims, most specifically their commanders, as they are the fault of the attackers.

All in all it’s probably safe to say that the operation in Afghanistan is likely to have been more effective at injuring Canadians than it has Al Queda.

-Ian.

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Canada’s Own Special Forces.. https://ianbell.com/2002/02/21/canadas-own-special-forces/ Thu, 21 Feb 2002 08:24:17 +0000 https://ianbell.com/2002/02/21/canadas-own-special-forces/ Interesting that the supposed “scandal” surrounding Canadian troops under US command turning over Taliban captives to the US hinges on a critical photo of troops that were originally identified as US Special Forces but eventually turned out to be Canadian Special Forces.

What? Canada has special forces?

Yep. They’re called the JTF2, or Joint Task Force Two and were created in 1993 after the RCMP asserted that it couldn’t handle the conflict of interest between counter-terrorism and the mandate to “protect and serve”. Probably more realistically, the public relations nightmare from RCMP counter terrorist operations such as Oka was more than they, as a publicly reporting organization, could handle.

As it is, the JTF2 was born and the torch passed from the RCMP.

If you’re not proud of the born-again-hard Canadian hockey team, maybe you should be proud that Canada can stand among the world’s most elite commando forces. Or something like that.

If Canada’s Defense Minister Art Eggleton were a smarter individual, he could have dodged the entire controversy by simply stating that he didn’t share information about JTF2’s participation with the US because to do so would have compromised their operational safety. This is a standard practise with other Special Forces units.

I compiled a bunch of research:

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