Royal United Services Institute-Vancouver

Royal United Services Institute-Vancouver RUSI Vancouver seeks to promote and inform balanced debate on strategic and national security issues

The Royal United Services Institute - Vancouver Society seeks to promote informed and balanced debate on strategic and national security issues by providing a forum for information and discussion within the community of the Greater Vancouver Area and the Lower Fraser Valley. RUSI Vancouver is a non-political organization which fulfills its aim through:
Supporting the development and maintenance of

effective national security and defence policies;
Reviewing and researching security and defence matters; preparing and presenting briefs, position papers and policy proposals to government and other organizations;
Working to help to ensure that the public is correctly informed on matters relating to national security and defence;
Promoting a collegial spirit and comradeship among our members, and providing a forum for discussion and exchange of views on matters of interest.

Thirty-five years ago, Canadians participated in the Gulf War. Veterans were recently introduced to the Governor General...
03/25/2026

Thirty-five years ago, Canadians participated in the Gulf War. Veterans were recently introduced to the Governor General at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.

Trump is trying to strong arm countries like Great Britain, Japan, France, South Korea, and even Communist China to send...
03/16/2026

Trump is trying to strong arm countries like Great Britain, Japan, France, South Korea, and even Communist China to send ships to help save his oily ass in the Straits of Hormuz. But notice that he didn't ask Canada? I guess someone showed him a picture of our navy after 50 years of budget cuts.

US threats create surge in Cdn Forces recruiting.
02/27/2026

US threats create surge in Cdn Forces recruiting.

The Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) aims to be fully AI-enabled by 2030, integrating AI into command, control, intelligence,...
02/21/2026

The Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) aims to be fully AI-enabled by 2030, integrating AI into command, control, intelligence, and logistical operations to maintain strategic advantage. Key initiatives include the Defence Centre for AI Capability (DCAIC) (est. 2024) for experimentation and the Defence Innovations Secure Hubs (DISH) for testing unmanned, autonomous systems.

Sixty-one years ago today, on February 15, 1965, Canada’s red and white maple leaf flag was raised for the very first ti...
02/15/2026

Sixty-one years ago today, on February 15, 1965, Canada’s red and white maple leaf flag was raised for the very first time on Parliament Hill. God bless our land and people.

The “Hunters” become the hunted: The 1838 U.S. invasion of Canada. The Battle of the Windmill National Historic Site is ...
01/17/2026

The “Hunters” become the hunted: The 1838 U.S. invasion of Canada.

The Battle of the Windmill National Historic Site is located an hour’s drive from Ottawa. It’s where, in 1838, some 250-armed American invaders (hunters) rode the momentum force of manifest destiny northward, only to meet a violent end at the hands of British regulars troops and Canadian militia.

At 18 metres high, the windmill tower stands like a sentry over the St. Lawrence River. It’s an impressive structure for the time it was built (1832) and, notwithstanding its conversion to a lighthouse in 1872, its base appears much the same now as it did in 1838.

The battle itself is overshadowed by the War of 1812 and geographically by nearby Fort Wellington.

The question is, why would hundreds of Americans pick up their rifles, cross an international border and invade a country that they were not at war with?

The American raiders, Hunters as they called themselves, had originally planned on seizing Fort Wellington, 2.5 kilometres away, to use as a base to liberate Canada. The landing, however, was botched and they arrived at Windmill Point instead.

At the time of the battle, there was a large stone tavern and several dwellings creating an outer perimeter around the tower. With walls a metre thick that were largely impervious to small cannon fire, the stone stronghold wasn’t such a bad plan B for the would-be liberators.

Its windows provide sightlines in all directions. From its upper floors, American snipers had unobstructed views of the battlefield and would have been able to see every British move as it happened. At the outset, this served the Hunters well.

On November 12th, 1838, the Hunters entrenched themselves, the next morning, British infantry and militia units attacked but they were thrown back.

Sources from the battle show the Queen’s professional soldiers had to restrain the Canadian militia when American prisoners were taken. If there was any sympathy for the Hunters, or pirates as they were often called on this side of the border, it wasn’t present during or after the battle.

For four days the martial contest played out in front of American spectators and sympathisers who had come to watch the battle. They were close enough to hear the thunder of cannons, muffled shouts and cracking muskets, but not close enough to see the brutal reality of war.

During the first day of the raid, small American boats brought supplies and reinforcements, including cannons, to the docks at Windmill Point. By the second day, this supply line over the St. Lawrence had been severed with the arrival of British and American naval vessels, as well as the presence of American regulars in Ogdensburg who were tasked with upholding U.S. President Martin Van Buren’s official policy of neutrality.

With resupply across the river blocked, the Hunters, who had been intended to be the vanguard of a much larger force, found themselves trapped in a hostile land.

The surge of Canadian volunteers anxious to join the American cause amounted to nothing more than lies.

The Hunters, now ironically the hunted, were surrounded and forsaken. Their salvation on the American shore may well have been 100 miles distant for all the good of its proximity.

The siege ground along for a few more days, while British reinforcements swelled the ranks of its forces to 2,000 men.

On November.16th an attack pushed the Hunters from the outlying buildings, some of which were torched, and into the tower and shoreline.

All the while, the windmill was bombarded from land and water. Casualties mounted. Finally, a white flag of surrender appeared from one of the windows, and the invading American force withdrew in defeat.

“Tiger 131: The Forgotten Battle:” is a well written account of a brief but furious battle by British forces against the...
01/17/2026

“Tiger 131: The Forgotten Battle:” is a well written account of a brief but furious battle by British forces against the Germans in North Africa in 1943. The descriptions of the battle, as told in the words of the soldiers who fought during those three days are compelling. The author, Dale Oscroft, captures the brutality and terror of battle from the perspective of those who fought for our freedom in World War Two. It is an excellent account of the grittiness of small unit combat.

01/07/2026

Canadian Modular Assault Rifles (CMAR): The CAF is set to replace its aging C7/C8 rifle fleet with a new two-tier system under the Canadian Modular Assault Rifle (CMAR) program. This will include a Tier 1 Full Spectrum rifle optimized for offensive operations and a Tier 2 General Service rifle, both incorporating modern optics, thermal vision, and sound suppressors.

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