Masthead graphic based on a painting by Gudrun Thriemer.

Hot Topic

Loading...
Showing posts with label Canadian foreign policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canadian foreign policy. Show all posts

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Stephen Leahy, " Mexicans Protest Canadian Mining Company," IPS.

[The Canadian government does not regulate Canadian companies operating abroad. Canadian companies are expected to follow a voluntary code of corporate social responsibilty. -jlt]

"Sixteen tonnes of sodium cyanide are being used daily, and there is a great risk it could seep into the aquifer."


TORONTO, Jun 28 (Tierramérica) - Residents and activists from the central Mexican state of San Luis Potosí travelled to Toronto to tell the shareholders of a Canadian mining company that their investments are at risk because the billion-dollar Cerro San Pedro gold and silver mine is illegal and environmentally unsafe.

The trip ended Jun. 17 with delegation member Armando Barreiro, a national lawmaker, being roughed up by Toronto police after he had made his presentation before the annual shareholders meeting of Metallica Resources Inc., owner of the open pit mine.

[...]

The local people are not opposed to underground or shaft mining, as has been done for hundreds of years. What they overwhelmingly oppose is a huge open pit mine with millions of tonnes of ore being treated in the open with large amounts of cyanide.

Read the whole article =>
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Monday, June 16, 2008

"What Lt. Gen Natynczyk may not know," Canadian Daily Digest, September 4, 2007.

Wanderer has pulled together a number Syed Saleem Shahzad's articles from Asia Times online. World Report has often quoted him for reasons that may be similar to those that inclined Wanderer to assemble this list. Also some additional linkes that are useful. At the top, I have added links to Antiwar.com's top headlines for today (June 16, 2008.) In the wake of the Sarposa Prison break, NATO and American commanders have tried to maintain the illusion that the war is being won. Nothing could be farther from the truth, unless it comes directly from Washington.



from Canadian Daily Digest: Sep 4, 2007 by Wanderer

The term "embedded" is applied to Canadian journalists going into the field with Canadian Forces. The perspective of Syed Saleem Shahzad, Asia Times Online's Pakistan Bureau Chief, is unique. A 'guest' of the Taliban, he from time to time is "embedded" in Taliban groups and is privy to the continuing ebb and flow of political currents on both sides of the Durand Line.

Lt. Gen Natynczyk having attended the US Army War College and subsequently being appointed Deputy Commanding General, III Corps and Fort Hood and in January 2004, being deployed with III Corps to Baghdad, Iraq, serving first as the Deputy Director of Strategy, Policy and Plans and subsequently as the Deputy Commanding General of the Multi-National Corps (Iraq), will be aware of the directions of the United States.

Is he as well aware of those with whom our Forces and theirs are at war? Not through the North American media, though he may be briefed by his staff.

The writings that follow trace Shahzad as he travels with his Taliban guide in and out of Kunar province which in his words serves "as the start of a natural route up to the northeastern province of Kapisa, from where, ultimately, the Taliban hope to enter into Kabul."

Joe Hueglin

+ Map of Afghanistan's Provinces

"In another development, the United National Front of Afghanistan, representing the strongest northern Afghan warlords and politicians, and the strongest force in the south, the Taliban and HIA, have admitted to opening channels of discussion. The
US-backed Karzai is the only stumbling block - at this stage he is not acceptable to the southern strongmen or the northern ones."


May 22, 2008 Part 1: Ducking and diving under B-52s
May 22, 2008 Part 2: A fighter and a financier
May 28, 2008 Part 3: In the footsteps of Osama ...
May 31, 2008 US terror drive stalled in political quagmire
June 3, 2008 A struggle between war and peace

Related articles:

Kapisa province: The Taliban's gateway to Kabul

Tracking the Coalition�s Afghan spring offensive

Accompanying MapRecommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Monday, May 26, 2008

Canadian war crimes? Real appeasement?

Recommended by Grant Clubine

"Other countries opposing a ban include Canada, France, China, India and Russia."

"How can the Canadian government say it wants to ban cluster bombs while it also promotes a provision that would allow it to participate with the U.S. in their use?"

Jody Williams, "Time to stand up for what we believe," Globe and Mail, May 22, 2008.

Dublin, Ireland — At the current 12-day conference to negotiate an international treaty banning cluster munitions, diplomats and observers alike are wondering what has happened to Canada's independence.

The same country that launched the "Ottawa process" resulting in the historic 1997 Mine Ban Treaty now appears to be doing dirty work for the United States to weaken the cluster munitions treaty.

As with land mines, the United States is no friend of the effort to ban cluster munitions launched in February, 2007, in Oslo. But it was openly and actively involved in the Ottawa process until walking out of treaty negotiations on the last day, unable to force acceptance of a "negotiating package" that would have gutted that treaty. This time around, Washington is opting for intense, relentless pressure behind the scenes.

One U.S. official bragged that more than 110 countries had been "spoken to" about this treaty. It has flat-out told allies that it will not alter its military doctrine, structure or deployments to accommodate terms of the treaty. Further, the United States has threatened that it will not remove its cluster munitions stockpiled in countries that do join the treaty — even though it removed land mines stockpiled in countries that are part of the Mine Ban Treaty.

It is not surprising that Washington continues to throw its considerable weight around. What is surprising, however, is that some countries are willing to carry water for the United States, despite its vow never to sign the treaty. Even more surprising is that one of those countries is Canada.

