Defending Canada: Canadian Military Preparedness, 1867- 1902
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Abstract
There has been an impression created by scholars that Canadian politico-military
actions were taken to benefit Great Britain and fulfill the needs of the Empire.
This thesis contends that decisions surrounding military preparedness, defense
spending and the militia made by the Canadian government were designed
primarily to protect and foster Canadian state interests that slowly evolved over
the three decades before the Boer War in 1899: in the first phase, continued
military solidarity with the British was demonstrated, especially during the Red
River Rebellion (1869-1870); in the second phase, new threats and armed
deployments showed an obstinate desire for autonomy at the expense of military
Imperial-Canadian cooperation, demonstrated by the purely Canadian operation
in the Northwest (1885) and of outright refusal to engage in overseas endeavours
(Nile Expedition 1884-85); the last phase saw an amalgamation of the previous
phenomena of imperial solidarity and colonial autonomy – that is to say, Canada
attempted to decide for itself which military ventures in which it would engage,
but Canadian leaders operated in a political world and they had to satisfy, at
times, certain segments of the Canadian population that continued to have strong
ties to the Empire. This transition from reliance, to obstinacy, and finally to
reluctant cooperation, demonstrates that Canada attempted to become more
autonomous as the decades passed, a stage that was later reached during the
First World War. In brief, then, Canada attempted to act in its own interests,
rather than in those of Great Britain in the last third of the 19th century.