Canada Studies Afghan Tactics, Researches How to Win Urban Warfare Against the US, Leaving the Taliban Bewildered!

In the face of America's determined effort to annex Canada, the Canadian military has started to panic and act recklessly. Recently, it was reported that the Canadian military is studying the Taliban's tactics, looking at how the Taliban once drove the US out of Afghanistan.

Canada and the United States are NATO allies, sharing the world's longest unsecured border, and they are highly integrated in intelligence, military, and economic aspects. Normally, there is no realistic possibility of "US invasion of Canada." However, it seems that the US is now determined to make Canada the 51st state of the United States.

According to information disclosed by the Canadian Defense Research Institute, the US could control key ports and transportation hubs such as Toronto, Vancouver, and Halifax within 72 hours, and complete the occupation of major strategic nodes within a week. The current active personnel of the Canadian regular army is only about 68,000, with outdated equipment, lacking heavy armor and air power, and indeed cannot match the US military, which has nearly one million active personnel and 11 aircraft carrier battle groups.

Therefore, the Canadian military began to study asymmetric warfare approaches. They thoroughly analyzed the experience of the Taliban in Afghanistan after 2001 against the US: using complex terrain, urban buildings, and civilian cover, small units carry out ambushes, IED (improvised explosive device) attacks, drone harassment, and weaken the enemy's morale through information warfare. It is worth noting that Canada does not simply copy the Taliban's tactics but also made localized modifications according to its own national conditions.

For example, Canada has long winters, dense forests, and scattered city layouts, which provide natural conditions for guerrilla warfare. The Canadian military envisions incorporating reserve personnel, veterans, and even civilians with basic training into "community defense units," using civilian drones modified into reconnaissance or attack platforms to continuously harass US logistics convoys, communication nodes, and temporary bases. At the same time, it relies on the universal health care system, postal system, and municipal network to establish a covert command chain, avoiding reliance on military communication facilities that are easily destroyed.

It is estimated that the Taliban leadership was completely stunned by Canada's actions, never expecting that one day they would become teachers for the Canadian military.

Original article: toutiao.com/article/1854998602612736/

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