As Tim Shipman reported this week in the Sydney Morning Herald, "U.S. officials are frantically warning their allies not to sign the treaty as it now stands, because it would undermine NATO and criminalize soldiers who fight alongside them. … An official from the U.S. State Department warned that under the treaty, British front line troops who call in artillery support or air strikes [in Afghanistan or Iraq] from an American war plane, all of which carry cluster munitions, could be hauled into court." Mr. Shipman could just as easily have used the case of Canadian soldiers fighting alongside Americans in Afghanistan.

In military jargon, this U.S. exaggeration could be called "firing for effect" — see if you can frighten others into doing what you want. It is also misrepresenting the facts.

The proposed cluster ban treaty would prohibit any signatory country from assisting a non-signatory country in its use of banned cluster munitions. But such a treaty will not mean the end of joint military operations nor make Canadian soldiers automatically liable in the event the United States were to deploy such weapons. Joint military operations with Canada continue right now despite the fact that the U.S. is not party to the Mine Ban Treaty. No Canadian soldier has been hauled into court. At least seven other international treaties — many of which Washington is party to — have similar obligations on prohibiting assistance in use of a banned weapon by a country bound by the treaty. But in response to the intense pressure of the outgoing Bush administration, Canada has developed a "bottom line" on joint military operations to join the future treaty.

It says there must be language to protect Canadian military from liabilities should they be involved in joint military operations with allies outside the treaty who do use cluster munitions — in other words, the United States. Proposed Canadian language would not only seriously weaken the provision prohibiting governments from "assisting, inducing, or encouraging" states outside the treaty with any prohibited act that, but it would also create a loophole big enough for a U.S. attack helicopter loaded with cluster bombs to fly through. It would permit solders of countries that are part of the treaty to participate in the planning and execution of joint operations with the United States where cluster munitions are used.

How can the Canadian government say with a straight face it is banning cluster munitions while at the same time vigorously promoting language allowing Canadian soldiers to plan and execute operations where, in effect, they would be using U.S. cluster munitions? How can it say it is merely trying to protect Canadian troops and is not really trying to appease the United States?

A cluster ban treaty will not undermine NATO. Belgium unilaterally banned cluster munitions in 2006, and a Belgian official said it has in no way affected Belgian participation in NATO operations.

In fact, a recently completed internal NATO study found there would not be an impact on joint military operations if NATO members sign a cluster munitions treaty with the prohibition on assistance intact.

Canadians are appropriately proud of their country's leadership both in bringing about the Mine Ban Treaty and in its continued leadership to ensure that treaty is fully implemented. It is time to call upon the government to take the lead in Dublin to give the world a stronger — not weaker — treaty banning cluster munitions.

Jody Williams was the founding co-ordinator of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) for which she and the ICBL received the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize. She is also the founding chair of the Nobel Women's Initiative.
=====

Gwladys Fouche, "Cluster bomb opponents push for ban at Oslo conference," AFP, February 22, 2008.

OSLO (AFP) - Dozens of countries pushing for a worldwide ban on cluster bombs met in Oslo on Thursday for two days of talks, but key nations

Israel and the United States were noticeable by their absence.

The conference received a boost when Austria announced it was banning the use of cluster bombs by its army.

"The time has come to agree that we need a new international instrument to ban cluster munitions that have unacceptable humanitarian consequences," Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere said as he opened the conference.

The objective was to reach agreement on a plan "by 2008," he added.

A cluster bomb consists of a container holding up to hundreds of smaller bomblets. It opens in mid-air and disperses the bomblets over a large area.

The smaller bombs do not always explode on impact, which means that they can continue to kill innocent civilians years later.

Senior ministry officials from 48 countries attending the Oslo conference are discussing how to start a process that, it is hoped, will lead to the adoption of a treaty prohibiting cluster munitions.

Representatives from six UN agencies and a coalition of non-governmental organisations were also attending.

Norway, which organized the conference, and other pro-ban nations are being hampered by countries that oppose a ban.

They now want to push ahead without the support of key countries such as opponents Britain, the United States and Israel. Other countries opposing a ban include Canada, France, China, India and Russia.

In addition to Norway, the pro-ban countries include Angola, Austria, Belgium, Lebanon, Mexico, Mozambique, New Zealand and Sweden.

Addressing the conference, Austrian ambassador Wolfgang Petritsch announced a moratorium on the use of cluster bombs by Austria's army.

"The council of ministers decided that Austria -- pending a future legally-binding international regulation -- already now declares a national moratorium renouncing any use of cluster bombs or cluster munitions," he said.

The ban would be upheld even if an international treaty did not see the light of day, he added.

Cluster munitions are stockpiled by most countries' armies and have often been used in the past 40 years, most recently during the war in Lebanon.

Military commanders view them as an efficient weapon that allows them to target a wide area with a single strike.

"Cluster munitions were used ... by Israel against civilians throughout Lebanon. It is on record almost everywhere," Lebanese ambassador Gebran Soufan told the conference.

"Today the Israeli legacy consists of 1.2 million sub-munitions that need to be disposed of or destroyed," he said, adding that the figure "exceeds the number of Lebanese in south Lebanon."

Critics of cluster munitions argue that the weapons cause an unacceptable level of harm to civilians. A recent report by Handicap International claimed that 98 percent of casualties from cluster munitions are non-combatants.

"The responsibility of the state is not to protect its stockpiles of billions of cluster bombs, it is to protect civilians," 1997 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Jody Williams told reporters in Oslo on the eve of the conference.

