Times Colonist

Canadian military about to get new leader. It should be a woman, some say

- SARAH RITCHIE

The search is on for the next leader of the Canadian Armed Forces — and it’s long past time that a woman became chief of the defence staff, observers say.

Canada has had 21 full-time defence chiefs since 1964, all of them men. The current top commander, Gen. Wayne Eyre, is due to retire this summer.

The military has long grappled with what a damning external report by former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour called a toxic culture of sexual misconduct.

At the same time, it is dealing with what Defence Minister Bill Blair described this past week as a recruitmen­t “death spiral.”

The forces need “a woman or an openly queer person” as their next leader if real change is going to happen, said veteran Sharp Dopler.

“We’ve been doing this dance with men at the helm for a very long time,” said Dopler. “Look where we are.”

Until 1992, Canada’s official military policy required that gay people be excised from its ranks.

Throughout the subsequent “LGBT Purge,” as it’s known, military members with LGBTQ+ identities endured persecutio­n and discrimina­tion even after that policy changed. Dopler was forced out in 1997. Canada has paid millions of dollars in reparation­s to the people who were targeted, and the prime minister officially apologized for the purge in 2017.

But the military’s record of failing to welcome people with different identities lingers. Women still only make up 16 per cent of the Armed Forces, though there is a goal to increase that share to 25 per cent within the next two years.

“It is about time that we have a chief of the defence staff who’s a woman, whether it’s this cycle or the next,” said retired Lt.-Gen. Guy Thibault, himself a former vice-chief.

Thibault, who is also chairman of the Conference of Defence Associatio­ns Institute, said it’s been almost 35 years since women were first allowed to serve in combat roles — about how long it takes to rise to the senior ranks.

“It would be disappoint­ing at this point if we hadn’t developed … a good bench of senior female general officers who could potentiall­y be a chief of the defence staff,” Thibault said.

“The good news is, we [have].” As of May 2023, there were 12 women at the rank of general and flag officer — making up about one in five of the top brass.

Several of them were promoted to their current roles in the immediate aftermath of a 2021 crisis in which a string of senior male commanders were accused of sexual misconduct.

When the government was last in an open search for a defence chief in 2020, some experts said women seen to be in contention, were perceived as lacking in command experience.

Thibault said “operationa­l credential­s” are critical to ensure the chief has credibilit­y with the troops and with allies.

This time around, the military is seen as being “in deep trouble,” Thibault said, as it deals with a combinatio­n of a severe shortage of troops and outdated equipment that mean it’s not meeting its own operationa­l readiness targets.

Plans to slash nearly $1 billion a year from Defence Department spending also have senior leaders worried.

Steve Saideman, director of the Canadian Defence and Security Network, said promoting one of the women in charge of culture change or personnel would send a strong signal from a Liberal government that likes to call itself feminist.

The Governor General appoints defence chiefs on the advice of the federal cabinet.

When asked about the search for a new chief in a recent interview, Blair said a “continuati­on of [Gen. Eyre’s] leadership” is what’s needed.

Megan MacKenzie, a researcher at Simon Fraser University, cautioned that simply appointing a woman to the top job will not be enough.

“Sometimes women or otherwise under-represente­d individual­s who are put in those positions of power are set up for failure, if there’s this expectatio­n that they can solve the problem just by being someone different and there’s not the institutio­nal support for their vision,” she said.

She also said she worries some of the hope and momentum for change that resulted from the Arbour report has been lost.

“I think members of the Canadian Armed Forces were hoping that this was going to be a watershed moment,” she said.

Dopler’s assessment was more blunt: “I am more than confident the status quo will be maintained.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Gen. Wayne Eyre, at the Conference on Security and Defence, in Ottawa on Thursday. Eyre, the top commander of the Canadian Armed Forces, is due to retire this summer.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Gen. Wayne Eyre, at the Conference on Security and Defence, in Ottawa on Thursday. Eyre, the top commander of the Canadian Armed Forces, is due to retire this summer.

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