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Richard Purser Retooling the Military

There are few signs of success

Written by Richard Purser   
If the defence minister has been making any effort to educate the prime minister, there are few signs of success.
 
 
 
 
 
This magazine expressed cautious hope for John McCallum when he was appointed defence minister a year and a half ago, but he does not appear to be living up to even such guardedly optimistic expectations. He shows few signs of having appropriate clout in the government. The already unpardonably delayed purchase of new maritime helicopters continues to drag on interminably after his appointment. The overall deterioriation of funding for Canada’s military over the past several years has not been reversed. Disrespect for the minister within the military was demonstrated when McCallum was invited not to attend the memorial service in Pembroke, Ontario for two Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan on October 2.

It has long been clear that Prime Minister Jean Chrétien has never comprehended or much cared about the role of the military, even after 9/11/01. And he has never really seemed to comprehend the state of dire threat that our neighbour to the south has felt itself to be under since that ghastly date. If the defence minister has been making any effort to educate the prime minister and his cabinet on these matters, there are few signs of success.

One can say that McCallum could best serve himself and his country by returning to his professional practice as an economist; but it may be that no defence minister could ever do much about Chrétien’s entrenched attitudes. Since a change in prime minister is imminent, perhaps McCallum might just as well stick around long enough to see if he can break through to Paul Martin.