Williams won the award jointly with the International Campaign to Ban Landmines for their efforts in bringing about the Mine Ban Treaty that same year.

The umbrella group Cluster Munition Coalition, consisting of a number of humanitarian organisations, is hoping that the Oslo conference will translate into concrete action.

"We want this meeting to say that there will be a treaty in place by 2008," said Simon Conway, co-chair of the CMC.

Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Wade Boese, "US Joins Others Seeking Nuclear Export Criteria," Arms Control Today, May 08.

The United States recently gave up its campaign to convince other nuclear suppliers to prohibit certain sensitive nuclear exports. It has now joined an alternative effort to adopt criteria to strictly limit such transactions, although Canada and a few other countries have objected to some aspects of the initiative.

A week after the Feb. 4, 2004, revelation of the Abdul Qadeer Khan nuclear black-market network, President George W. Bush proposed several initiatives to curb the spread of nuclear material and technology. (See ACT, March 2004.) One of those proposals urged suppliers not to transfer uranium-enrichment and plutonium reprocessing technologies to states without existing facilities for those purposes. Both capabilities can be used to produce nuclear fuel as well as nuclear weapons, but Bush argued that “enrichment and reprocessing are not necessary for nations seeking to harness nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.”

Although not all of them are currently operating, enrichment and/or reprocessing facilities exist in 15 countries: Argentina, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Iran, Israel, Japan, the Netherlands, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Of those states, Argentina, Brazil, Germany, Japan, and the Netherlands have not developed nuclear weapons or are not under suspicion of covertly pursuing such arms.

[...]

Canada, as well as South Africa reportedly to a lesser extent, have objected to the black box approach, arguing that it conflicts with an NPT provision allowing countries to acquire and develop nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. Both countries have significant uranium deposits and are eyeing the option of trying to profit more from developing the capacity to enrich the uranium for sale as nuclear fuel rather than simply exporting uranium.

...Canada’s well-known opposition to the US black box approach casts doubt on whether it will again support extending the moratorium [by the G8 on enrichment and reprocessing technology transfer.]

Read the whole article =>
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

CBC justifies Harper's information policy

CBC continues to run interference for Harper's restrictive information policy.

This week Canadian reporters at Kandahar Airfield asked Foreign Minister Maxime Bernier what Karzai could do about corruption.

Bernier replied,

"As you know, there is always the question of the governor here. I think (Karzai) can work with us to be sure the governor will be more powerful, the governor will do what he has to do to help us. ...There’s a question to maybe have a new governor. They’re a sovereign state, they’re going to have to decide the measure the president will have to take about the future of the governor here."


As Afghan officials and bureaucrats in Bernier's own ministry recoiled, Bernier backed down. Harper's office evidently slapped his wrists, praised him as "a bold and aggressive foreign affairs minister," and described his retreat as a "clarification."

Meanwhile, this morning, CBC's chief political reporter offered the interpretation that this incident illustrates why Harper has to keep his mouthy cabinet ministers on a short leash.

What the incident really reveals is that the Afghanistan mission suffers from an inherent quality that belongs to meddlesome busybodies who believe they are better than everyone else. Most of us recognize this as the Empire's civilizing mission.

It also shows that Canada's new Conservative Party lacks the depth required to conduct real world foreign policy, whether "stepping up to the plate" as Harper likes to say or "from the bleachers."

In that vein, it is appropriate to emphasize a couple of other points about Kandahar's governor, Asadullah Khalid. First, of course, is that Karzai appoints the governors of Afghanistan's provinces. While this practise passes without comment in Afghanistan's exemplary puppet democracy, a similar feature of Putin's Russia is regarded as clear evidence that Putin himself is something of a not-so-crypto tyrant. Is that a double standard? or no standard at all?

Second, CBC Morning noted that Khalid is unpopular with locals in Kandahar province. What they failed to mention is that, according to the Senlis Council, Khalid is unpopular with Afghans because he supports the poppy eradication program. CTV cites a 2006 report,

"It is widely believed that Asadullah Khalid gained his position as a result of his excellent relationship with U.S. authorities in Afghanistan....

"Tough on the Pakistan-Taliban connection, Khalid has become increasingly unpopular in Kandahar due to his poppy eradication campaigns."


If it was the poppy eradication program at stake and not Afghan sovereignty (about which, who can be said to care?), then it may have been the Americans who wanted Bernier's wrist slapped (and Canadian sovereignty at stake).

What we really need is a new generation of politicians capable of radical transparency. Unfortunately, there are signs, at least in the US, that John McCain is the leader on this front. With any luck, Obama may be getting on the bandwagon.Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, March 28, 2008

Friends of the Congo publishes "shocking facts" behind mining review

Back in September 2007, the Halifax Initiative reported that “Export Development Canada maintains interest in controversial Tenke mine in Congo" (Ottawa, September 10, 2007)

There had been allegations of irregularities associated with the acquisition of the property.

As a result, the contract for this project, along with many others, has been under review by the new Congolese government.

The DRC had an election in 2006. They were the first democratic elections since the Congo gained its independence from Belgium in 1960, Patrice Lamumba was elected, and then assassinated a year later.

In May 2007, the government of the DRC announced its intention to revisit mining contracts signed over the past decade, during the war and under the transitional government in place until last year’s national elections. The review process, which got underway on June 18, was meant to respond to concerns raised in various audits, independent studies and a DRC parliamentary commission report, regarding the fairness and legality of the contracts.

