(Redirected from Department of National Defence)
The 'Department of National Defence', frequently referred to by its
acronym 'DND', is the
department within the government of
Canada with responsibility for
Canada's military, known as the
Canadian Forces.
DND is the largest federal department in terms of personnel/employees and budget; there are 62,000 members of the Canadian Forces regular force, 23,000 members of the Canadian Forces primary reserve force, and approximately 22,000 civilian DND support employees. The department's budget in Fiscal Year 2007-2008 is C$16.9 billion.
[1] In 2006, the government announced a C$17 billion spending program for capital projects.
Until a December
2003 reorganization of the federal government, DND was in charge of emergency preparedness and response in Canada, through the
Office of Critical Infrastructure and Emergency Preparedness. DND also holds responsibility for the
Communications Security Establishment which is an organization staffed by a mixture of civilian and military personnel.
DND is led by the
Minister of National Defence and is headquartered at
National Defence Headquarters (NDHQ) in
Ottawa.
History
DND was created with the passage of the
National Defence Act on
January 1,
1923 through an amalgamation of the
Department of Naval Services with the
Department of Militia and Defence and the
Air Board. DND was intended to reduce administrative costs among the three services, as well as improve the coordination of national security policies. DND brought under a single department, the
Royal Canadian Navy, the Militia and
Canadian Army, and the Canadian Air Force (later the
Royal Canadian Air Force).
Early efforts at integrating the services failed and the RCN, army, and RCAF maintained separate headquarters. During the
Second World War, a
Minister of National Defence for Air and a
Minister of National Defence for Naval Services were appointed in May and July
1940 respectively. In
1946, DND reverted to having a single minister, whereby efforts were renewed at reducing duplication among the services.
In
1964, the position
Chief of Defence Staff was created, replacing the heads of the individual services as the nation's top military officer, and on
February 1,
1968, the three services were merged to form the unified
Canadian Forces. In a controversial October
1972 DND reorganization, the previously separate civilian and military branches in Ottawa were merged to form the single Department of National Defence Headquarters (NDHQ), with appointments being filled by both civilians and Canadian Forces officers.
In 2007 the Government of Canada began to refer to the department as 'National Defence and the Canadian Forces', however the official name for the department has not been legally changed:
:''The Defence Portfolio comprises the Department of National Defence, the Canadian Forces and a number of related organizations, all of which are the collective responsibility of the Minister of National Defence.''
[1]
Trivia
★ In 1974 the Defence Research Board was absorbed by DND.
★ DND funds a national youth program called
Cadets Canada.
★ DND has dealt with reports, sightings and investigations of
UFOs across Canada. It conducted investigations into
crop circles in
Duhamel, Alberta, and identifies the
Falcon Lake Incident in
Manitoba and the
Shag Harbour incident in
Nova Scotia as unsolved.
[2]
See also
★
Canadian Forces
★
★
Canadian Forces Land Force Command
★
★
Canadian Forces Maritime Command
★
★
Canadian Forces Air Command
References
1. http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/est-pre/20072008/me-bd/part1/ME-030_e.asp
2. Canada's Unidentified Flying Objects: The Search for the Unknown, a virtual museum exhibition at Library and Archives Canada
External links
★
Department of National Defence and Canadian Forces