National Post (National Edition)

Anand addresses military misconduct

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• The sexual misconduct crisis afflicting Canada's military is hurting recruitmen­t and morale in the ranks, Anita Anand said Friday as she used one of her first public addresses as Canada's new defence minister to lay out her priorities for the position.

Top of that list was what Anand described as significan­t and lasting change to the Canadian military's culture as the Armed Forces faces a crisis of confidence following complaints of inappropri­ate and in some cases criminal sexual behaviour involving senior officers.

It was in this context that Anand, who took over as defence minister last month from Harjit Sajjan, who was criticized for not doing more to address such behaviour among the top brass, noted the damage wrought on the military — and why culture change is her primary concern.

“This crisis is hurting morale and recruitmen­t in the Canadian Armed Forces,” she said in an address to Canadian and foreign delegates during the opening of the annual Halifax Internatio­nal Security Forum, which runs through the weekend.

“And I believe that in order for our military to be effective, our troops must feel safe, they must feel protected, and they must feel respected wherever they are, whatever they are doing.”

Anand's speech came just under a month after she was named defence minister, becoming only the second woman take over the position after Kim Campbell held it for six months in 1993.

It also came two weeks after Anand announced she had accepted retired Supreme Court judge Louise Arbour's recent call to transfer the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of military sexual misconduct cases to civilian authoritie­s.

The minister reiterated her decision on Friday, saying the move “demonstrat­es that we are serious.”

Among those in attendance in Halifax was Gen. Wayne Eyre, the former Canadian Army commander who has been serving as acting chief of the defence staff since February, when Adm. Art McDonald stepped down due to a military police investigat­ion into his own conduct.

McDonald has since called for the government to reinstate him after military police opted not to charge him, but the government instead put him on administra­tive leave and promoted Eyre. A decision on who will serve as permanent defence chief is expected soon.

While Anand spent the first part of her address focusing on sexual misconduct in the ranks, she later went out of her way to underscore the important work that the Canadian military has been doing even as the current crisis has been raging.

That included contributi­ng hundreds of troops to long-term care facilities early in the COVID-19 pandemic and responding to more than a dozen natural disasters over the past two years.

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