Absolutely, and I'll come back to that at the end. I have to fit it into the order in which you asked the questions, I think. Of course, if I don't, I'm sure you'll remind me.
So are we stretched? Yes, we are. Can we get it done? I think we can. If I'm not right, I'll let you know over the next couple of months. I'm pretty confident that the reserves will answer the call and get us through this transition period, because at the same time as we're doing all these operations at home and abroad, we want to grow.
In the past, when my father was a soldier, it would take probably 30 to 90 days to give him or her sufficient skills to go off to war. Now, because of the complexity of the things we do, it takes an awful lot longer. So at the same time as we're trying to grow, we have to send NCOs and officers overseas to lead their young men and women. And by the way, we need those NCOs and officers to train the recruits. That's why we have to get a little bit creative about trying to farm out to civilian industries some of the more routine activities that soldiers don't have to do.
With regards to the Olympics, the government has announced--or is about to announce or has stated the intent--the territorial battalion concept. We're going to start that in the west. That's the grouping of reserve units into what a regular force officer would call battle group equivalents, and reserve growth will be focused on the west. The intent that I've just finished articulating to all my army subordinates--the area and brigade commanders--is that the reserves will be focused on domestic operations supporting the regulars overseas; the regulars will be focused on international operations, supporting the reserves at home. Now, there's going to be a great deal of cross-blending, as there always has been in the past.
Vis-à-vis the Olympics, the organization that has a responsibility to do the detailed planning--and we're an adjunct to fit into that, if you would--is the RCMP, for the security aspect. Canada Command has stood up full time; they have some folk working on this full time. The indicative numbers—and you'll forgive me if I don't share those with you yet—are sizeable, but if you look at what sorts of duties those soldiers would be expected to do, it is not high- and mid-intensity combat--please, not to secure the Olympics. So the training requirement for them is much less than for the soldiers we're sending into combat operations overseas. For every soldier we train here at home, there are usually two more who are assisting in that training or getting the equipment ready. Those numbers are far less to support the Olympics.
So do I think we can do it? Yes, I do.
On the third part, in which you quoted my comment of some years ago about how every time you kill an angry young man, others come after you, that has been true throughout history. As a professional soldier who has been in combat operations, the last thing you want to do is actually kill. Having said that, we have been trained most of our professional lives through the application of lethal force as an option. And when those angry young men are coming after, for example, two school girls, whose bodies I saw decapitated by the side of the road because they had the temerity to want to try to go to school, if you can intercept those angry young men before they can kill those young women, and you offer them the choice of surrender and they decline, your choices are limited. So sometimes, tragically, there is no choice. We are there to protect the weak and the innocent, and we are willing to put our soldiers in the way. They are willing to go in between the foe and those we're charged to protect, and yes, sometimes it does involve killing. It is a last resort, but we are soldiers.
With regards to Leopard tanks, currently we have about 65 in running condition. There are around 20 tank chassis currently deployed overseas. They are in very good shape. I will have a sustainment issue over the next two to three years. There's no doubt that the army needs a heavily protected direct-fire weapons system. We put on additional armour and made a variety of other refinements to those tanks, some of which are taking place as we speak. As soon as those refinements and add-on armour packages are finished, the tanks will go into operation.