Defence minister Anita Anand was making the rounds this weekend, and talked a lot about further examination of what has been going on in the military, whether to refer past cases of misconduct to civilian investigators for a second look, and about whether it makes sense to have the military ombudsman report to Parliament (spoiler: It does not because Parliament is not in the chain of command, as explained in this column I wrote).
Nevertheless, this is all looking more and more like an indirect indictment of the job Harjit Sajjan was doing as minister, as professor Steve Saideman explains:
But the fact that Anand wants to study why DND/CAF/MND didn't implement Deschamps and other recommendations is important. Because not all resistance will go away with Sajjan and Vance.
The real hurdle here is changing the level of autonomy the CAF has over lots of stuff 2/x— Steve Saideman (@smsaideman) November 7, 2021
Those resisting change will have few allies outside the military. Neither the Conservatives nor the NDP can say "hey, just listen to the generals" at this point in time. They can accuse the govt of moving too slowly (McDonald should be gone) but not too quickly 4/x
— Steve Saideman (@smsaideman) November 7, 2021
Parliament not only had the capability to do oversight but actually thought oversight is its job. I can't tell you how many MPs and Senators have told me that they don't do oversight, they don't do review. Plus they lack clearances, expertise, interest, incentives. 6/x
— Steve Saideman (@smsaideman) November 7, 2021
a generations long problem is not going to be fixed overnight & it is going to require lots of efforts/axes/pillars/dimensions.
I won't use "whole of government" to describe it. Instead, I will use "instill civilian control of the military." Because that is what is needed. fin— Steve Saideman (@smsaideman) November 7, 2021