Canada’s top soldier said the Armed Forces continue to be locked in a fight against sexual misconduct within its ranks. And while 30 Canadian Forces members have been punished and 97 other cases of inappropriate behaviour are still ongoing, Defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance warned the public to “expect results to be sobering when we get results in the fall.”

Vance delivered on Tuesday, the update on the Armed Forces’ progress in dealing with sexual misconduct cases. The cases are a result of Operation Honour which Vance launched in 2015 following the report of Supreme Court justice Marie Deschamps.

Retired Justice Deschamp was asked by military commanders in 2014 to conduct lead an investigation into sexual misconduct in the military. In her report, Deschamp said she found a “sexualized culture” where female members of the Armed Forces were subjected to abuse ranging from harassment and sexual jokes to outright rape. She said the “endemic” sexual misconduct was condoned by the military leadership.

Click here to read the Armed Forces 51-paged Progress Report Addressing Inappropriate Sexual Behaviour

In the period of April to July 2016, a total of 148 incidents of harmful sexual behaviour were reported to the chain of command.

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Part 1: Interview with Gen. Jonathan Vance, chief of defence staff – Operation Honour and the importance of adjusting personnel policies

Vance said the military has so completed between April and July this year, 51 investigations into inappropriate sexual behaviour in the forces have been completed and 97 more investigations are still being conducted.

Of the concluded cases, 30 resulted in the handing down of “career impacting” punishment that ranges from fines to dismissal from the service.

Administrative consequences ranged from warnings and probation to removal from command positions and dismissal from the Canadian Armed Forces.

Three cases were referred to civilian courts. Four perpetrators could not be identified and 10 cases were considered unfounded.

Vance characterized the initial accomplishment as a “good start” but cautioned against being too optimistic about the results because there are “no quick fixes.”

He said there is still much work to be done because since the investigation has turned up 148 reports of inappropriate and harmful sexual behaviour.

The first priority of Operation Honour for this year, he said, was improving victim support.

According to the military victim support has been enhanced through several key areas which include:

  • Expanded hours of operation of the Sexual Misconduct Response Centre
  • Sexual Offence Response Teams have been established with the addition of 18 new investigator positions distributed nationally
  • Increased military training for health care professionals, military police, and prosecutors
  • Action to ensure victims are kept better informed throughout the investigative and judicial process
  • Improved victim support services from military police

The military is also focusing on obtaining “a more complete understanding of the precise nature of the problem,” according to DND press release.

The Armed Forces contracted Statistics Canada to conduct a survey between April and June this year to collect information regarding the prevalence of sexual misconduct within the military, the reporting of harmful and inappropriate sexual behaviour, and awareness of both Operation Honour and associated support mechanism.

The survey was the first of its kind to be conducted by the CAF. More than 40,000 regular force and primary reserve CAF members participated by sharing their experiences and perspectives.

The results of that survey will be released in the late fall.

The Armed Forces hopes the survey will help it obtain a comprehensive baseline that will shape ongoing and future action for policy development, program review, training modernization and others.

The focus of the second year of Operation Honour will be on moving beyond process and analysis into the development and implementation of policies, programs, and performance measurement necessary to catalyse the required culture change.. Most of the initiatives generating this change are in their early stages. So too is the organization’s ability to measure the outcomes that are beginning to emerge.

A large part of the success of Operation Honour will also depend on military commanders onboard and engaged.

“While the progress report mapped out the Canadian Armed Forces’ headway in implementing both Operation Honour objectives and the External Review Authority’s recommendations, this second progress report reflects Operation Honour’s requirement to get all subordinate commanders at their levels fully engaged across the organization,” said Lt. Gen. Christine Whitecross, commander of the Military Police. “”It is through them that we can hope to achieve mission success.”