Thank you, Chair.
Thank you for the opportunity. I would offer these observations after 36 years of wearing our uniform.
The environment in which Canada's men and women in uniform have served during my time of service has included the Cold War and the degree of pseudo-predictability that it provided, notwithstanding the fact I was glad like everybody else to see it end. Then we lived through and discovered the new realities of a post-Cold War world where the peace dividend and tranquility did not manifest themselves, but new forms of challenges, be they international or national, started to emerge and we ventured into learning how to deal with those. I'm a blue beret and a green-helmet wearer from the Balkans experience.
So I know how the world has changed and how we had to change with it to the post-9/11 world where a new paradigm of threats to the homeland turned into a form of reality that we have since responded to with partners, including the Arab Spring. The Arab Spring has created a definite no-same-as-last-year reality in the international peace and security arena, and now there is the new challenge of a major state acting in Ukraine and in the Crimea in a way that is no less a significant worry for many. All of that, of course, is going on concurrently with other challenges.
So I've seen us through all of these different security environments. Throughout all of that I've been in a profession that has, without fail, responded and fought when called upon, as well as delivered on being prepared the best we can with the tools we had, to be effective in that response. I couldn't have been happier to sling a sandbag in Winnipeg or to fight an ice storm in eastern Ontario during a challenging decade—and I won't use any terminology for that decade. It was a very challenging decade for our profession and Canada's perception of its military during that period. We served Canadians selflessly and became more known to our fellow citizens.
I have to say that since we embarked on the decade-plus experience in the Afghan mission, in which we delivered on our commitment—and thank you, again, for Friday last week—I've discovered some things. One is that I perceive a greater consciousness and understanding among Canadians of the dynamic, changing world we live in, where threats and risks are very real. It's useful to know how good we have it in a role that's this challenged, and to know that challenges really do exist out there.
I believe Canadians are conscious of the fact they have security organizations, law enforcement and others, and a military that are prepared to respond to those challenges home and away. I see it on the street every time I get thanked for my service, and there's an ownership of our military in this last decade by citizens that I didn't see in the 1990s. I couldn't be happier to see it today, notwithstanding that the security challenges are real and there are wicked problems out there to be confronted. Our stock in the world is first class. I can say this having served in military—maritime, air, and land. It's not limited to or fully enabled by their platforms alone, but it's about the people who wear the uniform who really are the strength of our force. We've got great people.
If I could leave you with a last thought, it is that I'm proud to have served and I'll continue to serve through my family's next generation who are in uniform today, a daughter full-time and two sons part-time. They didn't pick it because Dad told them to, just for the record. They're proud Canadians, proud to serve, and they're thrilled by how they're respected and admired by their fellow Canadians in or out of uniform.