Military models Canadian response to hypothetical American invasion - sh.itjust.works
The Canadian Armed Forces have modelled a hypothetical U.S. military invasion of
Canada and the country’s potential response, which includes tactics similar to
those employed against Russia and later U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan, two
senior government officials say. It is believed to be the first time in a
century that the Canadian Armed Forces have created a model of an American
assault on this country, a founding member of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization and a partner with the U.S. in continental air defence. A military
model is a conceptual and theoretical framework, not a military plan, which is
an actionable and step-by-step directive for executing operations. The Globe and
Mail is not identifying the officials, who were not authorized to discuss the
military’s thinking on this matter publicly. The officials, as well as a number
of experts, say it is unlikely the Trump administration would order an invasion
of Canada. Open this photo in gallery: Canadian soldiers patrol the area around
a NORAD satellite relay dome. The Canadian Armed Forces’ model of a U.S.
invasion is believed to be the first it has produced in a century.Gavin John/The
Globe and Mail The Globe reported this week that Canada is considering sending a
small contingent of troops to Greenland to join a group of eight European
countries that are holding military exercises as a show of solidarity for
Denmark, of which the self-ruling island is a territory. U.S. President Donald
Trump has been challenging NATO allies with repeated calls for the U.S. to
acquire Greenland and threats to impose tariffs on European countries who oppose
the takeover. Those threats escalated after his attack on Venezuela and capture
of President Nicolás Maduro earlier this month. Mr. Trump has also repeatedly
mused about Canada becoming the 51st state. On the weekend, NBC reported Mr.
Trump has been increasingly complaining to aides in recent weeks about Canada’s
vulnerability to U.S. adversaries in the Arctic. Steve Bannon, the former Trump
chief strategist who remains close to the President, said Canada is “rapidly
changing” and becoming “hostile” to the United States. The two senior government
officials said military planners are modelling a U.S. invasion from the south,
expecting American forces to overcome Canada’s strategic positions on land and
at sea within a week and possibly as quickly as two days. Prime Minister Mark
Carney says he’s concerned about the U.S. escalation over the future of
Greenland and its sovereignty as President Donald Trump threatens tariffs. The
Canadian Press Canada does not have the number of military personnel or the
sophisticated equipment needed to fend off a conventional American attack, they
said. So, the military envisions unconventional warfare in which small groups of
irregular military or armed civilians would resort to ambushes, sabotage, drone
warfare or hit-and-run tactics. One of the officials said the model includes
tactics used by the Afghan mujahedeen in their hit-and-run attacks on Russian
soldiers during the 1979-1989 Soviet-Afghan War. These were the same tactics
employed by the Taliban in their 20-year war against the U.S. and allied forces
that included Canada. Many of the 158 Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan
from 2001 to 2014 were struck by improvised explosive devices or IEDs. The aim
of such tactics would be to impose mass casualties on U.S. occupying forces, the
official said. Canadian troops would engage in unconventional warfare, which
includes ambushes, sabotage, raids, and hit-and-run tactics similar to what the
mujahedeen and Taliban used in Afghanistan.Gavin John/The Globe and Mail The
modelling provides the keenest insight yet as to the level of threat assessment
now being actively discussed by Canada with respect to the Trump administration.
One of the officials noted, however, that relations with the U.S. military
remain positive and the two countries are working together on Canada’s
participation in a new continental defence system, or “Golden Dome,” to defend
against Russian or Chinese missiles. The military has also run models on missile
strikes from Russia or China on Canadian cities and critical infrastructure.
