The
military history of
Canada
comprises hundreds of years of armed
actions in the territory encompassing modern Canada, and the role
of the Canadian military in conflicts and peacekeeping worldwide. For thousands of
years, the area that would become Canada was the site of sporadic
intertribal wars among
First Nations
peoples. Beginning in the 16th century, the arrival of Europeans
led to conflicts with
Aboriginal peoples and among the
invading Europeans in the
New World.
Starting
in the 17th century, the region was the site of conflicts between
the French
and the
British
for more than a century, as each allied with
various First Nation groups. In 1763, the British emerged
victorious and the French civilians, whom the British hoped to
assimilate, were declared "British Subjects". New challenges soon
arose when the
northern
colonies chose not to join the
American Revolution and remained loyal
to the British crown.
The victorious Americans
looked to extend their republic and launched
invasions in 1775 and in 1812. On both occasions, the
Americans were rebuffed by British and local forces; however, this
threat would remain well into the 19th century and partially
facilitated
Canadian
Confederation in 1867.
After Confederation, and amid much controversy, a full-fledged
Canadian military was created.
Canada, however, remained a British colony, and Canadian forces
joined their British counterparts in the
Second Boer War, and the
First World War. While independence followed
the
Statute of Westminster,
Canada's links to Britain remained strong, and the British once
again enjoyed Canadian support in the
Second World War. Since the Second World
War, however, Canada has been committed to
multilateralism and has gone to war only
within large multinational
coalitions such
as in the
Korean War, the
Gulf War, the
Kosovo War,
and the
2001
invasion of Afghanistan. Canada has also played an important
role in
UN peacekeeping operations worldwide and has
cumulatively committed more troops than any other country.
As of
2006, Canada
had the
second-highest peacekeeping fatality in the world, behind India
.
European colonization
First Nations
The first
conflicts between Europeans and Native peoples may have occurred
around 1006, when parties of Norsemen
attempted to establish permanent settlements along the coast of
Newfoundland
. According to
Norse
sagas, the native
Beothuk (called
skraelings or
skraelingars by
the Norse) responded so ferociously that the newcomers eventually
withdrew and gave up their original intentions to settle. Among
later European settlers, the First Nations developed a reputation
for violence and savagery. The Natives gave no heed to the idea of
surrender, and tended to
torture and kill those who did so.
Prior to the arrival of Europeans, some First Nations warfare
tended to be formal and ritualistic, and entail relatively few
casualties. But there is also evidence of much more violent
warfare, even the complete genocide of some groups by others, such
as the total displacement of the
Dorset culture of Newfoundland by the
Beothuk mentioned above, as well as by the
Inuit in other regions. There is no evidence of
genetic or cultural continuity, so the Dorset are presumed to have
simply been wiped out. Just prior to French settlement in the St.
Lawrence River valley, the local Iroquoian peoples were completely
eradicated, probably in warfare with their neighbors. Study of
whether any of these people, who had several large towns along the
St. Lawrence River, survived the 16th century is inconclusive.After
Europeans arrived, fighting tended to be bloodier and more
decisive, especially as tribes became caught up in the economic and
military rivalries of the European settlers. By the end of the
seventeenth century, the East Coast First Nations rapidly adopted
the use of
firearms, supplanting the
traditional
bow. While a skilled
warrior could dodge an incoming arrow, and
wooden
armour offered some measure of
protection against arrows, nothing could protect them from a
bullet. Even wounds to limbs from these
large-calibre, low velocity bullets eventually proved fatal. The
adoption of firearms significantly increased the number of
fatalities. The bloodshed, involved in native conflicts, was also
dramatically increased by the uneven distribution of firearms and
horses among Native groups.
Native tribes became important allies of the French and English in
the struggle for North American hegemony during the 17th and 18th
centuries; these alliances escalated the violence.
Scalping, which is now believed to have existed
before the arrival of the Europeans, became more common as the
Europeans demanded the presentation of scalps as evidence of their
military success.
Early French settlements
The French
under Samuel de Champlain
founded settlements at Annapolis Royal
in 1605 and Quebec City
in 1608, quickly joining pre-existing Native
alliances that brought them into conflict with other indigenous
inhabitants. For example, soon after the founding of Quebec
City, Champlain joined a Huron-Algonkian alliance against the
Iroquois Confederacy. In the earliest battle, superior French
firepower rapidly dispersed a massed groups of Natives. The
Iroquois changed tactics by integrating their
hunting skills and their intimate knowledge of the
terrain with their use of firearms obtained from the Dutch;
therefore, they developed a highly effective form of
guerrilla warfare, and were soon a
formidable threat to all but the handful of fortified cities. As
well, as the French gave few guns to their Native allies, the
Iroquois waged devastating warfare against the tribes of the Great
Lakes region. For the first century of its existence the chief
threat to the inhabitants of
New France
came from the
Iroquois Confederacy, and
particularly from its eastern-most people, the
Mohawks. While the majority of tribes in the
region were
allies of the French, the
Iroquois were aligned first with the Dutch, and, after the ceding
of New Netherland to England, with the British, and received their
weapons and support.
The
French and Iroquois
Wars continued intermittently until 1703, with great brutality
on both sides. In response to the Iroquois threat, the French
government dispatched the
Carignan-Salières Regiment,
the first group of uniformed professional soldiers to set foot on
what is today Canadian soil. After peace was attained, this
regiment was disbanded in Canada. The soldiers settled in the St.
Lawrence valley and, in the late 17th century, formed the core of
the
Compagnies Franches
de la Marine, the local militia. Later, militias were developed
on the larger seigneuries.
English–French conflict
Canada was colonised by two major European powers that were
historically at odds with each other, and it was inevitable that
this age-old tension would spill over into Canada; during the 17th
and 18th centuries, there was almost continuous conflict between
the colonizing powers in Canada.
17th century
Two years
after the French founded Annapolis Royal
, the English began their first settlement, at
Jamestown, Virginia
to the
south. From these original footholds, much larger colonies
would emerge.
The French colony of Canada on the Saint Lawrence
River
was based primarily on the fur
trade and enjoyed only lukewarm support from the French monarchy. It grew only
slowly amidst the tough and unyielding geographical and climatic
circumstances. The more favourably located English colonies to the
south developed more diversified economies and flourished. The
result was that by the 1750s, when the economic, political, and
military rivalries came to a head in the struggle of the
Seven Years' War, the total population of
the 13 English colonies was 1,500,000, whereas that of their French
rivals to the north was only about 60,000. As a result, outside of
their strongholds of Quebec City and Louisbourg, the French were
forced to employ both
guerrilla
warfare tactics, largely borrowed from the Natives. The
guerilla form of fighting became known as
la petite guerre.During the 17th
century, there were several skirmishes between the two
great powers. In 1629, a group of English
seaborne marauders captured and burnt the stronghold at Quebec and
carried off Champlain and its other leaders into captivity in
England. However, the French returned in 1632, rebuilt their
capital, and resumed their endeavours. The next most serious threat
to Quebec in the seventeenth century came in 1690 when, alarmed by
the attacks of the
petite guerre, the New England colonies
sent an armed expedition north, under Sir
William Phips, to capture the source of the
problems: Quebec itself. This expedition was poorly organized and
had little time to achieve its objective, having arrived in
mid-October, shortly before the St Lawrence would freeze over. The
expedition was responsible for eliciting one of the most famous
pronouncements in Canadian military history. When called on by
Phips to surrender, the aged Governor
Frontenac, then serving his
second term, replied "I will answer … only with the mouths of my
cannon and the shots of my muskets." After a single abortive
landing on the
Beauport shore to the
east of the city, the English force withdrew down the icy waters of
the St Lawrence.
