Canada’s international do-gooder image was shattered when it lost its bid for a UN Security Council seat, amid back-stabbing, maple syrup bribes, and Israeli-dictated cover-ups, bemoans Eric Walberg
The
humiliating withdrawal by Canada from the race with Germany and
Portugal for a covetted place on the United Nations Security Council
revealed what close observers have long known -- that the current
Conservative government in Ottawa has nothing but disdain for the world’s tattered peacekeeper and
would most likely just use its seat to serve US and Israel’s agenda.
Four years of Stephen Harper’s government was enough for the world to
turn its back on a once beloved
peacenik.
Dubai’s police chief’s announcement Monday that Canada
is covering up its arrest of a suspect in Israel’s assassination of
Palestinian leader Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in the UAE in January merely
confirms the world’s distrust.
Canada has served on the SC many
times in the past, once each decade since the 1950s, and was never
refused when it ran for a seat. It carved out a highly respected role:
the good cop to its southern neighbour’s bad cop. It refused to break
relations with Cuba after the 1959 revolution, refused to send troops to
Vietnam (unlike another privileged ex-British colony Australia),
recognised China in 1970, and refused to send troops to Iraq in 2003
despite intense pressure from US president George Bush.
One of
Canada’s finest moments was Lester Pearson’s Nobel Peace Prize in 1957
for negotiating the withdrawal from Egypt’s Sinai of Israeli troops,
replaced by UN peacekeepers, including, yes,
Canadians. Israel killed the 14 UN soldiers caught there during its
invasion of Sinai in 1967, though that did not prompt Pearson to return
his prize for helping create a no man's land that proved to be easy prey
for the Israelis.
How did the present sorry state of affairs
come to pass? Canadian Conservatives from the days of Confederation in
1867 until relatively recently stood for an independent Canada, and
old-time Conservatives today are as shocked as anyone. The only arguably
great Conservative leader since Confederation, John Diefenbaker,
refused to station US nuclear weapons on Canadian soil, defying a
furious US president Kennedy.
But the old Progressive
Conservative Party was highjacked in 2003 by predominantly small-town
right-wingers, boosted by the rising evangelical Christian movement, a
repeat of what happened to the US Republican Party in the 1990s. The
fiasco at the UN was “the world’s response to a Canadian foreign
policy designed to please the most reactionary, short-sighted sectors
of the Conservative Party’s base -- evangelical Christian Zionists,
extreme right-wing Jews, Islamophobes, the
military-industrial-academic-complex, mining and oil executives and old
Cold-Warriors,” writes Yves Engler, author of Canada and Israel: Building Apartheid.
In every corner of the world, Ottawa is now following US neocon policies, as if scripted in Bush’s Washington. On environment and the world economy, over the past four year Harper’s government has
-blocked former British PM Gordon Brown’s global tax on international financial transactions
-refused to recognise the human right to water
-refused to sign the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
-blocked consensus at the Rotterdam Convention to ban the toxin chrysotile
asbestos
-supported the environmentally disastrous “tar sands” oil extraction project
-blocked
a binding commitment on rich countries to reduce carbon emissions. It
even suggested the Kyoto Protocol be scrapped at a UN climate conference
session in Bangkok last year, prompting dozens of delegates to walk out
in protest.
Over 3,000 Canadian mines operate in Latin America,
Africa (especially the Congo), India and other unfortunate third world
venues, and are far and away the world’s worst offenders in terms of
environmental destruction and human rights abuses, according to the
Canadian Centre for the Study of Resource Conflict, but these companies
are the Conservatives’ close friends and supporters. At the G8 in June,
the Conservatives used Canada’s prominence as host to call in the G8 to
criticise war-wracked Congo for its meagre attempts to gain a greater
share of its vast mineral wealth, which is virtually untaxed and has
been
stolen from under the Congolese for more than a century.
Targetting
poor Congo elsewhere, Ottawa obstructed international efforts to
reschedule Congo’s foreign debt, the legacy of three decades of
US-backed Joseph Mobuto’s dictatorship. Canadian officials “have a
problem with what’s happened with a Canadian company,” Congolese
Information Minister Lambert Mende said, referring to his government’s
move to revoke a Canadian mining concession acquired during the
1998-2003 war. “The Canadian government wants to use the Paris Club [of
debtor nations] in order to resolve a particular problem.”
The
Conservatives love the mining companies so much they have even stalled a
Liberal proposal that the mining companies themselves agreed to at
their Mining Association of Canada under pressure from civil society
groups “to make diplomatic and financial support for resource companies
operating overseas contingent upon socially
responsible conduct”. The Conservatives nod and wink that it’s enough
to rely on “voluntary standards” to improve Canadian mining companies’
notorious behaviour.
The relations between Harper’s Conservatives
and Bush’s Republicans were so close, there was serious speculation
that then-foreign minister Peter MacKay was having a love affair with
his US counterpart secretary of state Condoleezza Rice. Moving on from
his Foreign Affairs, the Canadian Romeo was made minister of defence in
2008, where he resolved to spend $400 billion over 25 years to increase
Canada’s armed forces in line with US-NATO demands.
In 2009, the
so-called Canadian Afghan detainee abuse scandal erupted, when Canadian
diplomat in Afghanistan Richard Colvin, appalled by his own complicity
there in the torture of hundreds if not thousands of innocent Afghans, blew the
whistle. He submitted documents to a House of Commons Committee
proving both Harper and MacKay knew of the torture. Even now, Canadian
Joint Task Force 2 commandos regularly take part in illegal night-time
assassination raids.
