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Canada: Martin wraps himself in the Maple Leaf after scolding
from US envoy
By Keith Jones
16 December 2005
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Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin has increased the volume
and intensity of his nationalist rhetoric following a mid-election
campaign scolding from the US ambassador.
During a visit to a British Columbia lumberyard Wednesday,
Martin said he will continue to criticize the US for the heavy
tariffs it imposes on Canadian softwood lumber exports and for
its environmental policies. I am not going to be dictated
to as to the subjects that I should raise. I will make sure that
Canada speaks with an independent voice now, tomorrow and always,
and you should demand nothing less from your prime minister.
Later Martin, who has led Canadas 12-year-old Liberal
government since December 2003, told reporters, Were
not going to let up until Canadian companies are repaid the tariffs
that were improperly collected on our lumber and until our neighbours
respect the fact that free trade must be fair trade.
Martins comments came in response to blunt public criticism
from US Ambassador David Wilkinscriticism that was unprecedented
in that it was delivered in the midst of a federal election campaign.
Speaking Tuesday at a Canadian Club luncheon, Wilkins interrupted
what appeared to be extemporaneous remarks to read from a prepared
text. Said Wilkins, It may be smart election-year politics
to thump your chest and constantly criticize your friend and your
No. 1 trading partner. But it is a slippery slope, and all of
us should hope that it doesnt have a long-term impact on
our relationship.
Although Wilkins did not refer to Martin by name, it is patently
obvious that the Bush administration was intent on delivering
him and his government a message. The White House was shocked
and angered in February 2005 when Martin, who campaigned for the
Liberal Party leadership on a promise of improving relations with
the Bush administration, announced that Canada would not formally
join the USs geo-politically provocative, anti-ballistic
missile defence program.
Last week Canadas ambassador to Washington Frank McKenna
was given a dressing down from the White House for comments Martin
had made at an international conference on climate change in Montreal.
Speaking before diplomats and scientists from around the world,
Martin said that the USs failure to adhere to the Kyoto
accord on reducing greenhouse gas emissions indicated a lack of
global conscience.
Wilkins prepared text included this rejoinder: I
would respectfully submit to you that when it comes to a global
conscience, the United States is walking the walk. And when
it comes to climate change, we are making significant progress,
greater progress than many of those who have been most critical
of the US. The latter barb was a reference to the fact that
over the last decade greenhouse gas emissions have risen more
rapidly in Canada than in the US, notwithstanding the Liberal
governments claims to support Kyoto.
Wilkins intervention was ordered and no doubt scripted
by the highest levels of the Bush administration. US State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack defended Wilkins remarks, saying
that the ambassador had spoken as a representative of the
US government.
Posturing, hypocrisy and the Iraq war
There is a large measure of electioneering and hypocrisy in
Martins anti-Bush stance. Since 1993, the Liberals have
won four elections by railing against the right-wing policies
of their principal opponent. Then, when ensconced in power, the
Liberals have pursued policies similar to those advocated by their
Progressive Conservative, Reform Party, Canadian Alliance and
new Conservative Party rivalswhether it be massive social
spending cuts, tax cuts for big business and the well-to-do, the
regressive Goods and Sales Tax or the North America Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA).
More fundamentally, in so far as Martin and the Liberal government
do oppose certain policies of the Bush administration, it is from
the standpoint of defending the predatory interests of the Canadian
ruling class. Martin may shun the bellicose rhetoric of the Bush
White House, but he has moved to expand and rearm the Canadian
Armed Forces (CAF) with a view to upholding the interests of Canadas
corporate elite on the world stage.
For electoral reasons, Martin finds it useful to play up the
fact that Jean Chrétien, his predecessor as Liberal leader
and prime minister, decided to cancel plans to have the Canadian
Armed Forces join the illegal, 2003 US-British invasion of Iraq.
Chrétiens eleventh-hour decision did not mean
that Canada failed to provide valuable assistance to the US invasion.
To free up US troops for the invasion and court favor with the
Bush administration, Chrétien announced a further CAF deployment
to Afghanistan in February 2003. And a Canadian-led, international
anti-terrorist Persian Gulf naval task-force actively
cooperated with the Pentagon during the invasion.
Martin was out of cabinet in March 2003 when Chrétien
chose not to commit CAF personnel to the Iraq invasion. Publicly
he supported Chrétiens position, but Martin also
let it be known that had he been in charge the decision would
likely have been different. On becoming prime minister, Martin
named David Pratt, the most prominent supporter of the US invasion
in the Liberal parliamentary caucus, his defence minister, and
he has recruited as a star Liberal candidate in the current election
Michael Ignatieff, a leading liberal intellectual apologist for
the US invasion of Iraq and the Bush administrations assault
on civil liberties.