In 1695,
Pierre Le Moyne
d'Iberville was called upon to attack the English stations
along the Atlantic coast of Newfoundland
. Iberville sailed with his three vessels to
Placentia
(Plaisance), the French capital of
Newfoundland. Both English and French fishermen exploited
the Grand
Banks
fishery from their respective settlements on
Newfoundland under the sanction of the treaty of 1687, but the
purpose of the new French expedition of 1696 was nevertheless to
expel the English from Newfoundland. Iberville and his men
left Placentia on November 1, 1696, and marched overland to
Ferryland
, south of St
John's
. Nine days later, Iberville joined with
naval forces and both detachments began the march north to the
English capital, which surrendered on November 30, 1696, following
a brief siege.
After setting fire to St
John's
, Iberville's Canadians almost totally destroyed the
English fisheries along the eastern shore of Newfoundland.
Small raiding parties terrorized the hamlets hidden away in remote
bays and inlets, burning, looting, and taking prisoners.
By the
end of March 1697, only Bonavista
and Carbonear
remained in English hands. In four months of
raids, Iberville was responsible for the destruction of 36
settlements.
Early 18th century
During the 18th century, the British-French struggle in Canada
intensified as the rivalry between the mother countries worsened in
Europe. As concerns grew, the French government poured more and
more military spending into its North American colonies.
Expensive
garrisons were maintained at distant fur trading posts, the
fortifications of Quebec City were improved and augmented, and a
new fortified town was built on the east coast of Île Royale, or
Cape Breton
Island
—the fortress of Louisbourg
, the so-called "Dunkirk
of the North."
Three times during the 18th century, the French and English North
American colonies found themselves at war with one another. The
first two major wars were local off-shoots of larger European
conflicts—the
War of the
Spanish Succession (1702–13), the
War of the Austrian
Succession (1744–48). The last, the
Seven Years' War (1756–63), started in the
Ohio Valley.
The petite guerre of the Canadiens left a
trail of terror and devastation through the northern towns and
villages of New
England
, sometimes reaching as far south as Virginia
. The war also spread to the forts along the
Hudson Bay shore.
In 1713, a British force managed to capture
Port
Royal
, the French capital of Acadia
in present-day Nova
Scotia
. As a result, France was forced to cede
control of mainland Nova Scotia to Britain
in the Treaty
of Utrecht, leaving present-day New Brunswick
, Prince Edward Island
, and Cape Breton Island in the hands of the
French. British possession of Hudson Bay was guaranteed by
the same treaty.
During the War of the Austrian Succession, a force of New England
militia, under
William Pepperell
and Commodore
Peter Warren of
the
Royal Navy, succeeded in capturing
Louisbourg in 1745.
Yet by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle
that ended the war in 1748, France got Louisbourg back by trading
off other of its conquests in the Netherlands
and India
.
The New
Englanders were outraged, and as a counterweight to the continuing
French strength at Louisbourg, the British founded the military
settlement of Halifax
in 1749, with a strong naval base in its spacious
harbour.
Seven Years' War
In 1754, the Seven Years' War began in North America, where it is
sometimes called the
French and
Indian War.
The French had begun to challenge the claims
of Anglo-American traders and land speculators for supremacy in the Ohio Country to the west of the Appalachian
Mountains
—land that was claimed by some of the British
colonies in their royal charters. In 1753, the French
started the military occupation of the Ohio Country by building a
series of forts.
In 1755, the British sent two regiments of
the line to North America to drive the French from these forts, but
these were destroyed by French
Canadians and American Indians as they approached Fort Duquesne
. War was formally declared in 1756, and in
Canada, six French regiments of
troupes
de terre, or line infantry, came under the command of the newly
arrived general, the 44-year-old
Marquis de Montcalm. Accompanying him
were another two battalions of 'troupes de terre', bringing the
total number of French professional soldiers in the colony to about
4000. This was the first significant aggregation of trained
professional soldiers on what was to be Canadian soil.
Under
their new commander, the French at first achieved a number of
startling victories over the British, first at Fort William
Henry
to the south of Lake Champlain, where, in 1757,
over 2400 men, mostly British regulars, surrendered.
In the
following year, an even greater victory followed when the British
army—numbering about 15,000 under Major General James Abercrombie—was roundly
defeated in its attack on a French fortification at Carillon
(later renamed Fort Ticonderoga
by the British) at the southern tip of Lake
Champlain. The French numbered no more than 3500, but before
the British withdrew, the French had inflicted a loss of about 2000
men, mostly regulars, for a total French loss of about 350. In the
meantime, the British war effort had been galvanized by the
appointment of
William
Pitt as
British
Prime Minister, who was determined to win battles, and who
decided that North America would be the crux of the British war
effort.
In June 1758, a British force of 13,000
regulars under Major General Geoffrey
Amherst, with James Wolfe as one of
his brigadiers, landed and permanently captured the Fortress of
Louisbourg
.
A year later Wolfe set his gaze on Quebec City.
After several botched
landing attempts including particularly bloody defeats at Beauport
and Montmorency, Wolfe succeeded in slipping his
army ashore, forming ranks on the Plains of
Abraham
September 12. Montcalm, against the better
judgment of his officers, sallied out with a numerically inferior
force to meet the British. An epic battle followed in which Wolfe
was killed, Montcalm mortally wounded, and 658 British and 644
French fell dead or wounded. Badly mauled by massed British
volleys, the French retreated to the citadel and endured a painful
siege and blockade before capitulating on September 18.
However,
in the spring of 1760, the last French General, François
Gaston de Lévis, marched back to Quebec from Montreal and
defeated the British at the Battle of Sainte-Foy
in a battle similar to that of the previous year;
now the situation was reversed, with the French laying siege to the
Quebec fortifications behind which the British retreated.
However, the French finally had to concede the loss of New France
when the Royal Navy rather than the French fleet sailed up the St
Lawrence after the breakup of the winter ice.
France lost almost
all of its North American possessions, and retained only the small
islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon
as a base for its fishing fleet, which worked the
Grand
Banks
. The French formally withdrew from much of
North America in 1763 when they signed the Treaty of Paris.
France
was given the choice of keeping either New France or its
sugar-producing Caribbean island colony Guadeloupe
, and chose the latter as it had ten times the GDP
of Canada.
Conflicts with the United States
With the French threat eliminated, Britain's eastern seaboard
colonies became increasingly restive. The
American Revolution largely arose from
their resentment of paying taxes to support a large military
establishment, when there was no obvious enemy. This was augmented
by further suspicions of British motives when the Ohio Valley and
other western territories previously claimed by France were not
annexed to the existing British colonies, especially Pennsylvania
and Virginia, which had long-standing claims to the region.