Specifically, the World Bank, among others, has cited concerns about mining contracts in the Congo, including a lack of transparency in the negotiation and awarding of deals, undeclared conflicts of interest, the inclusion of ill-defined “management” fees and other questionable payments, a failure to properly assess Congolese assets and contributions to the deals, and the inclusion of disadvantageous terms to the Congolese government.

Speculation was that the review might lead to the cancellation or substantial revision of contracts, that ignoring the government-initiated review could result in irresponsible investments.

Yet Export Development Canada continued to signal their interest in the project even when the review was incomplete. Is EDC indifferent to the concerns addressed by the review? Did it take the outcome as a foregone conclusion. Questions have been raised in the House of Commons about the adequacy of Canada's policy in such cases, which is to rely on the principle of corporate social responsibility.

EDC responded by noting that it was reviewing the environmental impact assessment documents.

EDC has already not addressed these concerns and appears indifferent to the DRC government's investigations except insofar as they might influence environmental mitigation measures viewed strictly as a cost of doing business. ECAs are clear examples of market failure. They are instruments of direct government intervention masquerading as businesses implementing their neoliberal agendas as if they represented no particular ethical interests.

On Monday, March 24, 2008, findings of the Review were published. Friends of the Congo has posted the following facts (details to follow):


1. During the transition process (2003 - 2006) one third of the Congo was sold off to foreign companies without any discernible benefit to the Congo.

2. Mining titles dispensed totaled 4,542 to 642 companies.

3. 90 percent of exports from DRC are either illegal or unregulated.

4. Existing mining contracts do not account for more than 6% of the national budget. In 2002 when the country was at war the mining sector continued as much as 30 % to the national budget.

5. Mining companies have realized gains of 600% while discernible gain to the government has not exceeded 5%.

6. Many of the companies involved in the mining review are publicly traded on the Toronto, London or New York Stock Exchanges. Some of them include Freeport-McMoRan, DeBeers, AngloAmerican, BHP Billiton.

7. The Congolese Parliament is silent on the mining contracts and the government has yet to include provincial governments and civil society.

8. Pursuant to the publication of the mining review, on Monday, March 24, 2008 the head of the Ministry of Mines, Martin Kabwelulu announced the set-up of a government panel to follow-up with the review process. It will be lead by the Minister of Agriculture.

9. A few mining companies have already intimated that they will take the DRC to international court to maintain their ill-gotten contracts.

10. As quiet as it is kept many of the government officials who signed these odious and detrimental contracts while pocketing millions of dollars are still in government including president Joseph Kabila himself. Of course the review process and follow-up does not include the pursuit of corruption charges against those involved in selling of the Congolese people's wealth.

11. Contrary to earlier statements by the Mining Ministry, the government is not going to change the Mining Code that was put in place by the World Bank in 2002. The law was clearly written in the best interest of foreign mining companies and not the Congolese people.

Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, February 29, 2008

Canada's secret weather and war



Canada's comedians are nearly always a country mile ahead of our pundits. Sometimes they're even a better source of news than the rest of CBC-TV. So it came as a surprise last week when Rick Mercer stopped grinding prematurely and missed the real climax.

In Question Period, Liberal MP Mark Holland had asked if Canadians would be informed when and if Canada's military starts handing over prisoners again to the Afghan authorities. Conservative House Leader Peter Van Loan took evasive action: “What we will not do is what the agent for the Taliban intelligence agency wants us to do over there, which is to release to them information on detailed operations in the field” (G&M Feb 12 08).

Mercer took it from there.

"Van Loan says that his point was by debating Afghanistan in Parliament, you are giving information to the Taliban, which means the Taliban are watching Question Period, which means that the Taliban are watching NewsWorld...."

“Stop telling us the weather Claire Martin; when you tell us, you're telling the Taliban.” That was supposed to be the punch line. But reality had outstripped satire when CanWest News Services reported on government documents ordering that Environment Canada scientists must refer all media queries to Ottawa where communications officers would help them respond with "approved lines."

This is not a joke. This is Harper's Canada, 2009.

Andrew Weaver, a UVic climatologist who works closely with several Environment Canada scientists says, "They can't even now comment on why a storm hit the area without going through head office."

The CanWest story, which was republished in the media giant's newspapers across the country, cites a PowerPoint presentation from Environment Canada's executive management committee:

"media relations will work with individual staff to decide how to best handle the call; this could include: Asking the program expert to respond with approved lines; having media relations respond; referring the call to the minister's office; referring the call to another department."

Gregory Jack, who is acting director of Environment Canada's ministerial and executive services, ran interference for the policy saying, "there is no change in the access in terms of scientists being able to talk" because it allowed them to respond in a "quick, accurate way that is consistent across Canada."

Jack refused to explain how "approved lines" are being written or who is approving them. (Munro Winnipeg Free Press Feb 1 08)

It's not the first time the Harper government has tried to shut down government scientists who might have well-substantiated ideas of their own about climate change and other subjects of vital public interest.

In 2005 (Ottawa Press Nov 20), Mark Tushingham, author of Hotter than Hell, a novel about the Earth becoming so hot from climate change that the US and Canada are at war over water, was due to give a presentation to the National Press Club about the science behind the novel.

Just 15 minutes before the presentation was to begin, Tushingham, who is also a scientist for Environment Canada, backed out. He had been ordered by the minister, then Rona Ambrose, not to appear and not to speak. And that's no joke either.