Nevertheless, Martin, like Chrétien before him, has
had considerable success in identifying himself with the strong,
popular anti-war current and in claiming that this sets him and
the Liberals apart from the Conservatives, who in March 2003 denounced
the Liberal government for not standing with Canadas traditional
allies, the US and Britain.
That said, there are real and growing tensions between the
Canadian and US elites, as evidenced by the repeated spats that
Chrétien and now Martin have had with the Bush administration.
A crisis in Canada-US relations
The Canadian ruling class has been riled by the Bush administrations
readiness to run roughshod over the system of international law
and multilateral alliances that Washington helped put in place
in the decades after World War II. The Canadian elite was a strong
supporter of Cold War multilateralism, because through various
inter-imperialist alliances it was able to gain weight well beyond
Canadas economic and military clout and because such alliances
gave it a means of limiting and deflecting economic and political
pressure from the US.
Especially disturbing for Canadas corporate elite has
been Washingtons refusal to accept repeated decisions by
NAFTA panels and tribunals striking down the tariffs that the
US has imposed on Canadian softwood lumber exports. A lot of money
is at stake. Washington has collected some $4 billion US in tariffs,
money it is threatening to hand over to US lumber producers. But
even more significant in the eyes of Canadas corporate and
political elite is the apparent refusal of the US to abide by
the trade rules established under NAFTA.
In the face of considerable opposition from within its own
ranks, the Canadian ruling class effected a major change in its
class strategy with the 1988 Canada-US Free Trade Agreement and
then NAFTA. Through these trade pacts, the most powerful sections
of Canadian capital sought to secure guaranteed access to the
US market, under conditions where the world economy was fracturing
into three large zonesNorth America, the European Union
and East Asia.
But the disruption of border traffic after the September 11,
2001 attacks and the softwood lumber and other trade disputes
have demonstrated that the Canadian elite is far from having secured
privileged access to the US market.
The Canadian ruling class was quite willing to look the other
way when the Bush administration trashed international law to
invade Iraq. It is quite another thing when Washingtons
bullying and unilateralism threaten its own profits and strategic
interests.
One indication of just how angry and fearful the Canadian elite
is of the Bush administrations unilateralism is that both
the Liberals and Conservatives have in recent months said that
if the US is not prepared to address Canadas concerns over
the enforceability of NAFTA decisions, Canada should aggressively
pursue closer economic relations with China and India.
Like Martin, Conservative leader Stephen Harper has found it
politic to put some distance between himself and the Bush administration.
Earlier this week, before Wilkins had scolded Martin, Harper said
that a Conservative government would be ready to reopen the issue
of Canadian participation in the US missile defence shield, but
would not deploy Canadian troops to Iraq.
Following the exchange between Wilkins and Martin, Harper accused
the prime minister of grandstanding and suggested a Conservative
government would be more willing than the Liberals to confront
the Bush administration over the softwood lumber tariff. Harper
compared Martin to a schoolchild who is always name-calling
from a safe distance but has no intention of actually getting
into a fight. The prime minister, chided Harper, couldnt
throw a punch to save his life.
(One of the chief arguments that Harper and his Conservatives
made before and immediately following the outbreak of the Iraq
war was that the Liberals refusal to join the invasion had
damaged Canadas economic interests, because it would strengthen
US opposition to making a deal with Canada over softwood lumber.)
The election posturing aside, the Conservatives speak for a
section of the Canadian bourgeoisie that believes the interests
of Canadian capital can best be secured by aggressively pursuing
the role of Washingtons most faithful ally. The Liberals
speak for another faction that accepts the inevitability of a
closer economic and geo-political partnership with US imperialism,
but is seeking a means of continuing to pursue the multi-lateralism
of the pre-2001 era, so as to better be able to advance Canadian
capitals independent, imperialist interests. This faction
also fears the impact on class relations of Canada playing a more
active role in US overseas military adventures and of the refashioning
of Canadian nationalist ideology that this would entail. (Since
the 1960s, the ruling elite has promoted a Canadian nationalist
ideology that contrasts a pacific, purportedly more socially responsible
Canadian capitalism to the rapacious dollar-republic to the south.)
Workers in Canada must oppose all ruling class factions in
the debate over Canadas relations with the United States
and develop a joint struggle with workers in the US, Mexico and
around the world against all sections of capital and all forms
of imperialism.
See Also:
Week one of Canadas federal election
campaignPosturing, demagogy and reaction
[6 December 2005]
Canada: Liberal government
falls setting stage for January election
[29 November 2005]
Canada-US frictions intensify
after Ottawa balks at joining missile defence
[7 March 2005]
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