Instead, under the Quebec Act, this territory was set aside for the
First Nations. The
American
Revolutionary War (1776–83) saw the revolutionaries use force
to break free from British rule and claim these western lands.
American
forces took Montreal and the chain of forts in the Richelieu
Valley, but attempts by the revolutionaries to take Quebec
City
were repelled. During this time most French
Canadians stayed neutral. The revolutionaries' failure to achieve
success in these areas, and the continuing allegiance to Britain of
some colonists, resulted in the split of Britain's North American
empire. Many Americans who remained loyal to the Crown, known as
the
United Empire Loyalists,
moved north, greatly expanding the English-speaking population.
The
independent republic of the United States
emerged to the south, while a series of loyal
British colonies remained in place along its northern
border. The remaining British colonies were collectively
referred to as
British North
America.
War of 1812
After the
cessation of hostilities, animosity and suspicion continued between
the United States and the United Kingdom
. This erupted into a shooting war in 1812,
when the Americans declared war on the British. The Americans were
irked by British harassment of US ships on the high seas (including
impressment of American seamen into the Royal Navy), the occurrence
of which was a byproduct of British involvement in the ongoing
Napoleonic Wars. The Americans did
not possess a navy capable of challenging the
Royal Navy, and so an invasion of Canada was
proposed as the only feasible means of attacking the British
Empire. Americans on the western frontier also hoped an invasion
would bring an end to what they saw as British support of
American Indian resistance to the
westward expansion of the United States, and finalize their claim
to the western territories. The early strategy was to temporarily
seize Canada as a means of forcing concessions from the British.
However, as the war progressed, outright annexation was more
frequently cited as an objective—an early expression of what would
later be called "
Manifest Destiny".
Many Americans hoped the French Canadians would welcome the chance
to overthrow their British rulers.
"Push on, brave York
Volunteers!"
A mortally wounded General Brock urges the Canadian militia
forward.
The Americans launched an invasion across the northern border in
July 1812.
The war raged back and forth along the
border of Upper Canada, on land as well
as on the waters of the Great Lakes
. The British succeeded in capturing Detroit
in July, and in October. On July 12, U.S.
General
William Hull invaded Canada at Sandwich
(later known as Windsor
). The invasion was quickly halted, and Hull
withdrew, but this gave Brock the excuse he needed to abandon
Prevost's orders.
Securing Tecumseh's aid, Brock advanced on
Detroit
. At this point, even with his American
Indian allies, Brock was outnumbered approximately two to one.
However, Brock had gauged Hull as a timid man, and particularly as
being afraid of Tecumseh's natives. Brock thus decided to use a
series of tricks to intimidate Hull. Needless to say, the defeat of
Detroit was utter and complete.
A major
American thrust across the Niagara
frontier was defeated at the Battle of
Queenston Heights
by a combined force of British regular troops and
colonial militia under Sir Isaac Brock,
who lost his life in the battle.
1813 was
the year of American victories, when they retook Detroit and
enjoyed a string of successes along the western end of Lake Erie
, culminating in the Battle of Lake Erie (September 10) and
the Battle of
Moraviantown
or Battle of the Thames on October 5. The naval battle secured U.S.
dominance of lakes Erie and Huron. At Moraviantown, the British
lost one of their key commanders, the Shawnee chief
Tecumseh.
Further east, the Americans succeeded in
capturing and burning York (later Toronto
) and taking Fort George at Niagara
, which they held until the end of the year.
However,
in the same year, two American thrusts against Montreal
were defeated—one by a force of British regulars at
Crysler's
Farm
southwest of the city on the St Lawrence; the
other, by a force of mostly French Canadian militia under the
command of Charles de
Salaberry, to the south of the city at Allan's Corners on the Chateauguay
River. The Iroquois tribes of the
Upper Canada, the
Caughnawagas from near Montreal, and western
tribes under the
Shawnee chief,
Tecumseh, were valued allies of the British
throughout the campaign. These First Peoples played an important
part in many battles and on many occasions had a psychologically
debilitating impact on their enemy.
In 1814, was the year of American losses. The British recaptured
all of their lost territory and seized Michilimackinac in Michigan.
The defeat of Napoleon gave the British the chance to turn their
attention to the North American theatre and launch raids on
Washington, Baltimore and New Orleans.
After the capture of
Washington, DC in September at Bladensburg, the British burned down
the White
House
and other government buildings. The entire
occupation of Washington lasted only 26 hours. Americans chose the
path of peace after this loss. The war of 1812 is also called the
'Forgotten War'.
In December 1814, the two opponents signed a peace treaty that
restored the borders that had existed before the war. While
thoroughly British, Sir
Isaac Brock
became a martyred Canadian hero. The successful defence of Canada
relied almost entirely on British regular troops, the Royal Navy,
and Native Indian allies. In Canada the war is famed as a major
Canadian victory and in The United States it is instead famed as a
major American Victory. (Due to the battles of Baltimore and New
Orleans before the wars end)
British withdrawal
The fear that the Americans might reactivate their wish to conquer
Canada remained a serious concern for at least the next half
century, and was the chief reason for the retention of a large
British garrison there.
From the 1820s to the 1840s, there was
extensive construction of fortifications in the colonies, as the
British attempted to create strong points around which defending
forces might centre in the event of an American invasion; these
include the Citadels at Quebec City
and Halifax, and Fort Henry
in Kingston
. The Rideau Canal
was built during these years to allow ships in
wartime to travel a more northerly route from Montreal to
Kingston. (The customary peacetime route was the St Lawrence
River, which constituted the northern edge of the American border,
and hence was vulnerable to enemy attack and interference.)
One of the most important actions by the British forces during this
period was the putting down of the
Rebellions of 1837. The
Upper Canada Rebellion was quickly
and decisively defeated by the British forces. Attacks the next
year by Hunters' Lodges, U.S. irregulars who expected to be paid in
Canadian land, were crushed in 1838 in battles at Pelee Island and
Prescott. The
Lower Canada
Rebellion was a greater threat to the British, and the rebels
were victorious at the
Battle
of St. Denis on
November 23. Two
days later, the rebels were defeated at the
Battle of Saint-Charles, and on
December 14, they were finally routed at
the
Battle of
Saint-Eustache.
By the 1850s, fears of an American invasion had begun to diminish,
and the British felt able to start reducing the size of their
garrison. The
Reciprocity Treaty,
negotiated between Canada and the United States in 1854, further
helped to alleviate concerns. However, tensions picked up again
during the
American Civil War
(1861–65), apparently reaching a peak with the
Trent Affair of late 1861 and early 1862. This
was touched off when the captain of a US gunboat stopped the
Royal Mail Steamship Trent and
removed two
Confederate officials who were
bound for Britain. The British government was outraged and, with
war appearing imminent, took steps to reinforce its British North
American garrison, which was increased from a strength of 4000 to
18,000. In the end, cooler heads prevailed, war was averted, and
the sense of crisis subsided. This incident proved to be the final
major episode of Anglo-American military confrontation in North
America, as both sides increasingly became persuaded of the
benefits of amicable relations. At the same time, many Canadians
went south to fight in the Civil War, with most joining the Union
army, although some Canadians, especially in the Toronto militias,
were sympathetic towards the Confederacy (see
Canada and the American Civil
War).
