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Ken Pole Military Aircraft, Old and New
Written by Ken Pole   
Mao Zedong observed in a lecture that “armament is an important factor in war... In 1938,three years after becoming chairman of the Chinese Communist Party but 11 years before the People's Republic was created, Mao Zedong observed in a lecture that "armament is an important factor in war, but not the decisive factor.... Man, not material, forms the decisive factor." Mao also should have acknowledged that until troops can be delivered to a theatre of operations, the war remains one of words, not action.A case in point is the current Canadian deployment to Afghanistan; while technically not a ‘war' despite White House rhetoric, it still puts Canadian personnel in harm's way.From what I've seen and read over the past few weeks, it's a challenge they relish - after all, it's what they train for.

Getting Canadian troops and their gear, notably the impressive Coyote light-armoured reconnaissance vehicle, to Afghanistan was a job for the US Air Force for the simple reason that Canada hasn't had strategic airlift capability for years. A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Ottawa and Washington effectively commits each to provide the other with required aircraft. In this case, the Canadian troops and their vehicles and other materiel went to Afghanistan mainly aboard USAF Lockheed C-5 Galaxy transports with additional capacity provided by Boeing C-17 Globemasters, MD-11s and 747s as well as the odd Antonov.