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US war plans panic Canadas elite
By Keith Jones
19 February 2002
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Echoing the concerns of many European politicians and editorial
writers, Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien has counselled
the US not to embark on a unilateral military campaign to topple
the Iraqi government.
Speaking in Moscow last Thursday at a joint press conference
with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chrétien reiterated
his governments support for the US occupation of Afghanistan
and its purported world anti-terrorism war. However, he then joined
Putin in de-linking the US-Iraqi dispute from the question of
terrorism. The question of the production of unacceptable
armaments in Iraq, affirmed Chrétien, is a
problem that is under the authority of the United Nations, and
it is completely different than the problem of terrorism.
Chrétien urged the US to work in concert with its traditional
allies and through the UN Security Council, rather than act on
its own against Iraq. If we try to do it unilaterally,
said Canadas Prime Minster, it will go absolutely
nowhere.
Later the same day, Canadas External Affairs Minister
made like comments while on his maiden ministerial visit to Washington.
After meeting with US Secretary of State Colin Powell, Graham
declared, Nobody is supporting [Iraqi President] Saddam
Hussein but everybody recognizes that in international politics,
you have to have a process in which, before you invade a sovereign
country, there has to be a reason for it or were going to
lead to international chaos.
The Canadian government has far from closed the door on supporting
or even joining a US-led assault on Iraq. Both Chrétien
and Graham have indicated that were the US to demonstrate a tie
between the Iraqi regime and the September 11 terrorist attacks,
Canada would support US retaliatory action, including an invasion
of Iraq. And at his Washington press conference, Graham made the
strongest statement to date of Canadas readiness to participate
in a sequel to the 1991 Gulf War, if only the US could obtain
UN sanction. Speaking of the Iraqi regime, Graham said, If
it is shown that they are amassing weapons of mass destruction
with a vision of using them against someone in the immediate future,
thats a clear and present danger that we and all the world
have to address and wed be willing to address.
In an appearance before a US Senate committee last week, Colin
Powell asserted a US right to wage war against Iraq, if need be
alone and without UN sanction. However, nothing that either US
or Canadian leaders have said precludes the Bush administration
soliciting and winning Canadian support for a UN motion on Iraqi
disarmament, so crafted as to ensure its rejection by Baghdad
and a pretext for a US-led war on Iraq.
That said, Chrétiens remarks do reflect genuine
and widespread fears within the Canadian elite over the Bush administrations
war plans and flouting of international norms, treaties and alliances.
For its part, so strongly did the US object to Chrétiens
comments, that US National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice telephoned
the Prime Minsters top foreign policy advisor to demand
a clarification. Apparently a major sticking point was whether
Chrétiens remarks constituted a warning
to the US or not.
The official opposition Canadian Alliance was quick to condemn
Chrétiens Moscow remarks. Declared Alliance Defence
Critic Leon Benoit, This isnt the time for Canada
to weaken its resolve on the war on terrorism. We should be standing
shoulder to shoulder with our closest ally. True to form,
the National Post took an even stronger anti-government
line, titling its lead editorial last Friday, Soft on Saddam.
Theirs, however, is the minority view within Canadas elite,
at least for now.
The Canadian bourgeoisies predicament
The fears of the Canadian ruling class are three-fold. First,
that a US war against Iraq will redound against the interests
of the major capitalist powers. Thoroughly dangerous as
Iraq is, argued a recent Globe and Mail editorial,
attacking it would be more dangerous still. The likeliest
result of such a campaign ... would be that the country would
break up and destabilize the entire Middle East.
The second fear of Canadas elite is that the USs
refusal to accept the traditional norms of inter-state behaviourencapsulated
in the Bush doctrine that you are either with or against the USis
destabilizing world geo-politics and could ultimately split NATO.
A serious rupture between the US and Europe would pull the rug
out from the Canadian elites traditional strategy of resisting
US pressure and asserting its own interests by promoting multinational
institutions and alliances. Put bluntly, Canada would be pulled
even more tightly into the US orbit, thus further reducing the
ability of the Canadian bourgeoisie to pursue policies designed
to advance its own imperialist interests and ambitions.
Last but not least, Canadas rulers, or at least their
most astute representatives, fear that if the US draws Canada
into a wider warBush and his cabinet cohorts have spoken
of years of military strifeclass conflict at home will be
greatly exacerbated. Already, Canada has come under severe criticism
from the US and NATO for not devoting sufficient state resources
to its military.