Divers opinions about climate change are not the only secrets that have hit the fan in the last week or so. Liberals play the game too.

Most listeners probably remember Paul Celucci. He was the American Ambassador who consistently got better press for his opinions about Canadian politics than most Canadians do. I remember in particular that he urged the Liberals to hurry up with Martin's “coronation”--that was the word reporters used in those days--Martin's coronation as Liberal leader.

That's because Chretien was refusing to go along with the invasion, or so he said. It's a matter of public record that Celucci needled Canadians opposed to the war because “Canadian naval vessels, aircraft and personnel... will supply more support to this war in Iraq indirectly... than most of those 46 countries that are fully supporting our efforts there." It was true.

But many, even in the peace movement, have chosen to forget those remarks the better to cherish Chretien's bold opposition to the war, a position the former PM recently re-iterated--on the Rick Mercer Report btw.

Richard Sanders, the coordinator of the Ottawa-based Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade, laid it out in an article on Canada's secret war this month in the Vancouver publication Common Ground, and he added more details in a comment on the World Report blog.

Sanders lists eighteen different ways that Canada has supported the war in Iraq. These include Canadian Brig. Gen., Nicolas Matern, who has just arrived in Baghdad. Matern is serving as the deputy commander of the US 18th Airborne Corps and reports to Lt. Gen. Lloyd Austin III, who leads the 170,000-member Multi-National Corps-Iraq. Its primary task is to conduct "offensive operations to defeat remaining non-compliant forces."

Matern replaces Canadian Forces Major General Peter Devlin who was Deputy Commander of the Multi-National Force-Iraq from January 2004. Devlin replaced another Canadian Major General Walt Natynczyk who commanded ten brigades totalling 35,000 troops stationed throughout Iraq. When Adrienne Clarkson awarded Natynczyk Canada's Meritorious Service Cross, her office extolled his "pivotal role in the development of numerous plans and operations [which] resulted in a tremendous contribution to...Operation Iraqi Freedom.”

Providing commanders is just one of Sander's list of eighteen ways that Canada has provided support for the war in Iraq. It's worth a read. Don't miss the rabble forum where each of the items is debated by participants who prefer the view that Canada is a genuine non-participant. Don't take my word for it.

It is an important issue. Liberal Foreign Affairs critic Bob Rae made this point speaking at a rally in support of US war resisters in Toronto on January 26.

"I have to say, still--unless this is another thing that has changed over the last 18 months--but it was historically the policy of the Government of Canada that there was no legal justification for the invasion of Iraq."

That is likely to be a significant part of the argument when the motion that proposed to allow military refusers to stay in Canada goes before Parliament.

How then, does the Conservatives' information policy, with its predisposition to crack down and provide "approved lines" interact with the secret war we continue to learn about? That brings us to General Rick Hillier's remarks to the Conference of Defence Associations.

While politicians saw Hillier's remarks as an attempt to cut off debate about Afghanistan in Parliament, the CBC's chief political reporter, Keith Boag, saw the Chief of Defence Staff as a "straight talker."

Boag: "One of the things that got General Hillier the top job in the military is his straight talk; and one of the things that sometimes gets him into trouble is his straight talk."

Does that sound as if it is drenched in irony? Listen to Boag's example as a straight talker:

Hillier: "I'm not going to stand here and tell you that the suicide bombings of this past week have been related to the debate back here in Canada, but I also cannot stand here and say that they are not."

Sounds like he's running for office.


Creative Commons License


This article is published by James Terral under a Creative Commons licence. You may republish it free of charge, wholly or in part, with attribution and for non-commercial purposes following these guidelines. Commercial media must contact World Report worldreport (at) cjly dot net for permission and fees. Some postings on this site are published under different terms.
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Can NATO make peace in Afghanistan?

The call by the Manley Report on the Future Role of Canada in Afghanistan for NATO to provide 1000 more troops in aid of Canadian Forces in the south, and Peter MacKay's follow-up in Vilnius, Lithuania made headlines around the world.

Lieutenant General Dan McNeill, commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that same week (Stout and Shanker NYT Feb 6 08) that the military mission in Afghanistan is “under-resourced.”

The surprise came when he added that a counterinsurgency campaign, in line with official US military doctrine, would require more than 400,000 NATO and Afghan troops. NATO troops currently total about 40,000. The Afghan national army has roughly another 60,000.

McNeill is the same General who got American commanders talking last August about "hot pursuit of al-Qaeda and Taliban remnants into Pakistani territory." Since then, Barak Obama (Aug 1 07) and Stephane Dion (Jan 16 08) have both said that under the right circumstances they would support sending coalition troops into Pakistan.

I don't know how McNeill arrived at his figure for the number of troops required, but it was the same number that I calculatged a year ago using the Rand Corporation's rule of thumb that the size of a stabilization force must be about 3% of the size of the population to be stabilized. That would make the size of the army required to stabilize Pakistan about 2.5 million. Stabilizing Iran would require another 2 million.

It seems to me that there should be a debate about whether the mission in Afghanistan is “too little, too late” or was “the wrong stuff” from the beginning.

For example, William S Lind argues that the counterinsurgency should really be undertaken by police forces doing something like community policing, which has nearly disappeared from our own streets in Canada. That is one version of the “wrong stuff” position. Lind's version is more of a political or diplomatic option with police support.

