OldSolduer
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Or will he just go "uum uh its complicated"Will he be a man, or a mouse?
Or will he just go "uum uh its complicated"Will he be a man, or a mouse?
I read that earlier today.2) And from Chair of National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (a Liberal) following Committee's annual report--he wants more done to combat, in particular, PRC's foreign influence/interference activities in Canadian politics (India also likely active along these lines at lesser level):
John Ivison: This is no time for the Liberals to think of slashing defence spending
In the mid-1990s, awash with red ink, the Chrétien government chopped defence spending on the basis that no threat was so large that the U.S. couldn’t handle itnationalpost.com
More from the National post, with China surging we our selves need a pacific shift more then we already have. The question is where will our Latvia of the Pacific be?
Or smaller scale, look at Japan and South Korea for smaller carriers that hold 12 to 24 airframes.The best place for a Canadian "Latvia of the Pacific" would be onboard an Esquimalt based HMCS Bonaventure II. It would show how serious we are about the Pacific region and let us lead to the creation, or reincarnation rather, of SEATO. Integrated battle groups of Canadian carrier, Australian assault ships and combined destroyers/frigates and submarines would make a potent contribution to regional security, especially when paired with similar battle groups from the UK, the US, Japan and South Korea, even possibly India. You would have a nice encirclement of China, limiting it's ability to act as a bully in the region.
PS: And before people start saying: Oh! We can't afford a carrier": I am thinking about a carrier in style of the UK's Queen Elizabeth class. Highly automated with small crew (about 800) and a normal air wing in the 26-28 planes at about 500 air pers., surge capacity for full combat of about 50 airframes. We can expand the RCN and RCAF to do that without even getting close to the 2% of GDP we said we would soon be spending on defence.
Or ditch the expensive single, floating airfield and triple the number of fighters and add some transport aircraft to supply them in dispersed airfields with mobile AD/ASuW missile batteries?The best place for a Canadian "Latvia of the Pacific" would be onboard an Esquimalt based HMCS Bonaventure II. It would show how serious we are about the Pacific region and let us lead to the creation, or reincarnation rather, of SEATO. Integrated battle groups of Canadian carrier, Australian assault ships and combined destroyers/frigates and submarines would make a potent contribution to regional security, especially when paired with similar battle groups from the UK, the US, Japan and South Korea, even possibly India. You would have a nice encirclement of China, limiting it's ability to act as a bully in the region.
PS: And before people start saying: Oh! We can't afford a carrier": I am thinking about a carrier in style of the UK's Queen Elizabeth class. Highly automated with small crew (about 800) and a normal air wing in the 26-28 planes at about 500 air pers., surge capacity for full combat of about 50 airframes. We can expand the RCN and RCAF to do that without even getting close to the 2% of GDP we said we would soon be spending on defence.
Or ditch the expensive single, floating airfield and triple the number of fighters and add some transport aircraft to supply them in dispersed airfields with mobile AD/ASuW missile batteries?
And tomahawks all round.I see your aircraft carrier and raise you an ice capable aircraft carrier.
Now that would be a brand statement heard around the world
Strike squad of just 100 Brit Marines smashed 1,500 US troops in war games drill
A STRIKE squad of just 100 Marines smashed 1,500 US troops in a war games drill.
The shock victory has revolutionised military thinking.
The £400million drill in California had to be cut short because the British victory was so swift and unexpected
Our Future Commando Force attacked in the urban warfare exercise. Conventional tactics suggest they would need to heavily outnumber the defending Americans.
But working in eight teams of 12, they outmanoeuvred their rivals and used helicopter drones linked to screens on their chests to pinpoint weak spots.
The £400million drill in California had to be cut short because the British victory was so swift and unexpected.
Chief of the Defence Staff, General Sir Nick Carter, told The Sun yesterday: “This has overturned the principles of war. Mass is no longer the asset it once was — it is all about effect. If you concentrate your force, you are vulnerable.
“On the modern battlefield you want maximum dispersion to give your opponent maximum doubt.
