Military’s failure on sexual misconduct feels like ‘existential threat’: HR officer
OTTAWA — The senior officer responsible for human resources in the Canadian Armed Forces says the military’s repeated failure to address sexual misconduct in the ranks over the years has led to what feels like an “existential threat” to the institution.
That is what makes the current crisis different from past iterations, Lt.-Gen. Steve Whelan said in an interview, and why the military needs to keep its promise to address the problem this time around.
“It’s sad that we’ve had to come to a point where it feels existential,” he told The Canadian Press. “But that’s what happens when you don’t hold true to a promise you make to somebody saying: ‘I’m going to fix this.’ Well, this is a promise we have to keep.”
Whelan will have a personal hand in making sure those promises are kept as the head of military personnel command, which has oversight over everything from recruitment and training to promotions and health care.