The government’s answer? Declare the documents top secret and dismiss parliament, just as it did in 2008
when the opposition agreed to join forces and replace the minority
Conservative government, as is their right in a parliamentary democracy.
“It’s hard to find a country friendlier to Israel than Canada these days,” chirps Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. Stephen Harper’s Conservatives
-called
Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon a “measured response” (Two Canadian
UN peacekeepers were targeted and
killed by Israeli in the invasion. Harper refused to protest, asking
rhetorically in parliament what they were doing there in the first
place.)
-refused to condemn the invasion of Gaza in December 2008 or the siege of Gaza (the only “Nay” at the UN Human Rights Council)
-refused to condemn the Israeli murder of nine members of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla in May
-opposed
an attempted IAEA probe of Israel’s nuclear facilities as part of an
effort to create a nuclear-weapons-free Middle East.
-cut off UN humanitarian aid to Gaza because it was going through the Hamas government there.
That
$15 million for UNRWA-Gaza was not actually cancelled by Harper; it was
cleverly transferred to Operation PROTEUS, a plan to train a
Palestinian security force “to ensure that the Palestinian Authority
maintains control of the West Bank against Hamas,” according to Canadian
Ambassador to Israel Jon Allen. Boasts Minister of State for Foreign
Affairs of the Americas Peter Kent, this is the country’s “second
largest deployment after Afghanistan”.
While Canada trains
police to contain Palestinian anger, it is rapidly expanding relations
with the Palestinians’ colonial masters. Minister of International Trade
Peter Van Loan just held talks in Tel Aviv to further expand the
Canada-Israel Free Trade Agreement. Already robust, Canadian-Israeli
trade has more than doubled since its implementation in 1997. Canada
even allows goods manufactured in occupied territories by illegal
settlers to be labelled “Made in Israel”.
Canada and Israel
signed a far-reaching public security cooperation “partnership” in 2008
to “protect their respective countries’ population, assets and interests
from common threats”. Israel security agents now officially assist the
RCMP and CSIS in profiling Canadians citizens who are Muslims and
monitoring individuals and/or organisations
in Canada involved in supporting the rights of Palestinians. The barring of British MP George Galloway from entering Canada in 2009 was surely at the behest of now official Mossad advisers.
Not
only did Congo get a drubbing at the G8 in Toronto this June, so did
Iran. Kent told his confreres, “It’s a matter of timing and it’s a
matter of how long we can wait without taking more serious pre-emptive
action.” Read: Off with their heads! “An attack on Israel would be
considered an attack on Canada.” Read: Canada is a province of Israel.
Canadian naval vessels are already “exercising” off Iran’s coast,
waiting for the fun to begin.
Harper and MacKay have hosted NATO
Arctic war games aimed at the “aggressive” Russians, and announced plans
to spend $9 billion to buy F-35 joint strike “stealth” fighter jets to
“meet the threats
of the 21st century”.
The militarisation of Canadian foreign
policy extends from the Arctic to earthquake-wracked Haiti, which got
2,000 Canadian troops within hours, bumping several Heavy Urban Search
Rescue Teams, which were left behind. Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence
Cannon later explained that the teams were not needed. Canada was part
of the coup that overthrew and exiled Haiti’s elected president
Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 2004, and the Conservatives happily support
the ban on his political party Fanmi Lavalits in upcoming elections.
Similar to its policy in Palestine, Ottawa is spending tens of millions
of dollars to train Haitian prison guards and police.
Like its
policy in Haiti, Ottawa implicitly supported the coup against
left-leaning Honduran president Manuel Zelaya in 2009 and continues to
provide aid and train its military. Canada was the only country that did
not explicitly call for Zelaya’s return to power -- even
Obama did that much.
“Americas” Foreign Minister Kent’s kudos
are for Colombia and his criticism is aimed at Venezuela: “Democratic
space within Venezuela has been shrinking and in this election year,
Canada is very concerned about the rights of all Venezuelans to
participate in the democratic process.” Venezuela’s Ambassador to the
Organisation of American States Roy Matos was nonplussed: “I am talking
of a Canada governed by an ultra right that closed its parliament for
months to evade an investigation over the violation of human rights -- I
am talking about torture and assassinations by its soldiers in
Afghanistan.”
I need not continue this sad litany. If you want to
know Harper’s position on any foreign policy issue, just ask: “What
would Bush say?” or in the case of MacKay, “What would Condie say?” Of
course, even before this neocon rape of Canada’s body politic, Canadian
foreign policy never really
strayed very far into the woods. The Pearson legacy of “humanitarian
imperialism” endures in his Liberal successors Trudeau, Chretien and now
Michael Ignatieff, though the latter, as an American scholar and
supporter of the Iraq invasion, is surely pushing the limits.
It’s
not even clear that Harper gave a hoot about the UNSC seat. Was there
any soul-searching after the defeat? Perhaps a belated acknowledgment
that Canada has veered just a tad from its purported role as everyone’s
favourite peacenik? No. Instead, the Conservatives attacked
stuffed-shirt Ignatieff for scuttling the bid with his criticisms of
“Canadian” foreign policy, though no one at the UN needed any prompting,
and there is absolutely nothing “Canadian” about what Harper’s neocon
crew are up to.
Israeli-American analyst Israel Matzav laments,
“Canada’s candidacy was voted down because of its close relations with
Israel.” Perhaps Matzav,
Harper and the like should smell the coffee percolating around the
world these days. Israeli colonialism and US neocolonialism are
increasingly out of favour, at last.