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Description
Mr. Belzile discusses how your troops can ruin your career quicker than your superiors.
Transcription
The regular army and the NATO commitment started to grow and they stabilised, or they solidified perhaps instead of . . . we didn’t know how long we were gonna be in Germany. It turned out that it had been a very long time, but we didn’t, we knew then how long we’d been to Korea and we were finished in Korea and we came back. So I was called to the colonel and he says, “Do you wanna think about it? ” I said, “No, where do I sign? ” So one of the things that I would always say was, you know, that being an army officer, particularly an infantry officer, is a little more than a job, it’s almost like a calling, you know and I say it’s the closest thing to priesthood you could find, which would upset most of them but most of them would understand this. I don’t know, your own self-esteem I guess, and once you find out that your comfortable leading men, and women, but we didn’t have very many in those days, there were nurses and that was about it. And somehow that the people under you respect that and they’re the ones really that will make up your career because you can go down in flames a lot quicker if your own troops stop supporting you than the officers above you. Now a lot of people don’t understand that either and to me, that’s the harshest judges, are your own troops. They’re not the Prime Minister and the people above you. When you get up to be a very senior officer they start to know you because they heard about you and they may have to sanction certain appointments that you’re sent to. But other than that, you know, you’re just part of the army. But to the troops under you, if you’re the boss, at whatever level, they know what you’re doing and they can probably affect your career a lot more than people realize. So it’s, in my case, well, I was comfortable, liked it, was tough physically. I was pretty tough physically, and very healthy. I don’t mind sleeping outside, I mean, a little less today but, you know... but I don’t know, good, good manly life.