<http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/bruce-moncur/> Bruce Moncur Become a fan
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Former Soldier, PSW, B.A. History

*         

*        Soldiers, Don't Trust Canada to Bring You Home From Iraq Alive

Posted: 10/03/2014 3:29 pm EDT Updated: 10/03/2014 3:59 pm EDT 

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There are 26 Special Forces soldiers in Iraq until at least October 5 acting
as military advisors to the Iraqi military. I have worked with the Special
Forces on two separate occasions and have friends that are members of this
elite group of men and women. CSOR and JTF are some of the most trained
forces on the planet and watching them work was among some of the highlights
of my career. As I think back to being deployed to Afghanistan and times I
spent working for these organizations, I am reminded of time when my platoon
was fortunate enough to do a convoy dropping off supplies to the JTF. I can
still remember dismounting and being told to go get a hot lunch at the mess.
As I walked in the oppressive August heat I remember seeing the most built
man I have ever seen riding a stationary bike in the sun. His beard down to
his chest and the rapid pace he was pedaling did not match how easily he was
breathing. 

After lunch we were invited to partake in a tutorial in a range and one of
the special forces operatives was gracious enough to let me use his rifle
because I was carrying a C9 machine gun and would not have been able to part
take had he not lent me his rifle. Any soldier that knows anything about
being a soldier can tell you that letting another man use your rifle is not
something that one does. You zero that rifle to your eyesight and a minor
jolt can ruin the sights. 

It was a week later that I was shot, I was convinced that I was going to die
going in and out of consciousness, and as I was being carried to a casualty
collection point I looked up to see who was carrying me. It was the JTF
soldier that let me use his rifle, and I asked him if he remembered me. He
said he did not and I don't blame him because at the time we met I still had
a head that was not blown apart. I told him that he lent me his rifle and I
thanked him for it, he realized who I was and said to me that I will be
shooting before I know it. I must have lost consciousness again and lost
track of him because that was the last time I remember seeing him. I had not
thought of that story for years but as I hear the news about our special
forces deploying to Iraq I can't help but think that some of the men I
worked with could be part of that contingent. 

Unfortunately my injuries prevented his prophesy to come true, and it is
what has happened to me since my release that I hope no soldiers deploying
in the name of this country has to endure. The department of veteran's
affairs is not working, so making more injured veterans will only exacerbate
the problem. A recent report released by the veterans ombudsman
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/canada/1230723-report-disabled-vets-missing-ou
t-on-funds>  states that "nearly half of the country's most severely
disabled ex-soldiers are not receiving a government allowance intended to
compensate them for their physical and mental wounds." 

There is a reason that the tactics of Veterans Affairs has often been
described as callous. The No Go policy where, if denied enough times, the
injured soldier will get fed up and go away is practiced widely in Veterans
Affairs Offices across the country. Here is one example of thousands; a
World War II veteran, a man I know, that fought in Canada's famous Devils
Brigade (our first JTF), was injured in 1944 in Italy when he was hit with
shrapnel from Nazi artillery. He was hit in his back and was put on light
duties for the remainder of the war. When he returned home in 1946, he
applied for a pension. Although initially ignored, He continued to apply for
his pension into the 1950's, until eventually life got in the way, and he
stopped his pursuit. He had been told "no" so many times, that he made the
decision to focus on his family and life after war, rather than stay stuck
in a time warp with Veterans Affairs. Fast forward to 2010 when his health
began to deteriorate. He turned to Veterans Affairs once again. And low and
behold, he again faces the triple D policy; the department will Delay you
long enough and Deny you enough times, until you Die. Think about this man's
70-year struggle with Veterans Affairs Canada. In the same 70-year time
span, there have been 11 Prime Ministers who received their life long
pensions, while this 92-year-old Canadian Veteran has been delayed, and
essentially, denied his. 

For a more contemporary example, we can look to the Equitas lawsuit out of
British Columbia in which seven plaintiffs are arguing
<https://www.hilltimes.com/news/policy-briefing/2014/05/26/bc-supreme-court-
to-hear-feds-appeal-on-new-veterans-charter-suit-in/38584>  that the New
Veterans Charter infringes on Sections 7 and 15 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms by violating the Crown's social covenant to provide
adequate care for injured veterans and their dependents. The federal
government will have this tied up in the courts for years to come, appealing
and delaying as long as possible. One of the plaintiffs who was injured in
Afghanistan ended up losing a kidney, his spleen, and part of his pancreas.
Under the New Veterans Charter, this injured hero was awarded a $41,000 lump
sum payment. 

"To put that in perspective, if this lump sum was to be made into an annuity
every month, the pension awarded to him would work out to roughly $140 per
month." 

The Canadian Forces situation is dire. Our compensation system woefully
decrepit. Our government spends 1 per cent of the GDP on defense
<http://www.thecanadianpress.com/english/online/OnlineFullStory.aspx?filenam
e=DOR-MNN-CP.1dfdf098195b4214be6a6feed2df159a.CPKEY2008111303&newsitemid=297
14829&languageid=1>  on par with Lithuania and Latvia. The Army, Navy, and
Airforce were told that they will need to slash an additional 4 per cent
from their budget, something that only the navy says they can feasibly do.
Our infantry units are lucky if they get to the range twice a year. It was
reported that technicians working on a Canadian military aircraft were so
strapped for spare parts that they yanked some still-working pieces out of
an ancient plane on display at the National Air Force Museum
<http://ottawacitizen.com/news/national/royal-canadian-air-force-raided-muse
um-for-search-and-rescue-airplane-parts> .

The equipment that soldiers use is in such a poor state that the probability
of sustaining casualties is much higher. Casualties that veterans affairs
can't possibly handle given the current state the department is in. The
truth of the matter is Canada is about as ready for another war as the
Hapsburgs were in 1914. I implore upon those deploying to Iraq to take care.
I understand how much you want to deploy. You must understand that the
current government support to you are hollow promises and even though you
have given a blank cheque for this country the feeling is far from mutual if
you return home missing pieces.

Bruce Moncur is running for the federal NDP nomination for the riding of
Windsor-Tecumseh.

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko"

 

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