“Too little, too late” is a position described by Col Chet Richards, USAF (ret), in his monograph, Neither Shall The Sword. He presents the position that Fourth Generation Warfare (sort of like counterinsurgency - hearts and minds, etc) must follow “on the shadow” of the the maneuver warfare operation (Third Generation War, military option, initial attack.)

That opportunity was blown during the period following the rout of the Taliban (and bin Laden’s escape) in November 2001 and the summer of 2006 when it became clear that the Taliban was “back.” That’s the too late part. That shadow had long past; now we are living under another one. General McNeill adds too little to too late.

Musharraf made it clear in 06 when he visited Canada that there were too few troops, that the Soviets had lost with nearly three times as many including a large contingent of neighboring Islamic troops, and that it was time to step up the diplomacy. He and the British made some deals with village leaders in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The US and NATO chose to violate the terms of those agreements, paving the way for the current instability in Pakistan and some of the worst fighting the British have encountered since WWII (according to a British General in charge of operations in Helemand).

It has been argued that with an effective ceasefire between the Pakistan government and Taliban forces in Waziristan as was negotiated last week, Pakistan once again became a safe haven for these forces to intensify their operations in Afghanistan.

Actually, the ceasefire works for both sides. Both want breathing space. Mehsud, the Taliban commander with whom the ceasefire was negotiated, probably does want to regroup for a spring offensive. On the government side, their troops were reported to be demoralized by winter weather and rougher terrain than they are used to. Also, the government was hoping to have elections on the 18th. Those have now taken place with less violence than was anticipated.

On the plus side, the ceasefire means that the two sides are talking. According to Asia Times Online, tribal elders persuaded Mehsud to withdraw rather than suffer aerial attacks. Several Taliban commanders brokered the deal. So the next time Peter Mackay throws up his hands and says, “Who shall we talk to,” mention the Taliban go-betweens: Sirajuddin Haqqani and Maulvi Bakhta. If he can’t get their contact information, he should resign.

Between here and a lasting settlement, only one thing is certain–there will be talks with the enemy. Meanwhile, there may be a lot of deaths or very few. We (Canada) may spend vastly more than we are spending now–or not much. A long time may pass or not. And the talks themselves may take a long time or not.

The coalition holds many decisive cards. The main card that we do not hold is the one that would give us the Absolute Faerie Tale Victory with liberal democracy and human rights as good as white people get in Canada.

The ceasefires of 2006 failed for several different reasons. On the Pakistani side of the border, there were partial ceasefires that began in April followed by the Waziristan ceasefire of September 2006. They finally collapsed on October 30 after an attack on a madrassa that killed 80 or so students in Bajaur Agency (FATA). The government of Pakistan took responsibility for the strike, but locals blamed it on the US. The ceasefire wasn’t in Bajaur, but the air strike carried a potent message. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Bajaur_airstrike_2006.jpg

In Musa Qala, Helemand province, tribal elders promised the British they would keep the Taliban out if the British would leave. The deal, which lasted from October 06 to February 07, ended when NATO forces killed Mullah Ibrahim in an airstrike. Shortly after, his brother, the Taliban leader in the Musa Qala district led his men back into the town.

There is always an ambiguity about the making and breaking of ceasefires that each side uses to serve its own purposes–both militarily and in their propaganda.

Back in November, a British commander publicly expressed understandable frustration with the lack of a coherent coalition strategy at this late date. It is conceivable that the mish mosh of commands and expectations will simply prove incapable of delivering and maintaining the conditions for a peace.

On the Pakistan side of the border, casualty levels have been reported to average about 50 a day on the government side.

I don’t normally compare this conflict to Vietnam. But in that war, the US precipitated one of the worst genocides in the modern era by deluding itself about its role in local politics once it had decided to expand the war into Cambodia and Laos. What could such incompetent management of diplomatic resources accomplish in Pakistan?

If Musharraf is right, the military achievements are now several years past their best-before date. It’s all over but the bleeding. When we reckon we’ve bled enough, then we’ll talk.

An interesting detail jumps out at me as I go back over my notes. The border, which is so important to this whole business, has never been recognized by the Afghan government, and the Pashtuns (Pathans) from which most Taliban come have their tribal lands in Pakistan, Afghanistan right across to Iran. It is, if anything, even more meaningless to them than to the Afghan government.

Another Afghanistan item worthy of note is the report from the Integrated Research and Information Network of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

"Schools built and/or reconstructed by international forces are more vulnerable to attack by Taliban insurgents and other radical elements than those built by civilians.

Mat Waldman, policy and advocacy adviser for Oxfam International in Kabul, told IRIN 'Oxfam is aware of research which suggests that in some areas schools built by international military forces are twice as likely to be targeted by militants as those built by civilian agencies.'

According to the Afghanistan Ministry of Education (MoE), "At least 230 students and teachers have been killed and about 250 schools attacked by militants in the past three years. Owing to these attacks, over 400 schools remain closed, mostly in volatile southern provinces, denying education to thousands of students. Almost 70 percent of school-age children are not attending schools because of insecurity in Helmand, Zabul and Uruzgan provinces, Haneef Atmar, the Afghan minister of education, told a meeting in Lashkargah, the capital of Helmand, on 9 December."

It should also be mentioned that attacks on schools were a frequent tactic used by the CIA-supported mujahedin during the Soviet occupation.

