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Behind the posturing
Canada has decided to join in war on Iraq
By Keith Jones
14 February 2003
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Canadian Prime Jean Chrétien and his Liberal government
maintain that they have yet to take any decision on Canadas
participation in a US-led invasion of Iraq. This is a bare-faced
lie.
Regardless of what happens at the United Nations Security Council
in the coming days, Canada and the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF)
will join the US war against Iraq.
The Chrétien Liberals hope that the US will succeed
in bullying and bribing the great powers on the UN Security Council
into sanctioning war and this for two reasons. First, because
they calculate UN authorization would serve as a pacific and internationalist
fig-leaf for the US war drive and thus reduce antiwar sentiment.
Second, because they desperately hope the dispute between the
US and the principal European powers can be bridged and the system
of multilateral relations that has long-served Canadas elite
in offsetting US economic and geopolitical power preserved.
That the Chrétien government and the Canadian military
are already irreversibly committed to participation in a war of
aggression against Iraq can be readily demonstrated by a series
of ministerial statements and government actions and admissions.
* The senior CAF personnel who have been working with US and
British military planners on Iraqi invasion plans recently transferred
from the US Central Command in Florida to Qatar, the Gulf state
slotted to serve as the nerve centre for the coming US invasion.
Last month Defence Minister John McCallum conceded that CAF
leaders had been excluded from some planning meetings, because
of uncertainty as to whether Canada would participate in military
action against Iraq. But they were invited back late last year
after the Liberal government provided the US with assurancesassurances
that McCallum refused to specifyas to Canadas readiness
to participate in the war.
* On orders from the government-whip, Liberal MPs joined Tuesday
with their counterparts in the ultra-right-wing Canadian Alliance
to defeat a motion that stipulated the House of Commons should
consider supporting an attack on Iraq only if the UN Security
Council sanctions military action.
Spokesmen for the governing party claimed it had opposed the
motion, which was tabled by the indépendantiste
Bloc Québécois and supported by the social democrats
of the New Democratic Party as well as the Conservatives, because
it wanted to uphold cabinets prerogative to order military
action without House of Commons approval.
In a pre-Christmas interview Chrétien had suggested
Canada would only participate in a war authorized by the UN Security
Council. Since then, however, he and his ministers have repeatedly
indicated that this is merely a preference and that if the hypothetical
becomes reality and the US acts without a Security Council resolution
authorizing military action, Canada will rally to the Bush administrations
side. Thus Chrétien has claimed that Resolution 1441 already
provides all the legal sanction needed to attack and occupy Iraq.
* Chrétien and Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham
have been at pains to disassociate themselves from the French
and German governments stand that more time is needed for
the inspection process, condemning their call for a tripling of
the number of inspectors and their blocking of a NATO deployment
in support of Turkeyfrom which an attack on northern Iraq
is to be launched.
* A Canadian officer has been placed in charge of a multination
naval task force that is patrolling the Persian Gulf looking for
Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters fleeing Afghanistan. The task force
works in close concert with a US aircraft carrier group that has
been sent to the Gulf region to prepare for an imminent attack
on Iraq. In fact, the CAFs Roger Girouard will report directly
on the task forces work to US Admiral Barry Costello, who
heads a flotilla led by the aircraft carrier USS Constellation.
* Ottawa and Washington announced last week that US President
George W. Bush will pay a state visit to Canada in May. Meetings
between US presidents and Canadian prime ministers have been routine
since the late 1930s. But the timing of the announcement and the
often frosty relations between the Bush administration and the
Chrétien Liberals suggest that it is part of a series of
quid pro quos as the Canadian government dots the is
and crosses the ts on its participation in a US war
against Iraq.
Much of Canadas corporate media and the Official Opposition
Canadian Alliance have denounced the Chrétien government
for not being even more supportive of the US war drive. While
Canadian Alliance leader Stephen Harper recently conceded that
he now expects Canada to participate in a war against Iraq come
what may, he and much of Canadas establishment continue
to accuse the Liberals of allowing Britain and Australia to forge
a privileged relationship with Washington at the expense of the
economic and geopolitical interests of Canadas elite.
The Alliance was thus quick to condemn Wednesdays announcement
that Canada will send 1,500 troops this summer to Afghanistan
to participate in a UN sanctioned force that is serving to prop
up the countrys newly installed pro-US government. According
to the Liberals critics, the Afghan deployment will mean
that Canada will have few infantry to contribute to the war on
Iraq.
This may well prove false. Chrétien has frequently surprised
his right-wing critics by suddenly adopting their policiesas
with the mid-1990s conversion to massive social spending cuts,
the Liberals adoption of the Alliances tax cutting
program just before the last federal election, and Canadas
full-scale participation in the US war on Afghanistan. Moreover,
even if Canada initially sends only a small infantry force, it
has other military assets that the US is known to want and that
the Chrétien government clearly does intend to deployspecial
forces, warplanes and warships.
By announcing its intention to deploy large numbers of Canadian
troops under the UN flag, the Liberals hope to mollify public
opposition to Canada supporting and participating in a US-led
war on Iraq.
This cynical maneuver is in the tradition of Canadian peace-keeping.
While the Liberals and social democrats of the NDP have long promoted
the claimthat through the UN, Canada has been and can be
a force for peaceCanadian peace-keeping operations have
never been about peace and social justice. Rather they have been
about containing conflicts that threatened NATO unity (Suez and
Cyprus) or managing Cold War conflicts (as in Vietnam, where Canadian
peacekeepers spied for the Americans).
Historian Jack Granatstein is among those in Canadas
elite who believe that its peacekeeping mythology is now a barrier
to reorganizing the countrys military and foreign policy
in a new post-Cold War world of intensifying economic and geopolitical
rivalry. Yet he readily admits Canadian peacekeeping served US
interests, while at the same time allowing Canada to leverage
its relative small military and geopolitical power into a place
at the table in great powers deliberations.
As for Chrétien, he remains convinced that the best
way to mobilize support for war is by invoking the name of the
UN. His hope, for the reasons mentioned at the beginning of this
article, is that the Security Council ultimately sanctions the
US aggression against Iraq. But if it doesnt, he calculates
he will be able to win Washingtons favor and ensure Canada
a place in the organizing of a post-Hussein Iraq and Middle East
by announcing that Canadapurportedly one of the worlds
pre-eminent boosters of the UNis now convinced of the wisdom
and legality of unilateral US military action.
See Also:
Canada intensifies support
for US war on Iraq
[15 January 2003]
Aide to Canadian prime
minister replaced for calling Bush a moron
[28 November 2002]
Canada: Thousands
demonstrate against war on Iraq
[19 November 2002]
Canada falls in line
behind US war drive
[15 October 2002]
Canadas elite
clamours for huge increase in military spending
[8 October 2002]
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