The Canadian Election and the Afghan War
by TRNN
Murray Dobbin: Canadian government is supporting an American policy that's against Canada's interests.
Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper called an early election earlier this week. Since becoming Prime Minister, Harper has extended Canada's military mission in Afghanistan until 2011. Author and Journalist Murray Dobbin believes that Canada's foreign policy is supporting American foreign interests.
Bio
Murray Dobbin, Vancouver based, has been a journalist, broadcaster,
author and social activist for over thirty five years. A board member
and researcher with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, he has
written five studies for the centre including an expose of charter
schools and ten myths about the Canadian tax system. He has been a
columnist for the Financial Post and Winnipeg Free Press, contributes
to the Globe and Mail and other Canadian dailies and now writes a
column for the Vancouver on-line paper The Tyee. He has written five
books, three of them critical profiles of Canadian politicians. His
latest book, Paul Martin: CEO for Canada? exposes Martin’s corporate
agenda for the country.
Transcript
Is Afghan War altering Canada?
ZAA NKWETA: Canada's prime minister, Stephen Harper, triggered an early
election earlier this week in hopes of strengthening his Conservative
minority government's grip on power.
HARPER: Between now and October 14, Canadians will choose a government
to look out for their interests at a time of global economic trouble.
They will choose between clear direction or uncertainty, between common
sense or risky experiments, between steadiness or recklessness.
NKWETA: Harper's political rivals are Stéphanne Dion of the Liberal
Party, Jack Layton of the New Democratic Party, Gilles Duceppe of the
Bloc Québécois, and Elizabeth Ming of the Green party. Since becoming
prime minister, Harper has extended Canada's military mission in
Afghanistan until 2011. In so doing, critics say he has also
transformed Canada's foreign policy.
MURRAY DOBBIN, JOURNALIST AND AUTHOR: Canada's foreign policy is being
deliberately transformed by not only our participation in the
occupation of Afghanistan but by all of the things that come out of
that. I mean, first of all, we took on a combat role in Afghanistan
largely because we were afraid the United States was angry at our
failure to support them in the invasion of Iraq. But just as
importantly, coming out of that we see enormous expenditures on
defense. We are now spending at levels higher than at any time during
the Cold War period. Under the former head of the military, Hillier, we
saw a man who was constantly promoting the military. Really, we began
to see the military being integrated into what has been a strictly
non-military culture in this country. That, along with the huge
increases in military spending, really make us increasingly a carbon
copy of the United States. Canada's involvement in Afghanistan, we can
see where it's headed, because there's been an announcement that
they're going to build a pipeline through southern Afghanistan which
would go up through Kandahar. So, in effect, Canada's role will be to
defend the building of an American pipeline. But more than that, Canada
is supporting the United States in NATO in terms of the United States'
efforts to encircle Russia with very strongly free-enterprise,
pro-American regimes, such as the one of Saakashvili in Georgia. So
Canada, along with the United States and to some extent Britain, has
been pushing very hard for NATO membership for both the Ukraine and for
Georgia. So indirectly it's supporting United States efforts to reduce
the power of Russia in terms of its control over oil and gas in the
Caspian region. And so Canada, with absolutely no national interest in
doing so, is supporting an American foreign policy which could in the
long term actually harm Canada's interests.
NKWETA: Under the previous Liberal government, Canada's role in
Afghanistan began as a humanitarian relief effort. It was later
converted into a combat mission.
DOBBIN: The Liberals are in a tough spot. I mean, they were the ones
who agreed to go into Afghanistan. It was Paul Martin who agreed to
take on a combat role in Kandahar. So the Liberals are not in much of a
position to say anything, because they are complicit in this whole
thing. The more unfortunate part of this is that the NDP has decided to
essentially drop the issue of Afghanistan. And I think the reason for
that is that the Harper government has successfully framed the issue
around the call for supporting our troops. Canadians are conflicted on
this, although an increasing majority—a recent poll suggests an
increasing majority actually oppose the conflict in Afghanistan, and
over 60 percent, something like two-thirds, believed that we cannot
win. People are conflicted because they don't want to appear to be not
supporting our troops, who are being killed on a regular basis and
being wounded in this conflict. So I think it's a complicated issue for
political parties in a 37-day election to deal with an issue which is
extremely complex. For that reason I think that the parties who opposed
the war, both the Bloc and the NDP, have looked at it and decided that
in terms of a short election campaign, it's not an issue that would pay
off for them. The Harper government is committed to what is called
"deep integration." The formal name for this is the Security and
Prosperity Partnership. It's a plan to gradually, over a 20-year
period, integrate Canadian policies with American policies. That
includes the military policy, foreign policy, energy policy. We have
governments both Liberal and Conservative committed to this whole deep
integration agenda, which of course at its root is an assault on
Canadian sovereignty. It is virtually impossible to win in Afghanistan.
The retiring general in charge in Afghanistan for the United States
recently did an interview and stated that in order to pacify
Afghanistan, you would have to have 400,000 troops. They currently have
less than 60,000 who are actually involved in combat. Even if they took
every soldier they now have in Iraq and move them to Afghanistan, they
would still be 200,000 troops short. And so the loss of Afghanistan is
a certainty. The only question remaining is when western powers
recognize that and leave the country, and how much destruction will be
done, and how many Afghans and Canadian soldiers will have to die
before that happens.
DISCLAIMER:
Please note that TRNN transcripts are typed from a recording of the
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accuracy.
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