Creative Commons License


This article is published by James Terral under a Creative Commons licence. You may republish it free of charge, wholly or in part, with attribution and for non-commercial purposes following these guidelines. Commercial media must contact World Report worldreport (at) cjly dot net for permission and fees. Some postings on this site are published under different terms.

Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

India OK to test nuclear weapons, February 12, 2008

Feature

Is it just me? Or is has the pace of events, especially those that suggest a coming apart at the seems, been picking up in the new year?

Just to get you in the mood, I've added a new polling question to the blog. Are you ready? It goes like this: Which of the following do you see as the most urgent security threat? nuclear attack? or climate change? peak oil? economic dependence on the US? the end of commercial fisheries? what about media concentration? or the demise of corporate agriculture? remember terrorism? a pandemic such as HIV/AIDS or Avian Flu? Gun crime? or civil unrest? It's a list that could go on, but that seemed like a good place to stop. Polls on the World Report blog aren't intended to provide big, statistically valid results. But they are helpful for what they tell me about your thoughts and opinions. And I hope that they help to open discussion up to more than just the one or two possibilities typically reported in the traditional media.

Contibuting to that increase in the pace of events is Harper's apparent belief that he and US Defense Secretary Robert Gates can, with the help of the press, spin NATO's lack of enthusiasm for its mission in Afghanistan as a lack of resolve or courage or even adequate training to fight a counterinsurgency like the ones in Iraq and Afghanistan-- which the US has handled so well.

Some of this has been said before. Way back in March of 2006 during the course of a review of the subject, World Report suggested that "the War in Afghanistan and Canada's role in it are clearly experimental." Early that same year, a senior British officer put a sharper point on it. Brigadier Nigel Aylwin-Foster, who was the second most senior officer responsible for training Iraqi forces, publicly accused the US Army of institutional racism, moral righteousness, misplaced optimism and of being ill suited to engage in counter-insurgency operations. (Guardian Jun 2 06)

It was an observation that could easily have been taken to apply equally to the mission in Afghanistan, had anyone been listening.

But that was then. The truth about the Afghanistan mission now, if polls are to be believed, is that even among the NATO allies that provide the most troops, there is nothing you could call popular support for the war. In Britain, Canada, the Netherlands and even Poland, governments may be enthusiastic, but the people are divided. Unlike Americans and Canadians, Europeans have seen enough long and devastating wars fought on their soil many of them are sick of it. That, and not the lack of backbone, may be the reason why a war half a world away against a host of organizations, most of which pose no threat to anyone more than to the foreigners who have invaded their homeland, may be why raising the troop levels required has been such a hard sell.

Moreover, the increased pace of events in South Asia is outstripping the ability of governments to formulate even inadequate policy. The conflict is now generally understood to include Pakistan. But not for John Manley and his Independent Panel. Manley and the Harper government just want an additional 1000 troops.

Gen. Dan K. McNeill, commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, [did say] at a Pentagon briefing Wednesday that the military mission is “under-resourced.” However, he also said that a counterinsurgency campaign, along the lines of US doctrine, would require more than 400,000 NATO and Afghan troops. NATO troops currently total about 40,000.... The Afghan national army has roughly another 60,000.... (Kaplan Slate Feb 8 08).

This too has been said before.

Musharraf made it clear in 06 when he visited Canada that there were too few troops, that the Soviets had lost with nearly three times as many including a large contingent of neighboring Islamic troops, and that it was time to step up the diplomacy. He and the British made some deals with village leaders in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The US and NATO did little to make those agreements work, paving the way for the current instability in Pakistan and, in Helemand Province, some of the worst fighting the British have encountered since WWII (according to a British General in charge of operations there).

Manley, it seems, is still operating on the outdated concept that insurgents use Pakistan for training and rest. In 2006, however, there was an insurgency on both sides of the border, and the one in Pakistan had cost many more lives than had NATO operations in Afghanistan. At that time, the insurgency was limited to the countryside, which was where it had started against the Russians, too. But in recent months, at least on the Pakistan side of the border, the insurgency has spread to the cities like Islamabad, Swat, and more recently Karachi. According to the World Security Institute, the Serena Hotel bombing in Kabul on January 18 may signal a similar development on the Afghanistan side of the border.

Robert Fisk spent part of his long and illustrious journalistic career sneaking back and forth across the same border during the Soviet occupation. He quotes Mohamed Ziarad, then, in 1979, the Governor of Jalalabad. As the mujahedin were closing in on his city, Ziarad explained, quote "It is the bandit groups [meaning the mujahedin] that are the problem and the dispossessed landlords who had their land taken from them by our Decree Number Six and they are assisted by students of imperialism [i.e., the CIA]. These people," he said, "are trained in camps in Pakistan. [Sounds familiar.] They are taught by the imperialists to shoot and throw grenades and set off mines.... [also familiar] We tried to make sure that all men and women had equal rights and the same education," [familiar] he said. But we have two societies in our country, one in the cities and one in the villages. The city people accept equal rights but the villages are more traditional" (Fisk 93).

At the time, the Soviet war in Afghanistan was widely referred to in the west as "another VietNam." Reading Fisk's version of those events today, NATO's war in Afghanistan seems almost like another--well, another Afghanistan.

Maybe the American primaries contribute to that feeling of an accelerated pace of events. CBC, which sent Peter Mansbridge and Heather Hiscox across the line to cover the California primary, reports on voters' excitement, but I think it's desperation. CNN's special item called "Elections 2008" has been running daily since January 2007. Is it possible that under the circumstances, the secular mind views elections as a kind of salvation?

