The Canadian military is reorganizing its priorities to
suit a “post 9/11-world,” by creating reservist units for each area of
the country that would be tasked with providing “domestic security,”
and involve roles such as the mass internment of citizens in the event
of a terrorist attack.
“The Canadian military has embarked on a wide-ranging
plan to turn its reserve soldiers into focused units trained and
equipped to respond to a nightmarish array of domestic threats,” reports the National Post.
“The remodeling of the reserves will see the
development of specialist units in four of the military’s regional
divisions — Atlantic, Quebec, Ontario and the West.”
This is an open announcement that Canada has been
subdivided into military units that will be policed by military
reserves, who will take a “dominant role in domestic operations in the
future,” according to the article.
Of course, the necessity of the change is dressed up using the notion of troops helping people
in the event of earthquakes, floods and nuclear accidents, but we also
learn that one of the duties that the reservists would potentially
undertake would be mass internment of citizens in camps or quarantine
zones after a biological terror attack.
“We are training to establish a perimeter,” said Brigadier-General Jean Collin. “Do I see a scenario when we might be obliged to keep people in? Probably. You need to be trained to be able to make sure that you don’t become a casualty in the process of doing that security.”
In light of that comment, it’s interesting to note
that, according to the report, Brig-Gen. Collin, who has served in
Bosnia and Afghanistan, “has also been a special advisor to the Chief
of the Defence Staff on homeland security issues.”
Other roles for the military reservists would be to
undertake law enforcement and other “security” duties for domestic
events such as the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver and the 2010
G8 summit of world leaders in Huntsville.
Mention is also made of “scenarios that might require
a form of constabulary or policing function for reserves in civilian
containment and security.”
David Bercuson, director of the Center for Military and
Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary, attempted to dismiss
the premise by claiming reservists would oppose such measures.
“People in Ottawa sometimes forget that the reserves
are volunteers. If you try to change the reserves in ways they don’t
want to change, they just might not show up,” he said.
Would reservists oppose the use of military units for
purposes of domestic law enforcement and not show up, or would they
just follow orders under the justification of a breakdown in authority
after a biological attack or mass rioting after a total economic
collapse?
I’m not so confident that people who have been kicking
down doors, abducting, torturing and killing people in Afghanistan for
seven years under the justification that they are terrorists would be
unwilling to do the same to Canadian citizens if they were drilled with
the same propaganda.
The militarization of law enforcement duties in the U.S., Canada and Britain is accelerating at a pace never before seen.
Last week it was revealed
that the British Army is on standby to deal with rioting on UK streets
as a result of the economic crisis, according to a newspaper report,
which states that MI5 is targeting political activists who could help
create a “summer of discontent”.
The U.S. Army War College in November released a white paper called Known Unknowns: Unconventional ‘Strategic Shocks’ in Defense Strategy Development.
The report warned that the military must be prepared for a “violent,
strategic dislocation inside the United States,” which could be
provoked by “unforeseen economic collapse,” “purposeful domestic
resistance,” “pervasive public health emergencies” or “loss of
functioning political and legal order.” The “widespread civil
violence,” the document said, “would force the defense establishment to
reorient priorities in extremis to defend basic domestic order and
human security.”