In the meantime, Britain was becoming concerned with military
threats closer to home, and disgruntled at paying to maintain a
garrison in colonies that were becoming increasingly
self-assertive, and that, after 1867, were united in the
self-governing Dominion of Canada. Consequently, in 1871, the
troops of the British garrison were withdrawn from Canada
completely, save for Halifax and Esquimalt, where British garrisons
remained in place purely for reasons of
imperial strategy.
Fenian raids
Canadian Home-Guard defending against Fenians in 1870.
It was during this period of re-examination of the British military
presence in Canada and its ultimate withdrawal that the last
invasion of Canada occurred. It was not carried out by any official
US government force, but by an organization called the
Fenians.
This was a group of Irish-Americans, mostly Union Army veterans from the Civil War who believed that by seizing
Canada, concessions could be wrung from the British government
regarding their policy in Ireland
.The Fenians had also, to a large degree,
incorrectly estimated that
Irish
Canadians, who were quite numerous in Canada, would support
their invasive efforts and rise up, both politically and
militarily.
After the events of the Civil War, anti-British sentiment was high
in the United States.
British-built
Confederate warships had wreaked havoc on US commerce during
the war. Irish-Americans were a large and politically important
constituency, particularly in parts of the
Northeastern States and large
regiments of Irish Americans had participated in the war. Thus,
while deeply concerned about the Fenians, the US government, led by
Secretary of State
William H.
Seward, generally ignored the
Fenian organizing efforts. The Fenians were allowed to openly
organize and arm themselves, and were even allowed to recruit in
Union Army camps. The Americans were not prepared to risk war with
Britain, and intervened when the Fenians threatened to endanger
American neutrality.
The Fenians were a serious threat to Canada, being veterans of the
Union Army they were well armed.
They made
three attacks in 1866: one on Campobello Island
in New Brunswick in April, and the others in the
Niagara and the St Lawrence Valley regions in July. The
Campobello and St. Lawrence valley attacks failed. The Fenians won
the Battle of Ridgeway when troops, mostly University of Toronto
students and young men from Hamilton, were led into a bungled
attack and a sloppy retreat, but the Fenians quickly withdrew,
fearing a British counter-attack. In New Brunswick, their failure
was due to the presence of a strong force of British regulars and
the confiscation of Fenian weapons by the American navy. Two later
attacks along the Quebec-Vermont frontier in 1870 and Manitoba in
1871 proved similarly fruitless.
Despite these failures, the raids had some impact on Canadian
politicians who were then locked in negotiations leading up to the
Confederation agreement of
1867. The raids reinforced a sense of military vulnerability,
especially because the British were known to be seriously
considering the downsizing of their garrison, if not its outright
withdrawal. The Confederation debates were to some degree held in
an atmosphere of military crisis, and the greater military security
that would be gained through the pooling of colonial resources was
one of the factors that weighed heavily in Confederation's
favour.
Canadian autonomy
Canadian militia
With Confederation in place and the British garrison gone, Canada
assumed full responsibility for its own defence; it passed the
Federal Militia Act in 1868 and
Britain undertook to send aid in the event of a serious emergency,
and the Royal Navy continued to provide oceanic defence. Small
professional batteries of artillery were established at Quebec City
and Kingston. In 1883, a third battery of artillery was added, and
small professional schools of cavalry and infantry were created.
These were intended to provide professional backbone for the much
larger force of militia that was to form the bulk of the Canadian
defence effort. In theory, every able-bodied man between the ages
of 18 and 60 was liable to be conscripted for service, but in
practice, the defence of the country rested on the services of
volunteers who made up the so-called Active Militia, which in 1869
numbered 31,170 officers and men. During the remaining decades of
the century, this force was consolidated, attending summer camps,
parading about in colourful uniforms, and occasionally being
mustered to serve in times of strikes and other civil emergencies.

The most important early tests of the militia were the expeditions
against the rebel forces of
Louis Riel in
the Canadian west. The
Wolseley
Expedition, containing a mix of British and militia forces,
restored order after the
Red River
Rebellion with little violence in 1870. A greater test was the
North-West Rebellion in 1885
that saw the largest military effort undertaken on Canadian soil
since the end of the War of 1812.
The Rebellion saw a series of battles
between the Métis and their First Nations
allies on one side against the Militia and North-West
Mounted Police
on the other. The government forces
ultimately emerged victorious despite a number of early defeats and
reversals at the Battle of Duck
Lake, the Battle of Fish Creek
and the Battle
of Cut Knife Hill.
and out of ammunition, the Métis portion of the North-West
Rebellion collapsed with the siege and
Battle of Batoche. The
Battle of Loon Lake, which ended this
conflict, is notable as the last battle to have been fought on
Canadian soil.
In 1884, Britain for the first time asked Canada for aid in
defending the empire.
The mother country asked Canada to send
experienced boatmen to the Sudan
to help
rescue Major-General Charles
Gordon from the Mahdi
uprising. However, Ottawa was reluctant to do this, and
eventually
Governor
General Lord
Lansdowne recruited a private force of 386
Voyageurs who were placed under the command of
Canadian Militia officers. This
force, known as the
Nile Voyageur,
served ably in the Sudan and became the first Canadian force to
serve abroad. 16 voyageurs died during the campaign.
Boer War
The military business of the empire was again an issue when Britain
found itself hard pressed in the
Second
Boer War in
South Africa. The
British asked for Canadian help in the conflict, and the
Conservative Party
was adamantly in favour of raising divisions for service in South
Africa.
English Canadian opinion
was overwhelmingly in favour of active Canadian participation in
the war.
French-Canadians almost
universally opposed the war, as did several other groups. This
split the
governing Liberal
Party deeply, as it relied on both pro-imperial Anglo-Canadians
and anti-imperial Franco-Canadians for support. Prime Minister
Sir Wilfrid Laurier initially
sent 1,000 soldiers of the 2nd (Special Service) Battalion of
The Royal Canadian
Regiment. Later, other contingents were sent, including the
privately raised
Lord
Strathcona's Horse.
The Canadian forces missed the early period of the war and the
great British defeats of
Black Week.
The
Canadians in South Africa won much acclaim for leading the charge
at the Second Battle of Paardeberg
, one of the first decisive victories of the
war. At the Battle of Leliefontein
on November 7,
1900, three Canadians, Lieutenant Cockburn,
Lieutenant Turner, and Sergeant Holland of the Royal Canadian Dragoons were awarded
the Victoria Cross for protecting the
rear of a retreating force. About 7,400 Canadians, including
12 female nurses, served in South Africa. Of these, 224 died, 252
were wounded, and several were decorated with the Victoria Cross.
The war remained deeply unpopular in Quebec, where many people
viewed it as the crushing of a democratic minority group by an
imperial power, that in many ways, was similar to the
French-Canadian experience during the Lower Canada Rebellion of
1837 to 1838. Canadian forces also participated fully in the
concentration camp programs that
led to the deaths of thousands of Boer civilians.
Creation of a Canadian navy
Soon after the debate over the Second Boer War, a similar one
developed over whether or not Canada should have its own navy.
Canada had long had a small fishing protection force attached to
the
Department of
Marine and Fisheries, but relied on Britain for maritime
protection.
