Manley Report: Ottawa Gets Advice On Prolonging Afghanistan War
by Roger Annis
Troubled by the failures of the U.S./NATO war in Afghanistan, the Canadian government commissioned a review last October of the war and Canada’s participation.
A panel of five corporate and political figures was cobbled together in an effort to reach broader consensus among the war’s proponents.
Canada is an enthusiastic partner in the war, but there are growing
concerns among the country’s elite over the failure to defeat the
patriotic resistance in Afghanistan. Also, a slim but stubborn majority
of the Canadian population remains opposed to what appears to be a
futile and criminal war.
The governing Conservative Party chose a prominent figure in the
opposition Liberal Party, John Manley, to head the panel. The Liberals
took Canada into a more aggressive combat role in Afghanistan in May
2005, in the southern province of Kandahar, but some Liberals are
getting cold feet and others are tempted to use the failure of the
mission for short-term political gain at home.
The review panel’s report, delivered January 22, has sparked an intense
political debate. It has also forged a new, bipartisan agreement
between the Conservatives and Liberals.
What the report says
All five panel members had previously voiced support to the war, so
their pro-war recommendations were no surprise. Among the proposals
contained in their report are:
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Continued commitment to the combat role in Kandahar until at least 2009.
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Insistence on more support from other NATO countries as a pre-condition
for Canada to extend its combat mission beyond 2009. The report says at
least 1,000 more troops are needed. With such increased support, Manley
says the war can be won “in less than ten years.â€
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Acquisition of helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles at an
additional cost of hundreds of millions of dollars. Currently, Canada
relies on NATO allies for air support to its ground troops.
Gloomy outlook
The report has been welcomed enthusiastically by the war’s proponents.
An editorial in the January 23 National Post urged Harper to use the
report as a basis to launch a “reinvigorated mission†in Afghanistan.
But many supporters are less than enthusiastic about the war’s accomplishments to date.
Paraphrasing the report, National Post columnist Don Martin says
Canada’s “too-few-by-half combat troops†are, “ill-equipped, poorly
coordinated and losing the battle to the enemy while failing to deliver
adequate humanitarian aid or reconstruction help to average Afghans.â€
Martin, who has traveled extensively in Afghanistan, says the failure
of the U.S./NATO war is a “sad reality.â€
A lengthy article in the Globe and Mail on March 1 painted a gloomy
picture. Headlined, “Afghanistan: Facing the Ugly Truthâ€, the article
quoted from a recent survey of the situation by the Atlantic Council of
the United States, a prestigious American think tank. “Make no
mistake,†read its survey, “NATO is not winning in Afghanistan. Unless
this reality is understood and action is taken promptly, the future of
Afghanistan is bleak, with regional and global impact."
The most vocal critic among backers of the war has been the Senlis
Council, a European-based think tank that conducts extensive surveying
as well as charitable work in Afghanistan. In a series of detailed
studies of the Canadian role in Afghanistan issued in 2006 and 2007, it
flatly states that the war will be lost unless new approaches are made
to win friends among ordinary Afghans.
“The fact stands that Canada is losing its war in Afghanistan,†writes
Martin. “It’s high time other nations measured up as worthy allies
against global terrorism – without being blackmailed by our bluff.â€
Focus on NATO
The “other nations†referred to by Martin are Canada’s European allies
in NATO. Their role in Afghanistan is a central focus of Manley’s
recommendations, and a controversial one. The report says Canada should
vigorously pressure and shame its allies in Europe into committing more
troops to Afghanistan and engaging more actively in combat.
In a January 23 editorial entitled, “Demand the help of NATO partners,â€
the Globe and Mail writes, “What Mr. Manley proposes is a game of
diplomatic chicken, but it is one that Mr. Harper cannot avoid.â€
The editorial continues, “…it is a pitiful abdication of responsibility
for larger countries such as France and Germany to refuse to assign
another 1,000 (soldiers)…â€
But what if the “allies†are not persuaded, or if they don’t take
kindly to being blamed for the war’s failings? It’s a dilemma that
Manley and the government are acutely aware of. They are careful to
avoid describing their demands on NATO as blackmail or threats. The
preferred term is “applying leverage.â€
Canadian aid
Two issues particularly troubled the review panel – the failure of
Canadian “aid†in Afghanistan, and the failure of the government to
effectively “communicate†the good news of the war to the Canadian
population. The report makes some frank criticism on these two fronts.
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“Talk to CIDA (The Canadian International Development Agency) and you
will hear all manner of good things about the work it is contributing
to in Afghanistan,†wrote the Globe and Mail on January 24. But those
seeking specifics on what Canada’s “aid†has accomplished “are left
exasperated.â€
The newspaper echoes what the Senlis Council has reported for several
years, which is that Canada has nothing to show for the more than one
billion dollars in “aid†money it has spent in Afghanistan since 2002.
Ordinary Afghans remained mired in a terrible poverty, and they are
frequent victims of indiscriminate bombings and military offensives by
Canada and other NATO forces.
By all accounts, humanitarian conditions are deteriorating. Malalai
Joya, the suspended member of the Afghan parliament, recently gave a
grim picture of ordinary life in her country to the British newspaper
The Independent. “The economic situation is also terrible – official
figures put unemployment at around 60 percent but in reality it is much
closer to 90 percent. Hundreds died in the winter from hypothermia, and
women were so poor that they tried to sell their babies because they
could not feed them.â€
Senator Colin Kenny, chair of the Standing Senate Committee on National
Security and Defence, says getting explanations from CIDA is like
grasping at air. He told CBC Radio’s The Current on January 22, “We
haven’t been able to find out what they (CIDA) are doing,†despite
extensive research by his committee. When members of his committee went
to Afghanistan to examine aid projects firsthand, they were prevented
from doing so by the Canadian military, who said it was “too dangerousâ€
to venture outside the barbed wire military compound where they were
housed.
Kenny said that when his committee met the government minister for
CIDA, Beverley Oda, last year, they heard nothing but “gobbledygook.â€
They “didn’t get a straight answer from her in an hour and half.â€
Manley’s report proposes that CIDA create a “signature project†such as
a school or hospital that could be used to showcase Canadian “aid†to
the Afghan people.
The report comes down hard on the government’s mishandling of the
information and propaganda side of the war effort. As criticism of the
war has mounted, including from its supporters, the government has
reacted by closing down access to information. Panel member Derek
Burney, a highly placed official of the governing Conservative Party,
said, “I’m not opposed to a more controlled message.†But he and the
commission are concerned that a total clampdown on information does
more harm than good.
Torture
By far the most serious political damage to the war effort has been
non-stop revelations of the use of torture by Canada and NATO as a
weapon of war. A damning editorial by the Globe and Mail on January 30
listed no less than seven occasions in 2006 and 2007 when the
Conservative government lied about or misrepresented the Canadian
military’s collusion with torture agencies of the Afghan government,
police and armed forces.
The government’s latest subterfuge began with an announcement on
January 23 that as of November 2007, the Canadian military is no longer
turning over prisoners to Afghan authorities because they are then
tortured. The announcement baffled observers who wondered why it was
not announced when it supposedly came into effect. The government
answered by saying that it was not told of the change by the military.
But this story had to change because military leaders reacted angrily
to the implication that they are operating outside of the control and
direction of the government.
The announcement begged a series of questions. If the change in policy
is real, what is the military now doing with those it detains?
Releasing them? Has it created its own detention facilities in
Afghanistan? Is it turning prisoners over to the U.S.? The answer to
these questions may lie in a February 4 report in La Presse. The
Montreal daily reported that the Canadian military is secretly opening
its own detention facility in a wing of the notorious central prison in
Kabul.
In December, after the supposed change of policy, army officials argued
that any relaxation of the detainment policy would gravely compromise
the safety and security of the Canadian mission. Speaking to a
committee of the Canadian Parliament on December 14, Brigadier-General
André Deschamps, army chief of staff to Canada’s mission in
Afghanistan, declared, “The insurgents could attack us with impunity
knowing that if they fail to win an engagement they would simply have
to surrender.…â€
The controversy over the torture policy will not go away. On February
1, the Globe and Mail reported that the governor of Kandahar province,
Asadullah Khalid, has personally tortured prisoners; that the Canadian
government knew of this since at least the spring of 2007; and that it
has kept the information hidden. The following day, the newspaper
reported that the head of Canada’s armed forces, Richard Hillier,
praised Khalid as a good friend and ally of Canada and that it was up
to the government of Afghanistan to investigate any allegations against
him.
Government faces severe dilemma
The January 23 announcement stemmed from the government’s growing
concern about a legal challenge in the federal court brought by the
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) and Amnesty
International that would oblige the military to treat prisoners
according to the post-World War Two Geneva conventions. Like the U.S.,
Canada says its operations in Afghanistan are not bound by the
conventions.
The government was trying to negotiate an end to the legal challenge.
But that was blown out of the water on February 29 when it announced a
resumption of detainee transfers. Minister of Foreign Affairs Peter
Mackay said that officials of the Afghan military had provided verbal
assurances that torture excesses would end.
Ron Hoffmann, deputy head of the Canadian embassy in Kabul, said, "Our
experience to date with the Afghans is they have taken all the
allegations of mistreatment very seriously."
Amnesty and the BCCLA immediately applied for an injunction from the federal court to prevent the resumption.
In Parliament, the Conservatives and Liberals have signaled agreement
on a motion to be voted in March that will extend the combat mission in
Kandahar to 2011.
Manley believes that the best outcome to hope for is a shattered
Afghanistan where imperialist interests are nonetheless preserved.
“We’re not going to have a VE day here with parades in the streets,†he
cautioned journalists on January 23.
The furor over his report can only increase the number of Canadians who
question the war’s aims and rationale. Many more can be won to the view
that the only principled and humanitarian end to the carnage is
withdrawal of foreign occupation forces and recognition of the right of
the Afghan people to freely determine their political future.
Roger Annis is a trade union activist in Vancouver BC and a
member of that city’s Stopwar.ca coalition. An earlier version of this
article appeared on the Socialist Voice website.
From Facebook's Don't extend it. End it. (Canada's war in Afghanistan).
Subject: It's lobby time: House of Commons vote is March 13!
LOBBY THE LIBERALS
Don't extend it. End it. Bring the troops home now
The House of Commons vote to extend Canada's mission in Afghanistan has
now been set for Thursday, March 13. And Liberal leader Stéphane Dion
and the Liberals are poised to support an extension – for the second
time!
The Canadian Peace Alliance is calling on all members and supporters to
contact key members of the Liberal caucus to demand that they oppose
Stephen Harper's motion to extend the mission to 2011.
The Conservatives need Liberal votes in order to extend the mission.
The New Democratic Party and the Bloc Québécois have said they'll vote
against it. If the Liberals decide to oppose it too, they'll have
enough votes to stop the extension – and to end Canada's war in
Afghanistan.
Between now and March 13, please contact by email and phone these key
members of the Liberal caucus and lobby them to oppose extending the
mission in Afghanistan.
BY EMAIL: STEP 1:
Cut and paste the addresses of these key Liberals into your address line:
Dion.S@parl.gc.ca, Ignatieff.M@parl.gc.ca, Coderre.D@parl.gc.ca, info@bobrae.ca, Wilfert.B@parl.gc.ca, Goodale.R@parl.gc.ca
STEP 2 (optional):
Personalize your message with a few lines about why you oppose an extension of the mission.
STEP 3:
Cut and paste the campaign declaration into the body of your email. Then send.
CAMPAIGN DECLARATION TO INCLUDE IN YOUR EMAIL:
Don't extend it. End it. Bring the troops home now!
Dear __________________:
The US-led combat mission in Afghanistan is now over six years old,
longer than World War Two. And sadly, there is now more instability and
violence in Afghanistan than in 2001.
NATO forces continue to back a government dominated by warlords and
drug lords. In 2007, NATO bombs killed over 6,500 people in Afghanistan
- the highest death toll since the war began.
Stephen Harper's government has been implicated in scandals involving
the torture and abuse of Afghan detainees. Independent reports show
that reconstruction has come to a virtual halt while hundreds of
millions in aid money is unaccounted for.
Opium production in Afghanistan is at its highest levels ever,
providing 93 per cent of the world market. Violence against Afghan
women is still widespread, while their security deteriorates on a daily
basis.
A clear majority of Canadians now oppose Canada's mission in
Afghanistan. Sixty-one per cent are against plans to extend the mission
past February 2009.
But Stephen Harper is proposing to do just that: extend Canada's
mission in Afghanistan until 2011. Canadian troops have suffered one of
the highest casualty and death rates of all NATO forces and thousands
of Afghan civilians have been killed.
It's time to stand up to Stephen Harper. We call on the Government of
Canada to stand with the majority of Canadians and say no to extending
the mission in Afghanistan.
Don't extend it. End it. Bring the troops home now.
Sincerely,
Your name:
Your address:
BY PHONE:
Phone the following Liberal MPs to let them know you oppose an extension of the mission.
Hon. Stéphane Dion, Leader of the Opposition (Liberal): (613) 996-5789
Michael Ignatieff, Deputy Leader of the Opposition (Liberal): (613) 995-9364
Hon. Denis Coderre, Opposition Critic for National Defence (Liberal): (613) 995-6108
Bob Rae, Opposition Critic for Foreign Affairs (Liberal): (416) 922-0401
Bryon Wilfert, Associate Opposition Critic for Foreign Affairs (Liberal): (613) 992-3802
Ralph Goodale, House Leader (Liberal): (613) 996-4743
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