National Post

Military leadership shuffled again

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The fallout from the failed prosecutio­n of Vice-admiral Mark Norman continued Friday as the Department of National Defence announced another shuffle to the top ranks of the Canadian Forces, including the appointmen­t of a new second-in-command.

Canadian Army commander Lt.- Gen. Jean- Marc Lanthier has been tapped to become the new vice- chief of defence staff, the fourth officer to serve in that position since Norman was suspended from the office in January 2017.

Lanthier takes over from Lt.- Gen. Paul Wynnyk, who linked his surprise resignatio­n Tuesday to an aborted attempt to reinstate Norman as vice- chief after the breach- of- trust case against him was dropped in May.

Lanthier had only last year taken over command of the army, which will now go to Lt.- Gen. Wayne Eyre, who just last month had been installed as the chief of military personnel, the Forces’ top human-resources officer.

Those moves caused a ripple effect as DND said four other senior officers were being moved to fill in the gaps.

While the military’s senior ranks are subject to change every year as older officers retire, the pace has accelerate­d since Norman’s suspension as vice- chief of the defence staff.

The churn in the vicechief ’s office has been worrying to many observers given the importance of the position, which is responsibl­e for much of the day- to- day financial oversight and management of the Forces.

“The VCDS position is supposed to be the critical resource steward,” said defence analyst David Perry of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. “And it’s hard to do that effectivel­y, no matter how good the people you’re putting into those positions are, if you’re having people that aren’t staying even two years.”

Many believed Wynnyk would stay in the position after the government and Norman announced a still- undisclose­d settlement last month, along with Norman’s plan to retire from the Forces.

But that was before Wynnyk’s surprise resignatio­n, which he tendered in a letter to defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance that was subsequent­ly leaked and caused a firestorm of controvers­y earlier this week.

In his resignatio­n letter, Wynnyk wrote that when he was appointed vice- chief of the defence staff in July 2018, Vance insisted on a two- year commitment. Before that, Wynnyk had been one in a series of fill- ins as the military waited for Norman’s breach of trust case to make its way through the courts. Wynnyk had previously planned to retire this summer.

But Vance asked Wynnyk to make way for Norman by retiring after the breach of trust case was dropped — only to ask him to stay after the government and Norman reached a settlement.

Wynnyk told Vance he was pressing ahead with his retirement.

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