Military planners envision an American attack that would follow clear signs from
the U.S. military that the two countries’ partnership in NORAD, the North
American Aerospace Defence Command, was ending, and the U.S. was under new
orders to take Canada by force. Conscription has been ruled out for now, but the
level of sacrifice that would be asked of Canadians remains a central topic, the
officials said. General Jennie Carignan, Chief of the Defence Staff, has already
announced her intention to create a 400,000-plus-strong reserve force of
volunteers. The officials said they could be armed or asked to provide
disruptions if the U.S. becomes an occupying power. A senior Defence Department
official said Canada would have a maximum of three months to prepare for a land
and sea invasion. The first indications that invasion orders had been sent would
be expected to come from U.S. military warnings that Canada no longer has a
shared skies policy with the United States, the source said. This rupture in the
joint defence agreement would likely see France or Britain, nuclear-weapon
states, being called on to provide support and defence for Canada against the
U.S. The Globe is not identifying the senior defence official, who was not
authorized to discuss Canadian war-modelling scenarios. Open this photo in
gallery: A Canadian soldier dismantles a drone during a training operation in
the Northwest Territories. Drones and other weapons that could destroy American
tanks could be employed to disrupt an invasion, according to Retired
Major-General David Fraser.COLE BURSTON/AFP/Getty Images Retired major-general
David Fraser, who commanded Canadian troops in Afghanistan alongside the United
States, said Canada could also use drones and tank-killing weapons like the
Ukrainians used against the Russians to blunt their invasion in February, 2022.
Mr. Fraser said it is unthinkable that Canadian planners have had to draw up a
U.S. invasion scenario. Whatever Mr. Trump does with Greenland and possibly
Mexico would weigh into any Canadian scenario, he said. But Canada can count on
support from European countries, Britain, Japan, South Korea and other
democratic nations. “You know if you come after Canada, you are going to have
the world coming after you, even more than Greenland. People do care about what
happens to Canada, unlike Venezuela,” Mr. Fraser said. “You could actually see
German ships and British planes in Canada to reinforce the country’s
sovereignty.” Mr. Fraser said Canada should immediately place more military
assets in the North to claim its right to the region. If the threat from the
U.S. became serious, he said Canadian soldiers would be placed along the border
even though there is no realistic possibility that Canada could defeat the U.S.
militarily. Insurgency tactics would be the best way to deal with U.S. invading
forces, he said. “There is a quantum difference between defending another land
like Canadians did in Afghanistan versus defending Windsor, Ontario. You do not
walk across that border because everybody is your enemy then,” Mr. Fraser added.
Retired lieutenant-general Mike Day, who headed Canadian Special Forces Command
and served as chief strategic planner for the future of the Canadian Armed
Forces, said it was “fanciful” to think the Americans would actually invade
Canada. But he acknowledged Canada’s armed forces could not stand up to the
world’s biggest and most sophisticated military. He said, however, that the U.S.
would have great difficulty occupying a country the size of Canada. “We wouldn’t
be able to withstand a conventional invasion. We would, for a limited period of
time, be able to defend a very small civilian population, like the size of
Kingston,” he said. “Notwithstanding the size of the American military, however,
they do not have the force structure to occupy, let alone control every major
urban centre in Canada.” “Their only hope would be a Russian-like drive to Kyiv
and hope that works and the rest of country capitulates once they seize the seat
of power in Ottawa,” he added. “Like Ukraine, it would inconceivable to me that
we would give up if they seized our capital.” Gaëlle Rivard Piché, executive
director of the Conference of Defence Associations, said she did not see a
situation where the U.S. would attack Canada. But she also said it’s crucial for
Canada to significantly build up its defence capabilities. “Clear signalling to
our neighbour to the south that we want and we’re willing and able to rapidly be
a credible ally that is capable of defending itself, ensuring our own national
security, our national defence, will play a deterrence role towards a potential
willingness by the United States to control some of Canada or to invade a
portion of Canada,” she said. An RCMP Blackhawk helicopter patrols at Roxham
Road along the Canada-U.S. border. Experts say even if the U.S. does not invade,
Canada must still strengthen its military presence near the border.Carlos
Osorio/Reuters University of Toronto political scientist Aisha Ahmad said Canada
needs to drastically boost its homeland defence capabilities, regardless of the
potential U.S. threat to the border. “The better Canada can embrace this
approach to homeland defence, the less likely all of these horrible scenarios
that nobody wants will ever come to pass,” she said. U.S. generals would be
aware that Canadians would fight back against an invasion, using whatever
tactics would be the most effective, she said. “I do believe that there are
intelligent generals south of our border who could very easily identify that
risk environment.”