Times Colonist

Forces template failing women and minorities, Vance says

- MICHAEL MacDONALD

HALIFAX — The man who leads the Canadian Armed Forces says the military has failed to adequately integrate women and minorities, partly because it has for too long relied on an antiquated template for its recruits.

Gen. Jonathan Vance, the chief of defence staff, told a defence and security conference on Saturday that the military has to change because the very nature of warfare is changing, particular­ly when it comes to cyber-warfare.

“I think we … stand accused of looking backwards and seeing what worked in the past and keeping [those practices] going forward,” Vance told the Halifax Security Forum, which has attracted more than 300 experts, politician­s and military officials from around the world.

“That worked through a great stretch of warfare that was state-on-state, that matched physical versus physical. All of us in this room are infused with that DNA.”

He said the problem is that the nature of warfare is changing — fast.

“It has required that we become diverse so that we attract the talent [we need],” he told a panel discussion. “We know that the future of warfare is going to demand different ways of thinking in different domains so that we can prevail.”

He said the template the military uses to find ideal recruits, which is largely based on physical attributes, must be altered for certain jobs.

“We’ve created a template, and inside that template is the perfect military recruit … and everybody else who is not in that template, the antibodies start to gather around them,” he said.

“We’ve gone through that with LGBTQ2 [people]. We’ve gone through that with race. We’ve gone through that with women.”

Janet Wolfenbarg­er, a retired general who served in the U.S. Air Force for 35 years, said the American military has made great strides when it comes to gender equity, but she made it clear it still had a long way to go.

While she served in the air force, Wolfenbarg­er said the proportion of women in uniform rose from 10 per cent in the late 1970s to about 19 per cent in 2015 when she retired.

Wolfenbarg­er was promoted to be the first female four-star general in the U.S. Air Force in 2012, and there are now six women in the U.S. military at that level.

“I maintain that the glass ceiling has been broken,” she said. “That has opened up opportunit­ies for women to look up and see there are opportunit­ies … but there is still work to be done.”

 ??  ?? Gen. Jonathan Vance says the military has to change because the very nature of warfare is changing quickly.
Gen. Jonathan Vance says the military has to change because the very nature of warfare is changing quickly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada