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NDP rallies to the defence of Canadian imperialism
By David Adelaide
5 January 2007
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Canadas nominally social-democratic New Democratic Party
(NDP) has in recent months made a concerted effort to paint itself
as an opponent of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) mission in Afghanistan,
hoping that widespread anti-war sentiment among the Canadian populationand
opposition to the Afghanistan intervention in particularwill
redound to its electoral benefit.
At the same timeand speaking out of the other side of
its mouththe NDP has taken great pains to ensure that its
stance on the Afghanistan intervention is not misinterpreted by
the elite as a more general opposition to Canadian militarism
and imperialism. This has found graphic expression in a series
of recent NDP motions in Parliament, each adapting in some way
to the military and to the right-wing campaign, led by the minority
Conservative government of Stephen Harper, to reorient Canadian
foreign policy in an aggressively militarist direction.
Most recently, when the Bloc Québécois briefly
threatened to bring down Harpers government with a non-confidence
motion concerning the Afghanistan mission, the NDP attacked the
Blocs maneuver from the right. NDP leader Jack Layton called
the BQs threat mere political games and said
that it was more important to get some results out of this
Parliament or, in other words, to continue to prop up the
Harper Conservatives.
Let there be no mistake: the NDPs stance on the war in
Afghanistan is a political trap, aimed at containing public opposition
to Canadian imperialism within the limits set by the Canadian
political establishment. All of the parties currently represented
in the House of Commons support the use of Canadian military force
for geo-political and economic advantage, even if they sometimes
differ sharply on the details.
When the former Liberal government of Paul Martin redeployed
CAF personnel to the more volatile southern region of Afghanistan,
they did so with the full support of the NDP. When the newly-crowned
Harper Conservatives pushed through a 2-year extension and expansion
of that same mission, the NDP opposed this maneuver, but from
the standpoint that the expanded Canadian involvement in Afghanistan
might prevent Canada from carrying out other military interventions
(such as in Darfur or Haiti).
In August 2006, as mounting casualties called increasing attention
to the brutal and colonialist nature of what was transpiring in
Afghanistan, the NDP issued a call for Canadian forces to be withdrawn
by February 2007. For the benefit of ruling class ears, NDP leader
Jack Layton was quick to specify that the call for withdrawal
was being made only because the intervention was not the
right mission for Canada, was not clearly defined,
and lacked an exit strategy.
Explicitly invoking the peacekeeping tradition
that has long been the cover for the projection of Canadian military
force in pursuit of geo-political influence, Layton went on to
criticize the Afghanistan intervention as unbalanced in
that it focuses on counter-insurgency and not peace keeping.
The NDP studiously avoided specifying in detail what exactly
was to be withdrawn, thus leaving the door open to an ever so
slightly repackaged deployment of the Canadian military. Layton
emphasized that we must continue to work multilaterally
to get tough on terrorism and that issues like combating
global poverty, international development assistance, reforming
international institutions, peace building and securing human
rights are all part of the solution.
Despite the limited nature of the NDP proposal, it nonetheless
provoked a firestorm of negative commentary from a political and
media establishment extremely sensitive to the slightest criticismextremely
sensitive because it is acutely aware of how little popular support
there is for the rapid rightward shift in Canadian politics that
has taken place during the past year. The response of the NDP
has been to attempt to distance itself from the controversy by
a series of parliamentary motions that support the
Canadian military and its actions.
The first of these was the Veterans First Motion,
introduced by the NDP and passed in early November, which makes
small adjustments to the regulations concerning pensions for spouses
and widows of CAF soldiers, as well as changes to the pension
regulations for members of the military released early due to
injuries suffered on the job. Then, later in the same month, the
NDP seized on an initiative spearheaded by the Dominion Institute,
a right-wing think-tank devoted to promoting Canadian nationalism.
The Institute had succeeded in collecting some 90,000 signatures
on a petition calling for the last Canadian veteran of the first
World War (or rather, the last WWI veteran resident in Canada,
since two others survive abroad) to be given a state funeral.
The transparent hope of those backing the petition was for a national
spectacle that would be used to revive public support for Canadian
nationalism and for Canadas military traditions.
According to a Globe & Mail editorial supporting
the petition, There is but one way to impress upon the minds
of every Canadian, old and young, the scale of what Canadian soldiers
accomplished during the First World War. There is but one way
to ensure that the concept of remembrance is more than a generalized
duty to a proud military heritage and is recognized for what it
is: a way to give thanks for the gift of freedom given many peoples
and the attainment of nationhood for our own.
The NDP jumped at this chance to demonstrate its support for
Canadian militarism and introduced a motion for just such a national
spectacle, winning the unanimous support of the other parties
in the House of Commons. According to Layton, the NDP motion and
consequent state funeral would afford Canadians the opportunity
to collectively celebrate the sacrifice of all WWI veterans.
It is worth pausing to note exactly what is intended here.
According to the NDP leader, the First World War is something
to collectively celebrate. The NDP is here playing
an accessory role in a campaign of deception in which the war
is supposed, as in the Globe & Mail editorial cited
above, to have brought the gift of freedom and the
attainment of nationhood.
There is absolutely no sense in which the First World War,
the prolonged and barbaric massacre of millions of individuals
in a brutal competition for markets and territories, was a war
for freedom. On the contrary, the basis for the war
lay in the fact that global economic development had outgrown
the limits of the system of nation states. Each of the major capitalist
powers now fought to ensure that this contradiction would be solved
at the expense of all the others.
As Leon Trotsky explained in his seminal The War and the
International, written immediately after the outbreak of the
war and directed primarily against the socialist parliamentarians
of the Second International (the political ancestors of Layton
and the NDP) who had rallied behind their respective countries
war efforts,
All talk of the present bloody clash being a work of
national defense is either hypocrisy or blindness. On the contrary,
the real, objective significance of the War is the breakdown of
the present national economic centers, and the substitution of
a world economy in its stead. But the way the governments propose
to solve this problem of imperialism is not through the intelligent,
organized cooperation of all of humanitys producers, but
through the exploitation of the worlds economic system by
the capitalist class of the victorious country; which country
is by this War to be transformed from a Great Power into the World
Power (The
War and the International, 1914).
For the Canadian ruling class, the war was primarily a chance
to assert itself as a major power independent of Britain. Having
pushed during the war for Canada to be given a co-equal role with
Britain in the managing of the British Empire, Canadian Prime
Minister Robert Borden successfully demanded at the wars
end for Canada to have an independent seat at the Paris peace
conference and the League of Nations. It is this that the Globe
& Mail now lauds as the attainment of nationhood.
In pursuit of this aim, 60,000 Canadian soldiers were thrown to
their deaths on European battlefields, with a further 172,000
wounded.
The war effort had been accompanied, moreover, by a sweeping
assault on democratic rights. At the wars outset the government
had imposed the War Measures Act, leading to the confinement of
thousands in internment camps, and it but rigged the 1917 election
in order to impose conscription. Soldiers serving overseas were
allowed to freely choose any Canadian constituency in which to
vote, rather than their home district, and the right to vote was
suddenly extended to womenbut only those who had close relatives
in military service overseas.
The peacekeeping trap
A fundamental political issue underlies the ongoing tack and
weave of the NDP on Afghanistan. Where and when the NDP argues
for restraints on the use of Canadas military power, this
does not take the form of a principled opposition to Canadian
imperialism but rather that of an appeal to a certain conception
of Canadas national interest.
In an era characterized by unbridled US militarism and increasing
inter-imperialist conflict, sections of the Canadian elite have
come to see the peacekeeping tradition as an albatross
around their neck. For these layers, who find their political
voice in Harpers Conservatives (or in a section of the Liberal
Party), direct participation in US-led wars is seen as the only
way to retain international influence and have a hope of sharing
in the spoils.
Meanwhile the NDP (together with the other section of the Liberal
Party) argue that the peacekeeping traditiona
key element in the nationalist ideology and foreign policy posture
of the Canadian ruling class during the previous periodhas
not yet outlived its usefulness. There is an organic relationship
between this position and the Canadian nationalism that has long
been the NDPs mainstay: the independent foreign policy
that Layton and the NDP champion is nothing other than the previous
imperialist strategy of the Canadian ruling class.
Far from being something opposed to war and imperialism, Canadian
peacekeeping represented a major contribution to sustaining
the international imperialist order during the Cold War. A full
member of NATO and NORAD, Canada sent troops to police conflicts
between NATO allies, or between the US and the Soviet Union, lest
those conflicts assumed forms damaging to the system of multilateral
relations in which the Canadian bourgeoisie had invested so heavily.
For the Canadian ruling class, the peacekeeping arrangement
was simultaneously a way of gaining international influence, offsetting
the greater influence of the US, and maintaining military capabilities.
The struggle against war will not be advanced one iota by appealing
to the Canadian elite to return to their prior strategy. To be
successful, the fight against a reinvigorated Canadian imperialism
has to be placed on a higher and deeper foundation: direct collaboration
with workers in the US and around the world in an international
socialist movement that will end war, oppose attacks on democratic
rights, and place economic development under the control of the
working class.
See Also:
Bloc Québécois
support for Canadas Afghan war exposed
[27 Dec 2006]
Protests demand immediate
withdrawal of Canadian troops from Afghanistan
[30 Sept 2006]
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