Although the Chrétien Liberal government has seconded
the European elites criticisms of US militarism and unilateralism,
the economic and geo-political position of Canadian capital differs
fundamentally from that of its European rivals. The most powerful
sections of the European bourgeoisie are not anxious for a conflict
with the US and like the Chrétien Liberals would probably
prefer that the clock was turned back to before September 11.
But through the deepening integration of the European Union and
the launch of the Euro, they have built a powerful platform from
which to assert their global interests. By contrast, the intensifying
inter-capitalist struggle for markets and profits has driven Canadian
capital into an ever-tighter economic relationship with the US.
Canadas proximity to the US and its dependence on the US
marketsome 40 percent of Canadas GNP is directly tied
to cross-border tradedictates that in any serious crisis
among the imperialist powers, the Canadian bourgeoisie will fall
in line with the US.
Deputy Prime Minister Michael Manley admitted as much in a
recent interview. After voicing opposition to a unilateral US
attack on Iraq, Manley said, Im not going to tell
you that I think, because we try to cooperate with them [the US],
that therefore were going to influence them. ... If theyre
going to make a decision on Iraq for example, its their
decision. Theyll hear us. Theyll hear the British,
the Europeans. Theyll make their own decisions. ... I dont
think we need to agree with them when we think theyre wrong.
At the same time we have to realize that there are certain realities
here. We are on the North American continent.
Canada and the US Northern Command
The crisis confronting the Canadian elite is above all demonstrated
by the fact that even as Chrétien expresses grave reservations
about US policy, his government is pursuing closer military/security
co-operation with the US as the best means to maintain influence
in the world, i.e. to stake the Canadian bourgeoisies claim
to a role and share of the spoils in the post-September 11 reordering
of the world.
Early last month there was a real sense of elation in Canadian
political and media circles when it was announced that Canadian
Armed Forces (CAF) infantrymen would be participating in the US
campaign to hunt down suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives
in southern Afghanistan. The deployment to Kandahar of 750 CAF
personnel marks the first time since the Korean War that Canadian
ground forces have served under US command.
Even more significantly, Canada has begun formal negotiations
with Washington on joining the new Northern Command that the Bush
administration has vowed to have in operation by next October.
The Northern Command will bring together units from all branches
of the US military and other state agencies, including the Coast
Guard, in a corps for homeland defence.
Although no one in Ottawa has dared say so, the US decision
to establish the Northern Command rendered NORAD, the more than
four decades old US-Canadian joint-air defence command,
obsolete, since Washingtons plans call for air, land and
territorial defences to all be brought under the new command structure.
Defence Minister Art Eggleton and the Canadian military are known
to strongly support full Canadian participation in the Northern
Command, which would mean that Canadian naval and land forces,
will join the Canadian air force in being fully integrated with
the US military. The Foreign Affairs Department and Prime Ministers
Office are said to fear participation would lead to a major erosion
of Canadas ability to assert its independent interestsit
would certainly require Canada to drop its opposition to the US
deployment of an anti-ballistic missile system. But, these concerns
notwithstanding, the negotiations have begun.
Eggleton and the proponents of CAF participation argue that
if Canada fails to join the Northern Command it will lose all
influence over US plans to defend the continent and the Canadian
military will lose vital access to advanced training and equipment.
As for the threat to Canadas ability to pursue an independent
foreign policy, or so goes the argument, the Northern Command
is only for defence.
One doesnt need to cite military strategy books to refute
this claim. When a delegation of Canadian senators visited Washington
to discuss the Northern Command, the first question they were
asked was where Canada stood on Bushs characterization of
Iraq, Iran and North Korea as an axis of evil. According
to the Colin Kenny, Chairman of the Canadian Senate Defence Committee,
the US are looking for friends big-time.
Based on the reports he received from the Canadian senators
who made the Washington trip, Globe and Mail columnist
Hugh Winsor concluded: Canada, will inevitably come
under pressure to support US initiatives in Iraq, Iran North
Korea or elsewhere as the price for its participation in
US military operations in Afghanistan and maintaining or
intensifying joint military operations in North America.
In the last two decades of the twentieth century, the traditional
labor organizations and their national programs proved utterly
impotent before capitals global assault on the social position
of the working class. The post-September 11 surge of US militarism
and the intensifying conflicts between the imperialist powers
underscore the urgency of the working class making the program
of international socialism the axis of its struggles.
See Also:
Bush administration confirms plans for
war against Iraq
[16 February 2002]
European foreign ministers attack Bushs
policy
[15 February 2002]
Canadas prime minister accuses opposition
of assisting terrorists
[11 February 2002]
Canadas elite
ponders implications of Fortress America
[6 November 2001]
Canada joins war on
Afghanistan
[16 October 2001]
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