Intelligence Branch (Canadian Forces)
Intelligence Branch | |
---|---|
Active | 1982–present |
Country | Canada |
Branch | Canadian Forces personnel branch |
Type | Intelligence |
Motto(s) | Latin: E tenebris lux "Out of the Darkness, Light" |
March | Eine kleine Nachtmusik |
The Intelligence Branch (French: Branche du service du renseignement) is a personnel branch of the Canadian Forces (CF) that is concerned with providing relevant and correct information to enable commanders to make decisions.
The branch works in a variety of challenging positions, at home and abroad, meeting the needs of commanders and operational planners of the Canadian Forces at all levels and in all environments, be it on overseas missions like Bosnia and Herzegovina, Haiti, Somalia, Rwanda, Timor-Leste, and Afghanistan, or at home like the ice storms in Quebec, floods in Winnipeg, and fires in British Columbia.
History
The first "Intelligence" guides unit in Canada was the “4th Troop of Volunteer Cavalry of Montreal (or Guides)”, formed on 7 February 1862. Renamed “The Royal Guides or Governor General’s Body Guard for Lower Canada,” and later “The Guides,” the unit was disbanded in 1869 after helping to repel Fenian raiders.
During the North-West Rebellion (1885), various irregular cavalry units were used as scouts. One of these scout units, drawn from the Dominion Land Survey, was called the “Intelligence Corps.” With a strength of three officers and thirty men performing long-range reconnaissance and light cavalry functions, it was the first unit to be designated an “Intelligence” unit in the British Empire. These scout units, the forerunners of the Fort Garry Horse and North Saskatchewan Regiment, were disbanded by 18 September 1885.
During the Boer War in South Africa, Canadian mounted troops gathered information of intelligence value with Lord Strathcona's Horse and British scout units. Canadian intelligence efforts in South Africa led to the appointment on 6 February 1901 of Lieutenant-Colonel V.B. Rivers, RCA, as the first Intelligence Staff Officer of the Canadian Militia. Shortly after, on 1 April 1903, the Corps of Guides (Canada) was created in the Canadian Army. Under the new structure, a District Intelligence Officer responsible to Director General of Military Intelligence (DGMI) was appointed to oversee Corps of Guides units established in each of Canada’s twelve military districts. The first DGMI, Lieutenant-Colonel W.A.C. Denny, had a very small staff overseeing information collection and mapping, and approximately 185 militia officers serving the Canadian Corps of Guides. Lieutenant Colonel Victor Brereton Rivers was the first Intelligence Staff Officer of the Canadian militia.[1]
By 1914, the Canadian Corps of Guides totalled some 500 all ranks. Given that their mounted scout role appeared inappropriate for war in Europe, many of the personnel serving with the Corps of Guides were absorbed into existing units and formations in the Canadian Army. Others became Intelligence staff officers and NCOs serving with the British Intelligence Corps. Some continued to serve in Canada with the Canadian Corps of Guides. The Intelligence system created within the First Canadian Division prior to its deployment to France in 1915 served as the basis for the development of Intelligence structures generally throughout the Canadian Corps.
After the War, a position for a Director of Military Operations and Intelligence was maintained in the Canadian Army. Corps of Guides units in Canada were converted to cyclist companies charged with protecting the main force form surprise during time of war. After disbandment of these companies on 31 March 1929, a small staff in Ottawa and some districts performed Intelligence duties. In 1932, Intelligence staffs of the RCAF and Army were amalgamated.
When Canada mobilized in September 1939, Intelligence structures based on British organizations were rapidly developed and intelligence analysts were given new challenges. As of 16 December 1940, there were about 60 all ranks posted to Canadian Intelligence duties. Foreseeing the need for 200 intelligence personnel, Major John Page proposed that Field Security (FS) functions be separated from the Provost Corps. Moreover, he worked to have an Intelligence Corps, formed in a manner similar to that of the British Intelligence Corps formed on 25 June 1940, recognized.
Establishment of the First Canadian Army in April 1942 led to a tremendous demand for Intelligence specialists, and on 29 October 1942 the Canadian Intelligence Corps (C Int C) was officially recognized as a Corps. Canadians from universities, colleges, businesses and industries joined the C Int C to participate in a great variety of Intelligence duties; a number became casualties at Dieppe, in Northwest Europe and the Adriatic. Army Intelligence sections or staffs were represented at Army, Corps, Division, and District levels, with seven Field Security Sections in existence as well. By 1943, for the first time in Canadian history, Canadian personnel filled all Intelligence appointments within Canada's Army formations and units.
In 1948, the Canadian Militia was authorized six Intelligence Training Companies: No. 1 in Montreal, No. 2 in Toronto, No. 3 in Halifax, No. 4 in Vancouver, No. 5 in Winnipeg, and No. 6 in Edmonton. The basic aim of these Companies was to provide a pool of trained Intelligence personnel to augment the Regular Force when needed.
During the 1950s and 1960s, members of the C Int C were engaged in a variety of intelligence duties in Canada, Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States and Cyprus. Following unification of the Canadian Forces in the late 1960s, the C Int C, the Clerk-Intelligence trade, the Canadian Provost Corps, and the Air Force Police were united to become the CF Security Branch, and CFSIS (Canadian Forces School of Intelligence and Security) was formed.
In 1981, the CF Security Branch was divided into two separate branches: one for Intelligence and the other for Security. Sir William Stephenson ("A Man Called Intrepid") accepted the appointment as first Colonel-Commandant of the Intelligence Branch, which was formed 1 October 1982. The actual re-badging occurred on 29 October 1982 - the 40th anniversary of the birth of the C Int C.
In 2000, a further split with the Security Branch occurred, with intelligence training moving from CFSIS at CFB Borden to the newly formed CFSMI at CFB Kingston. This ended the formal affiliation of the Intelligence Branch with the former CFSIS.
Intelligence Branch cap badge
When the current intelligence branch was formed on 1 October 1982 the branch had a new badge. The colours scarlet, dark green and white denote the evolution of the Intelligence Branch from the Canadian Corps of Guides, the Canadian Intelligence Corps, and the Canadian Forces Security Branch, respectively. The North Star symbol embodied in the Canadian Intelligence Corps badge is also found in the branch badge, further preserving historic ties. The compass rose shape of the badge draws notice to the worldwide scope of branch responsibilities.
The branch today
The Canadian Forces School of Military Intelligence (CFSMI) in Kingston, Ontario, is the Canadian Forces Centre of Excellence for Intelligence Training. Training is provided to both Regular Force and Reserve members of all three elements of the Canadian Forces. The CFSMI mission is to provide officers and non-commissioned members of the Intelligence Branch and other military branches core and specialist intelligence training.[2]
Army intelligence reservists, employed at 6 Intelligence Company (Edmonton, Vancouver and Winnipeg), 2 Intelligence Company (Toronto) and 7 Intelligence Company (Ottawa), 4 Intelligence Company (platoons in Montreal and Quebec City), 3 Intelligence Company (Halifax, Nova Scotia), make a vital contribution to this effort while in garrison or deployed on overseas missions.
The shoulder title in English is INT and in French RENS.
See also
- Signals Intelligence
- Canadian Security Intelligence Service
- Communications Security Establishment
- RCMP Security Service
- Royal Canadian Mounted Police
References
- ↑ Harold A. Skaarup ‘Out of Darkness—Light: A History of Canadian Military Intelligence, Volume 1’
- ↑ http://www.rockymountainrangers.ca/?p=eductraining Canadian Forces Schools
External links
Preceded by Public Affairs Branch |
Order of Precedence
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Succeeded by Cadet Instructors Cadre |