Britain was increasingly engaged in an
arms race with Germany
, and in 1908, asked the colonies for help with the
navy. The Conservative Party of Canada argued that Canada
should merely contribute money to the purchase and upkeep of some
British
Royal Navy vessels. Some
French-Canadian nationalists felt that no aid should be sent;
others advocated an independent Canadian navy that could aid the
British in times of need.
Eventually, Prime Minister Laurier decided to follow this
compromise position, and the
Royal
Canadian Navy was created in 1910. To appease imperialists, the
Naval Service Act included
a provision that in case of emergency, the fleet could be turned
over to the British. This provision led to the strenuous opposition
to the bill by Quebec nationalist
Henri
Bourassa. The bill set a goal of building a navy composed of
five
cruisers and six
destroyers. The first two ships were the
Niobe and
Rainbow, somewhat aged and outdated
vessels purchased from the British.
With the election of the Conservatives in
1911, in part because the Liberals had lost support in Quebec, the
navy was starved for funds, but during the First World War, it was greatly expanded and
played an important role in both the Atlantic
and Pacific
.
Creation of a Canadian army
As British troops began to leave Canada in the late 1800s and early
1900s, the importance of the Militia (comprising various cavalry,
artillery, infantry and engineer units) grew. The last
Officer Commanding the
Forces , Lord Dundonald, instituted a series of reforms in
which Canada gained its own technical and support branches. These
various services, called "corps", included
- Canadian Engineer Corps (created July 1, 1903)
- Signalling Corps (created October 24, 1903)
- Canadian Army Service Corps December 1, 1903
- Permanent Active Militia Army Medical Corps July 2, 1904
- Ordinance Stores Corps July 1, 1903
- Corps of Guides 1902
In 1904, the appointment of Officer Commanding the Forces was
replaced with a Canadian
Chief of the General
Staff. Additional corps would be created in the years before
the First World War, including the world's first separate military
dental corps.
Creation of a Canadian air force
The First World War was the catalyst for the formation of Canada's
air force. At the outbreak of war, there was no independent
Canadian air force, although many Canadians flew with the
Royal Flying Corps and the
Royal Naval Air Service.
In 1914 the Canadian government authorized the formation of the
Canadian Aviation Corps
(CAC). The CAC was formed to accompany the
Canadian Expeditionary Force to
Europe and consisted of one aircraft, a Burgess-Dunne, that was
never used. The CAC was disbanded in 1915.
A second attempt at forming a truly Canadian "air force" was made
in 1918 when two Canadian squadrons (one bomber and one fighter)
were formed by the British
Air Ministry
in Europe. The Canadian government took control of the two
squadrons in 1918 by forming the
Canadian Air Force. This air
force, however, never saw service and was disbanded in 1920.
The British government encouraged Canada to institute a peacetime
air force by giving Canada several surplus aircraft, and in 1920 a
new Canadian Air Force (CAF) directed by the
Air Board was formed as a part-time or
militia service providing flying refresher training. After a
reorganization the CAF became responsible for all flying operations
in Canada, including civil aviation. Air Board and CAF civil flying
responsibilities would be handled by the
Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF)
after its creation in April 1924.
The Second World War would see the RCAF become a truly military
service.
First and Second World War
First World War
On August 4, 1914, Britain entered the First World War by declaring
war on Germany. The British declaration of war automatically
brought Canada into the war, because of Canada's legal status as
subservient to Britain. However, the Canadian government had the
freedom to determine the country's level of involvement in the war.
The Militia was not mobilized and instead an independent
Canadian Expeditionary Force
was raised, which eventually numbered
four divisions which
fought on the
Western Front.
In the later stages of the war, the four-division
Canadian Corps was regarded as among the most
effective and respected formation on the
Western Front. Because its component divisions
were larger than comparable British formations (who were suffering
manpower shortages by 1916), Canadian divisions came to be relied
on as "shock troops" and used frequently in an assault role. This
led to Canada's own manpower problems in the aftermath of the
Battle of the Somme, and plans
for a second Canadian corps and two additional divisions were
scrapped, and a divisive national dialogue on conscription for
overseas service was begun.
Canadian troops were also employed to defend
the British colonies of the West Indies from the German navy on the
island of Saint
Lucia
, and later a contingent was sent to Siberia.

A Canadian anti-aircraft team in
1918.
Without
conscription, the Canadian
force was limited to those dedicated enough to enlist.
The high point of
Canadian military achievement came at the Battle of
Vimy Ridge
on April 9, 1917, during which Canadian troops
captured a fortified German hill that had resisted British and
French attacks earlier in the war. Vimy, as well as the
success of the Canadian flying aces
William Barker and
Billy Bishop, helped to give Canada a new sense
of identity. This translated into greater autonomy, with Canada
sending its own delegates to the
Treaty of Versailles negotiations in
1919, joining the
League of
Nations as a member in 1921, and being formally granted
autonomy via the
Statute of
Westminster in 1931.
The other major combatants had all introduced conscription to
replace the massive casualties they were suffering. Spearheaded by
Sir Robert Borden who wished to
maintain the continuity of Canada's military contribution and with
a burgeoning pressure to introduce and enforce conscription, the
Military Service Act
was ratified.
Although reaction to conscription was favourable in English Canada
(as well as at the front), the idea was deeply unpopular in
Quebec
. In
the end, conscription raised about 120,000 soldiers, of whom about
47,000 actually went overseas.
The Conscription Crisis of 1917 did
much to highlight the divisions between French and English-speaking
Canadians
in Canada.
Despite the rancour, the
Conscription Crisis of 1917 did
not hinder Prime Minister
Robert
Borden's political career, for in the following election of
that year, Borden's Union government won 153 seats, nearly all from
English Canada.
However, of Quebec
's 65
seats, Borden's government won only 3.
For a nation of eight million people, Canada's war effort was
widely regarded as remarkable. A total of 619,636 men and women
served in the Canadian forces in the First World War, and of these
66,655 were killed and another 172,950 were wounded.
In 1919, Canada sent an
expeditionary force
to Siberia to aid the
White
Russians in the
Russian Civil
War.
These troops were based in Vladivostok
and saw little combat before they withdrew, along
with other foreign forces.
Canadian sacrifices are commemorated at eight memorials in France
and Belgium.
Two of the eight are unique in design: the
giant white Vimy
Memorial
and the
distinctive Brooding Soldier at the Saint Julien
Memorial
. The other six follow a standard pattern of
granite monuments surrounded by a circular path.
They are the Hill 62
Memorial
and Passchendaele Memorial
in Belgium, and the Bourlon Wood
Memorial
, Courcelette Memorial
, Dury
Memorial
, and
Le Quesnel
Memorial
in France. There are also separate war
memorials to commemorate the actions of the soldiers of
Newfoundland in the Great War.
The largest are the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland
Memorial
and the National War
Memorial
in St. John's
. Newfoundland did not join Confederation
until 1949.
Second World War
Following the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939,
Canada's Parliament supported the government's decision to declare
war on Germany on September 10, one week after the United Kingdom
and France. Canadian airmen played a small but significant role in
the
Battle of Britain, the
Royal Canadian Navy and the
Canadian merchant marine played a crucial role in the
Battle of the
Atlantic.
