First Deployment to Bosnia

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Description

Mr. Mac Culloch speak about his opportunity to deploy to Bosnia and his roles and responsibilities as operations officer.

Wayne Mac Culloch

Le Major Wayne Mac Culloch est né en 1953 au Cap Breton et il a grandi au Québec. À 18 ans, il a fréquenté le Collège royal militaire pour ensuite s’enrôler en 1968, à titre d’ingénieur militaire. M. Mac Culloch a été déployé trois fois en Bosnie et une fois en Haïti. Il a pris sa retraite après 41 ans de service. Il a ensuite travaillé avec le Ministère de la Défense nationale. Depuis 2004, M. Mac Culloch est un bénévole dévoué pour présenter le “Module de la paix” avec le programme Rencontres du Canada, partageant avec les jeunes l’importance du service et du sacrifice.

Transcription

First place I got to serve outside of Canada was in Bosnia during the civil war. And I was actually called off leave. I was on leave in Cape Breton and I was given 48 hours to get to Sarajevo so it was throw the family in the car, drive back to Ottawa and get some equipment together and then jump on an airplane for the flight first to Zurich and then down to Zagreb and then finally into Sarajevo. My job when I got there was being General Sir Michael Rose’s operations officer so in essence I was responsible for the day to day operations for the troops from thirty two nations and numbering about twenty five thousand and ten. My day started at 5:27 in the morning because it would take me 3 minutes to get to the showers which were unlocked at 5:30 to conserve water. I would be at my desk not later than 10 to 6 in the morning and I would be fortunate to get out of the office by 2:30 the next morning. So there wasn’t really a lot of time in the run of a day for much other than looking after the crisis which regularly popped up. Our job in Bosnia was to make sure that the humanitarian convoys were not robbed by roadside bandits but because we were there both the press and the people looked to us to provide even more stability so we ended up doing things like negotiating cease fire agreements. And in fact on the 21st and 28th of August we negotiated two anti-sniping agreements which took the death toll in Sarajevo down to three to five a week.

It was a little different in that I understood the situation of what was going on. I understood what the cultures were that were involved and the fact that I was relatively amenable to other people and other cultures was very helpful. Certainly anyone who comes from a different culture will realize that when you show up in a different environment there is some adjustment that’s required and I credit the Canadian openness with allowing me to be able to adjust to understanding the Bosnian way of thinking and as a result be better able to make suggestions which would be more acceptable to them in terms of whether it be solutions for delivery of aid or just general well-being.

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