DEFENCE OF N.Z.
“Recruiting Today Not Satisfactory”
OPINION EXPRESSED BY LABOUR MEMBERS
members of the defence committee, the Speaker of the House of Representatives (the Hon. W.\E. Barnard), Mr W. J. Lyon, M.P., and Mr J. A. Lee, M.P. submitted a minority report to the conference of the Labour Party on the subject of land defence, in which they expressed the view that recruiting today was not satisfactory, and emphasizing the need for every fit man to offer himself for voluntary training for the defence of New Zealand. The minority report, which was endorsed by the conference and added to the defence committee’s report, was as follows:— The Labour Government is to be congratulated upon all that has been done to improve the efficiency of air and naval defence, and to improve our defence equipment generally. However, under land defence, Mr Barnard, Mr Lyon and Mr Lee, submit the following: CHANGED CIRCUMSTANCES Having regard to the changed circumstances of the world in which we live, we feel that the first essential to adequate defence is an affirmation by the conference of the New Zealand Labour Party and by the Prime Minister that it is the duty of every fit man to offer himself for voluntary training for the defence of New Zealand. The present small land force is justifiable only on the grounds that our present system is producing a sufficiency of instructors and officers and noncommissioned officers necessary to train every fit man in New Zealand should the need arise for the defence of New Zealand. Recruiting today is not satisfactory. It is confined too largely to men of a too youthful age. Defence is a task for men as well as boys. While these boys are valuable in themselves and will be useful material at a later date, there is a grave shortage of men of the 25 to 35 or 45 age groups, and a recruiting campaign is necessary to secure the addition of these men. REQUIRED AGE LEVEL It is obvious that if war breaks out tomorrow, too many of our rankers will not be of the age level required for service, let alone of the age, physique and experience level required as officers, n.c.o.’s and instructors necessary to establish a New Zealand army should the need arise. A sufficiently large number of recruits is not offering. Some means must be adopted to ensure the retention of recruits till the required standard of efficiency has been attained.
We do not subscribe to the viewpoint that New Zealand cannot defend itself. The New Zealand Division in France proved itself one of the best in the field, and any raider or enemy staging a raid or a minor attack would meet with extraordinary resistance provided New Zealand were possessed of equipment and munitions and of the highlytrained force we vision if the present strength were of the mature age group and capably trained so as to act as n.c.o.’s, officers and instructors.”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19390417.2.75
Bibliographic details
Southland Times, Issue 23794, 17 April 1939, Page 8
Word Count
494DEFENCE OF N.Z. Southland Times, Issue 23794, 17 April 1939, Page 8
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