C Force, two Canadian infantry
battalions were involved in the failed
defence of Hong Kong. Troops of the
2nd Canadian Infantry
Division also played a leading role in the disastrous
Dieppe Raid in August 1942. The
1st Canadian Division and tanks of the
independent
1st Canadian
Armoured Brigade landed on Sicily in July 1943 and after a
38-day campaign there, took part in the successful
Allied invasion of Italy. Canadian
forces played an important role in the long advance north through
Italy, eventually coming under their own corps headquarters after
5th Canadian Armoured
Division joined them on the line in early 1944 after the costly
battles on the Moro River and at
Ortona.
On June
6, 1944, the 3rd Canadian
Division (supported by tanks of the independent 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade)
landed on Juno
Beach
in the Battle of
Normandy. Canadian airborne troops had also landed
earlier in the day behind the beaches. Resistance on Juno was
fierce, and casualties were high in the assault waves, in
particular the first assault waves, which sustained a 50 percent
casualty rate. By day's end, however, the Canadians had made the
deepest penetrations inland of any of the five seaborne invasion
forces. The Canadians went on to play an important role in the
subsequent fighting in Normandy, with the
2nd Canadian Infantry
Division coming ashore in July and the
4th Canadian Armoured
Division in August. In the meantime, both a corps headquarters
(
II Canadian Corps) and eventually
an army headquarters—for the first time in Canadian military
history—were activated.
One of the most important Canadian
contributions to the war effort was in the Battle of the Scheldt, where First Canadian Army defeated an
entrenched German force at great cost to help open Antwerp
to Allied shipping.
First
Canadian Army fought in two more large campaigns; the Rhineland in
February and March 1945, clearing a path to the Rhine River
in anticipation of the assault crossing of that
obstacle, and the subsequent battles on the far side of the
Rhine
in the
last weeks of the war. The I Canadian
Corps returned to northwest Europe from Italy in early 1945,
and as part of a reunited First Canadian Army assisted in the
liberation of The Netherlands (including the rescue of many Dutch
from near-starvation conditions) and the invasion of Germany
.
The Royal Canadian Air Force had three key responsibilities during
the war: the
British Commonwealth Air
Training Plan (BCATP), Canada's contribution to training
military aviators; the
Home War Establishment (HWE), which
provide 37 squadrons for coastal defence, protection of shipping,
air defence and other duties in Canada, and the
Overseas War
Establishment (OWE), which provided 48 squadrons serving with
the
Royal Air Force (RAF) in Europe,
the Mediterranean and the Far East.
RCAF airmen served with RAF fighter and bomber squadrons, and
played key roles in the
Battle of
Britain,
antisubmarine
warfare during the
Battle of the Atlantic, and
the
bombing campaigns against Germany. Even
though many RCAF personnel served with the RAF,
No. 6 Group
RAF Bomber Command was formed
entirely of RCAF squadrons. Canadian air force personnel also
provided close support of Allied forces during the
Battle of Normandy and subsequent land
campaigns in Europe. To free up male RCAF personnel who were needed
on active operational or BCATP training duties, the
RCAF Women's
Division was formed in 1941. By the end of the war, the RCAF
would be the fourth largest allied air force.
Of a population approximately 11.5 million, 1.1 million Canadians
served in the armed forces in the Second World War. Of these, an
officially recorded total of 42,042 members of the armed forces
gave their lives, and another 55,000 were wounded. Many others
shared the suffering and hardship of war. In line with other
Commonwealth countries, a women's corps entitled the
Canadian Women's Army Corps,
similar to the RCAF Women's Division, was established to release
men for front-line duties. The corps existed from 1941 to 1946, was
re-raised in 1948 and finally disbanded in 1964.
Multilateralism, peacekeeping and the Cold War
Soon after the end of the Second World War, the
Cold War began.
As a founding member of NATO
and a
signatory to the NORAD
treaty
with the US, Canada committed itself to the alliance against the
Communist bloc. Canadian
troops were stationed in Germany throughout the Cold War, and
Canada joined with the Americans to erect defences against Soviet
attack, such as the
DEW Line. As a
middle power, Canadian policy makers realized
that Canada could do little militarily on its own, and thus a
policy of
multilateralism was
adopted whereby Canada would only join military efforts as part of
a large coalition. Canada also chose to stay out of several wars,
despite the participation of close allies, most notably the
Vietnam War and the
Second Iraq War, although Canada lent
indirect support and Canadian citizens served in foreign armies in
both conflicts. The postwar period saw a major reorganization when,
in 1968, the three forces were merged into the
Canadian Forces. (See also
Canada and the Cold War,
Canada and the Vietnam War and
Canada and the Iraq
War).
Canada in Korea
After the Second World War, Canada rapidly demobilized. When the
Korean War broke out, Canada needed
several months to bring its military forces up to strength, and
eventually formed part of
British Commonwealth Forces
Korea. Canadian land forces thus missed most of the early
back-and-forth campaigns because they did not arrive until 1951,
when the attrition phase of the war had largely started. Canadian
troops fought as part of the
1st Commonwealth Division, and
distinguished themselves at the
Battle
of Kapyong and in other land engagements.
HMCS Haida and other ships of the Royal
Canadian Navy were in active service in the Korean conflict.
Although the Royal Canadian Air force did not have a combat role in
Korea, twenty-two RCAF fighter pilots flew on exchange duty with
the
USAF in Korea. The RCAF
was also involved with the transportation of personnel and supplies
in support of the Korean War.
Canada sent 26,791 troops to fight in Korea. There were 1,558
Canadian casualties, including 516 dead. Korea has often been
described as "The Forgotten War", because for most Canadians it is
overshadowed by the Canadian contributions to the two world wars.
Canada is a signatory to the original 1953 armistice, but did not
keep a garrison in South Korea after 1955.
Peacekeeping
Closely related to Canada's commitment to multilateralism has been
its strong support for
peacekeeping
efforts. Canadian
Nobel Peace
Prize laureate
Lester B.
Pearson is considered to be the
father of modern United Nations Peacekeeping, and Canada has a long
history of participation in these missions. Canada participated in
every UN peacekeeping effort from their beginning until 1989, and
has since then continued to play a significant role. More than
125,000 Canadians have served in some 50 UN peacekeeping missions
since 1949, with 116 deaths.
Since 1995, however, Canadian direct participation in UN
peacekeeping efforts has greatly declined. In July 2006, for
instance, Canada ranked 51st on the list of UN peacekeepers,
contributing 130 peacekeepers out of a total UN deployment of over
70,000. That number decreased largely because Canada began to
direct its participation to UN-sanctioned military operations
through NATO, rather than directly to the UN. The number of
Canadian soldiers on UN-sanctioned operations in July 2006 was
2,859.
The first
Canadian peacekeeping mission, even before the creation of the
formal UN system, was a 1948 mission to Kashmir
. Other important missions include the long
stay in Cyprus
,
observation missions in the Sinai
and
Golan
Heights
, and the NATO
mission in
Bosnia
. The 1993 Canadian response to
Operation Medak pocket in Bosnia was
the largest battle fought by Canadian forces since the Korean War.