“Then apply disposable technology that you don’t mind losing.”
Brigadier Dan Cheeseman, head of the Royal Navy’s hi-tech weapons wing, added: “This has turned around traditional thinking.”
Yesterday, the Future Commando Force and the new “tier two” special forces’ Rangers Regiment — similar to the US’s Green Berets — unveiled hi-tech weapons at the MoD’s Bovington Camp in Dorset.
Troops are experimenting with flying grenades, remote-controlled mortar bombs and “throwbots” which can be lobbed into buildings before soldiers conduct dangerous room-clearance operations.
Dave Young, regimental sergeant-major of 3 Commando Brigade, said: “If we’d had this kit in Afghanistan, there is no doubt it would have saved lives.”
The Navy is planning an exercise this year to see if Marines in jet suits can board a ship.
The Rangers Regiment will fight alongside rebels and freedom fighters in other countries’ wars.
Terry is a good friend of mine. You are so bang on. A brilliant writer, a fierce moralist in his own way and, frankly, wasted on this country.A lefty who gets it, in the same mould as Orwell.
In my opinion we need to cater to Taiwan more and China less. Let Beijing be mad, time to hunt down there spies, secret PLA training cells in Canada (if rumors are true) and cripple their network of reachAnother home run by Terry Glavin. I wish he would get more exposure in Canadian media. A lefty who gets it, in the same mould as Orwell.
Terry Glavin: Canada humiliates itself once again with its shameful treatment of Taiwan's Tsai
The irony is that the former law professor embodies everything that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau would want to be, but isn’tnationalpost.com
That would be quite the journey to make across the Pacific, and then back again, to fish.This applies to us as they can wipe out many of our fish stocks as well.
The sheer tonnage of China’s sixteen thousand hull fishing fleet and the fleet’s illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) practices exert their own gravitational pull for diplomatic, intelligence, military, and economic analysts globally. Contextualizing China’s massive fishing fleet within China’s grand strategy, identifying the most likely use case for the fleet, and assessing the most dangerous use case suggest the need for updates in the U.S. Department of Defense’s role in monitoring and addressing the assessed threats.The Strategic Significance of the Chinese Fishing Fleet
A naval officer discusses why China’s massive fishing fleet should be closely monitored by military planners because of its harmful activities below the threshold of conflict and its potential use as a paramilitary force.www.armyupress.army.mil
China emitted more greenhouse gases in 2019 than all of the world's other developed nations put together
By IAN RANDALL FOR MAILONLINE
- Researchers estimated the greenhouse gas emissions of 190 different nations
- They considered gases including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide
- China accounted for 27% of the world's 52 gigatons of CO2 equivalent emissions
- However, on a per capita basis, China emits just less than the OECD average
- Per person, the globe's worst emitter is the US, at 7.6 tons a head to China's 10.1
PUBLISHED: 10:04 EDT, 7 May 2021 | UPDATED: 12:02 EDT, 7 May 2021
China released a greater volume of greenhouse gases into Earth's atmosphere in 2019 than all of the world's developed nations put together, a study has found.
The eastern superpower has tripled its emission levels since the 1990s, crossing the 14 gigatons threshold for the first time ever in 2019.
Emission estimates for 190 nations across the globe were calculated by experts from research firm Rhodium Group in tandem with Breakthrough Energy.
The analysis considered six greenhouse gases — carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulphur hexafluoride.
Global emissions have risen 11.4 per cent in the last decade to reach 52 gigatons of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2019, with China responsible for 27 per cent of this.
The second-worst emitter was the US — accounting for 11 per cent of the total — with India edging out the EU for the first time to come in third at 6.6 per cent. ...
- The one lady's statement that for a month, they all watched in confusion as to what the massive Chinese fishing fleet was up to. And then it became clear... Ummmmmm...bit of an odd statement from someone who's full time job appears to be involved in the fight against illegal fishing My guess right off the bat is that the fishing boats were, you know, fishing...CBH99 It`s already happening
Chinese fishing armada plundered waters around Galápagos, data shows