One of
the darkest moments in recent Canadian military history occurred
during the humanitarian mission to Somalia
in 1993, when Canadian soldiers tortured a Somali
teenager to death, leading to the Somalia
Affair. Following an inquiry, the elite
Canadian Airborne Regiment
was disbanded and the reputation of the Canadian Forces suffered
within Canada.
The loss of nine Canadian peacekeepers when
their plane was shot down over Syria
in 1974
remains the largest loss of life in a single event in Canadian
peacekeeping history.
Canadian Forces in Europe
Canada
maintained a mechanized infantry brigade in West Germany
from the 1950s (originally the 27th Canadian
Infantry Brigade, later named 4 Combat Group and 4 Canadian
Mechanized Brigade) to the 1990s as part of Canada's NATO
commitments. This brigade was maintained at close to full
strength and was equipped with Canada's most advanced vehicles and
weapons systems as it was anticipated the brigade might have to
move quickly in the event of a
Warsaw
Pact invasion of the west. The brigade was augmented by Militia
soldiers from Canada and for a time even
Royal Canadian Army Cadets were
permitted to serve in the brigade for short periods.
The Royal Canadian Air Force established
No. 1 Air Division in the early 1950s to
meet Canada's NATO air defence commitments in Europe. It consisted
of twelve
fighter squadrons located in
four wings, two of which were in France, and two in West
Germany.
Unification and the post Cold War era
Unification
In 1964 the Canadian government decided to merge the Royal Canadian
Air Force, the Royal Canadian Navy and the Canadian Army to form
the unified
Canadian Forces. The aim
of the merger was to reduce costs and increase operating
efficiency. The Minister of National Defence,
Paul Hellyer stated on November 4, 1966, that
"the amalgamation...will provide the flexibility to enable Canada
to meet in the most effective manner the military requirements of
the future. It will also establish Canada as an unquestionable
leader in the field of military organization." On February 1, 1968,
unification was completed.
Gulf War
The 1991
Gulf War was a conflict between
Iraq and a coalition force of 34 nations, led by the US. The result
was a decisive victory of the coalition forces. Canada was one of
the first nations to agree to condemn Iraq's 1990 invasion of
Kuwait, and promptly agreed to join the US-led coalition.
In August,
Prime Minister
Brian Mulroney sent the destroyers
HMCS Terra Nova,
HMCS Athabaskan, and HMCS Huron to
enforce the trade blockade against Iraq. The supply ship
HMCS Protecteur was sent to aid the
gathering coalition forces. While all others returned to Canada in
the spring of 1992, HMCS Huron remained on station to enforce
sanctions and was the first warship to enter Kuwait Harbour
following the war. When the UN authorized full use of force in the
operation, Canada sent a
CF-18 squadron with
support personnel. The nation sent a field hospital to deal with
casualties from the ground war.
When the air war began, Canada's planes were integrated into the
coalition force and provided air cover and attacked ground targets.
This was the first time since the
Korean
War that its forces had participated in combat operations.
Canada suffered no casualties during the conflict, but since its
end, many veterans have complained of suffering from
Gulf War Syndrome.
A Canadian
combat engineer regiment
was investigated following the release of 1991 photographs which
showed members posing with the dismembered bodies in a Kuwaiti
minefield.
Peacekeeping in Croatia
Canada's
forces were part of UNPROFOR, UN peacekeeping force in Croatia
and in Bosnia and Herzegovina
during the Yugoslav
wars in the 1990s.
The Canadian government claims that Canadian forces within the UN
contingent clashed with the Croatian Army in what has been called
Operation Medak Pocket, where
27 Croatian soldiers are reported to have been killed. The battle
at the Medak Pocket was called "the greatest battle of the Canadian
Army since the Korean War", and in 2002, the 2nd Battalion
Princess Patricia's
Canadian Light Infantry Battle Group were awarded the
Commander-in-Chief Unit
Commendation "for a heroic and professional mission during the
Medak Pocket Operation". But according to some sources, this battle
never happened. Former UNPROFOR Canadian officer,
John John McGuinnes, a witness at the
Norac-Ademi trial for war crimes in Medak Pocket, stated that there
were one or two shootouts, but there were no injuries. He also said
that the decorations were awarded for whole tour in Croatia, not
only for participation in Medak pocket activity.
Kosovo: Operation Allied Force
The NATO Bombing of Yugoslavia (code-name Operation Allied Force
or, by the United States, Operation Noble Anvil) was NATO's
military operation against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
during the Kosovo War. The strikes lasted from March 24, 1999, to
June 11, 1999.The Canadian Air Force deployed a total of 18 CF-18s,
enabling them to be responsible for 10% of all bombs dropped in the
operation.
War in Afghanistan

Canadian soldiers in
Afghanistan.
Canada joined a U.S.-led coalition in the
2001 Attack on
Afghanistan. The war was a response to the
September 11, 2001
Terrorist Attacks, with the goal to defeat the
Taliban government and rout
Al-Qaeda. Canada sent
special forces and ground troops to
the conflict. In this war, a Canadian
sniper
set the world record for longest distance kill. In early 2003,
Canadian JTF2 troops were photographed taking Afghan prisoners,
sparking a debate of the Geneva Conventions. After the war, Canada
formed an important part of the NATO-led stabilization force,
ISAF.
In
November 2005, Canadian military participation shifted from ISAF in
Kabul
to Operation
Archer, a part of Operation Enduring Freedom in and
around Khandahar. As of April 24 2009, 118 Canadian soldiers
had been killed in the Afghanistan mission (see also:
Canadian Forces
casualties in Afghanistan).
On May 17, 2006, Captain
Nichola
Goddard of the
Royal
Canadian Horse Artillery became Canada's first female combat
arms casualty. One of the most notable battles that the Canadian
Forces have fought in Afghanistan thus far is the Canadian-led
Operation Medusa in which the
second battle of Panjwaii was fought. Canada was also the main
allied combatant in the first but less intense battle of
Panjwaii.
Canadian troops have taken on an extended role in combat operations
in southern Afghanistan, meeting Taliban forces in open conflict.
The Canadian mission to Afghanistan is scheduled to end in February
2011, but there is divisive debate in Canada as to whether the
mission should be extended.
Invasion of Iraq (2003)
In 2003, under
Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien, about a hundred
Canadian soldiers, on exchange to American units, participated in
the
2003 invasion of Iraq.
Nevertheless, Canada
chose not to
"join with the so-called Coalition of the willing" during
the invasion of Iraq.
Canada refused to do so unless it was approved by the
United Nations. This decision, popular in
most of Canada, upset the administration of American president
George W. Bush.
Concurrently, Canada deployed some
additional troops to the War on
Terrorism in Afghanistan
. Some claim that it incidentally freed up
some American
and British
troops for assignment in Iraq. Canada
continues to have warships in the Persian Gulf area as part of
Operation Altair. Their presence is
justified by Canada's commitment to Operation Enduring
Freedom.
On October 9, 2008, the
CBC published this
statement:
"in their book, The Unexpected War
, University
of Toronto
professor Janice
Gross Stein and public policy consultant Eugene Lang write that the Liberal government would actually
boast of that contribution to Washington.
"In an almost schizophrenic way, the government bragged publicly
about its decision to stand aside from the war in Iraq because it
violated core principles of multilateral-ism and support for the
United Nations. At the same time,
senior Canadian officials, military officers and politicians were
currying favour in Washington, privately telling anyone in the
State Department or the
Pentagon who would
listen that, by some measures, Canada's indirect contribution to
the American war effort in Iraq — three ships and 100 exchange
officers — exceeded that of all but three other countries that were
formally part of the coalition.""
In January 2004 (in the first month under
Prime Minister Paul
Martin)
Walter J.
Natynczyk deployed with III Corps to
Baghdad,
Iraq
, serving first as the Deputy Director of Strategy,
Policy and Plans, and subsequently as the Deputy Commanding General
of the Multi-National Corps (Iraq) during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Natynczyk led the Corps' 35,000
soldiers, consisting of 10 separate brigades, stationed throughout
the Iraq Theatre of Operations. He stayed there one year, until
January 2005. On January 24, 2006, (in the last few days under
Prime Minister Paul Martin),
Natynczyk "was awarded the
Meritorious Service Cross
[specifically] for his [combat] efforts [in Iraq]." On June 6,
2008, the Government of Canada (under
Prime Minister Stephen Harper) named
Natynczyk as the next
Chief of the Defence
Staff (CDS), replacing retiring General
Rick Hillier.
In mid February, 2008, (under
Prime
Minister Stephen Harper) Canadian
General Nicolas Matern, a Special Forces
officer and former commander of Canada's elite counter-terrorism
unit, began to serve as deputy to Lt. Gen.
Lloyd Austin III, incoming commander of the
170,000-strong Multi National Corps-Iraq.
By January 23, 2008,
Fort
Bragg
had already confirmed that Matern had already
been deployed to Iraq.
See also
References
- Notes
- UN website.
- Starkey pg. 28
- Desmond Morton, A Military History of Canada. pg.
2
- Armstrong Starkey. European and Native American Warfare. pg.
21
- Starkey pg. 29
- Chartrand, René Canadian Military Heritage Vol 1.
p.17
- Granatstein, Jack Canada's Army p.28
- Stuart, Ch.3. For US war aims, see also Reginald Horsman, "On
to Canada: Manifest Destiny and United States Strategy in the War
of 1812" in The Michigan Historical Review, 13:2 (Fall
1987), pp.1–24.
- Jack Granatstein has discussed at length the often inaccurate
and ahistorical modern-day perspectives Canadians have regarding
the War of 1812.
- Neidhardt, Wilfried. Fenianism in North America
p.48
- Neidhardt, Ibid, p.30.
- Neidhardt, Ibid, p.15.
- Senior, Hereward. The Last Invasion of Canada: the Fenian
raids, 1866–1870. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1991.
- Stephen J. Harris "Nile Voyageurs." The Oxford Companion to
Canadian History. Gerald Hallowell, ed. Don Mills: Oxford
University Press, 2004.
- Miller, Carman. Painting the Map Red: Canada and the South
African War, 1899–1902. Montreal: Canadian War Museum,
1993.
- Love, David, A Call To Arms.
- Berton, Pierre Vimy
- Morton, Desmond When Your Number's Up
- In reality, a small brigade numbering 1,973 soldiers and two
civilian supervisors of the Auxiliary Services, commanded by a
brigadier. See Stacey, C.P., and Volume I of the Official History
of the Canadian Army in the Second World War.
- Milberry 1984, p. 97.
- Bercuson, David Maple Leaf Against the Axis: Canada's
Second World War. Stoddart, 1995.
- Milberry 1984, p. 259.
- Bercuson, David J. Blood on the Hills: the Canadian Army in
the Korean War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press,
1999.
- Morton pg. 258
- Front Page.xls
- Current Operations | National Defence and the Canadian
Forces
- Professionalism Under Fire: Canadian
Implementation of the Medak Pocket Agreement, Croatia
1993, by Lee A. Windsor
- , page 198
- canadiansoldiers.com site Accessed June 22,
2006.
- Milberry 1984, p. 366.
- Milberry 1984, p. 367.
- Atlanta
Journal, War photos being probed in Canada, October 11,
1996
- National Defence and Canadian Forces (DND/CF): SCONDVA - Transcripts - Monday, April 27, 1998: The
Croatians reported that 27 of their members were killed or wounded
during the fire fights with my battle group during the 14 days in
Medak.
- Canadian military faces scandal, Nacional News
Magazine, 11.12.2002
- Miroslav Međimorec, " The Medak Pocket: Canadian Interpretation – Canadian
Sources," National Security and the Future, vol. 3, #3-4,
(Autumn/Winter 2002).
- HTV - John John McGuinnes, Croatian Radiotelevision: John John McGuinnes about the "battle" :
Upitan o navodnom sukobu Hrvatske vojske i kanadskog bataljuna
McGuinnes je rekao da je do razmjene vatre došlo jednom ili dva
puta, ali da ozlijeđenih nije bilo. English
translation: After question about battle between
Canada batt. and HV, he said that there were one or two shootouts,
but there were no injured.
- Canadian Forces website.
- Governor General announces awarding of Meritorious
Service Decorations
- Governor General announces awarding of Meritorious
Service Decorations
- Harper to name new top general: report, The
Ottawa Citizen, June 6, 2008
- Bibliography
- Bercuson, David J. Maple Leaf
Against the Axis: Canada's Second World War. Stoddart,
1995.
- Bercuson, David Jay and J.L. Granatstein. Dictionary of
Canadian Military History. Don Mills: Oxford University Press
Canada, 1992.
- Chartrand, René. Canadian Military Heritage. Montreal:
Art Global, 1993.
- Engler, Yves
- Dyer, Gwynne and Tina Viljoen.
The Defence of Canada. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart,
1990.
- Granatstein, J. L. Canada's Army: Waging War and
Keeping the Peace. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002.
ISBN 0802046916
- Granatstein, J. L. Battle Lines : Eyewitness Accounts
from Canada's Military History (2004) ISBN 0887621562
- Milberry, Larry (General Editor).
Sixty Years - The RCAF and CF Air Command 1924 - 1984.
Toronto: Canav Books, 1984. ISBN 0-9690703-4-9.
- Morton, Desmond.
A Military History of Canada. Toronto: M&S, 1999. ISBN
0771064810
- Roberts, Leslie. There Shall Be Wings. Toronto: Clark,
Irwin and Co. Ltd., 1959. No ISBN.
- Stacey, C.P. The Canadian Army 1939–1945: an Official
Historical Summary. Ottawa: by authority of the Minister of
National Defence, 1948.
- Stuart, Reginald C. United States Expansionism and British
North America, 1775–1871. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of
North Carolina Press, 1988. ISBN 0-8078-1767-8
- Carmichael, Dr. Trevor A. 2001. Passport to the Heart:
Reflections on Canada Caribbean Relations. Ian Randle
Publishers, Kingston 6, Jamaica. ISBN 976-637-028-1 The book's Forward passage, synopsis
External links
Further reading
- Faces of War at Library and Archives Canada
- Barkwell, Lawrence J. Batoche 1885: The Militia of the Metis
Liberation Movement. Winnipeg: Manitoba Metis Federation,
#0-9683493-3-1, [2005].
- Engler, Yves