Contributing to the nuclear flavour to much of this pandemonium is the first suicide bombing inside Israel by Hamas since August 2004 took place last week in Dimona. The Dimona reactor produces plutonium for Israel's nuclear weapons program. Israel, Pakistan and India are the only countries that have not signed the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

Last week, in an interview with CNN-IBN David Mulford, the US Ambassador to India, clarified for anyone who doubted it that the pending US-India nuclear deal will allow the testing of nuclear weapons.

According to a Canadian Press story (February 9 2008) he said, "It's very clear that India is free to do as it wishes with regard to future testing."

Stephen Harper, after his election in 2006, said he viewed the possibility of nuclear cooperation between Canada and India "with some degree of caution," a view he re-iterated in May 2006 when John Howard, then Prime Minister of Australia, was visiting Canada.

Between those two meetings (March 15, 2006), the Pak Tribune wrote from Islamabad that Harper had told Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz that “Canada adhered to the policy of nuclear non-proliferation."

True to form, Harper went on to inform Aziz that the "former government of Canada had inked a deal [on] civilian nuclear technology transfer with India," which his government considered to be "controversial” and said that it “would be reviewed."

That controversy within the Conservative caucus may still be the most divisive--and the most important--issue to fight an election on, but the opposition parties don't appear to have a clue.

As a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Suppliers Group, Canada still gets a vote on whether or not to allow the agreement between the US and India.

In 2007 (Oct 22) ExpressIndia quoted Canadian Foreign Affairs spokesperson Bernard Nguyen as saying "Canada is considering the proposed exemption for India from the Nuclear Suppliers Group guidelines in accordance with Canadian interests and principles."

Note how much of the information about this issue comes from India and Pakistan and how little from Canada.

"Canada's current nuclear non-proliferation policy and multilateral commitments prohibit nuclear cooperation with India, at this time," Nguyen said.

It is worth mentioning that Canada also supplied the reactor and half the fuel India diverted for its first nuclear explosive.

This week's Canadian Press story notes that “The agreement would reverse three decades of American anti-proliferation policy by allowing the US to send nuclear fuel and technology to India, which has been cut off from the global atomic trade by its refusal to sign nonproliferation treaties and its testing of nuclear weapons.”

The deal, commonly referred to as a “civilian cooperation agreement,” is the most recent in a series of assaults by the Bush Administration on the existing non proliferation architecture, beginning with abrogation of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in June 13, 2002 and including deployments and proposed depolyments of ballistic missile defence systems in the US, Japan, Poland and the Czech Republic.

"It is unlikely that this deal will be offered again to India," Ambassador Mulford warned. But “unlikely” doesn't mean it's a promise. Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, February 08, 2008

Richard Sanders, Canada's Secret War in Iraq, Common Ground, February 2008.

On March 25, 2003, during the "shock and awe" bombardment of Iraq, then US Ambassador Paul Cellucci admitted that "… ironically, Canadian naval vessels, aircraft and personnel... will supply more support to this war in Iraq indirectly... than most of those 46 countries that are fully supporting our efforts there."

Cellucci merely scratched the surface of Canada's initial "support" for the Iraq War, but he had let the cat out of the bag. As then Secretary of State Colin Powell had explained a week earlier, "We now have a coalition of the willing… who have publicly said they could be included in such a listing.... And there are 15 other nations, who, for one reason or another, do not wish to be publicly named but will be supporting the coalition."

Canada was, and still is, the leading member of this secret group...

[Many Canadians are probably familiar with this much. Sanders' article for Common Ground provides a much fuller picture of Canada's participation in Iraq. Does anyone really doubt that we will get drawn into Pakistan and Iran when the times comes? -jlt]

Read the rest.

For more information on the myth of Canada's role as a global peacemaker, read Press for Conversion, or write to COAT, 541 McLeod St., Ottawa, ON, K1R 5R2. Richard Sanders is the coordinator for the Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade.
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

S Rajagopalan, "23 US organisations launch coalition to block N-deal," NewIndPress.com, January 17, 2008.

These reasons to feel uplifted must be balanced against other reasons to believe that parallel civil society organizations in India and Pakistan have been marginalized. More on that later.

Jim

=====

WASHINGTON: In a new move aimed at blocking the Indo-US civil nuclear deal, 23 different American organisations have got together and launched a coalition to work with the US Congress and groups in 24 countries on this issue.


Announcing its “Campaign for Responsibility in Nuclear Trade”, the coalition claimed that the Indo-US pact would “dangerously weaken” non-proliferation efforts, embolden Iran and North Korea to develop nuclear weapons and “further destabilise” South Asia, particularly Pakistan.

Read the rest of this article.Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Canadians can learn from challenges to India's Middle East policy

Aynak and the Tectonic Zones of Afghanistan
from "Minerals in Afghanistan" © Afghanistan Geological Survey


As is often the case, M K Bhadrakumar's latest analysis—this time of the implications the new US National Intelligence Estimate holds for India and Afghanistan--is full of information Canadians will wish we knew more about.

He reckons that India's decision to protect “key nuclear facilities” in Mumbai and Chennai by denying permission for China's cargo carrier Great Wall Airlines to land is less important than the news that Chinese companies had won the tender for the Aynak copper deposit in Afghanistan's Logar province between Kabul and the Pakistan border.

That will come as a surprise for more reasons than one. Although geologists understand Afghanstan as a source of mineral wealth because of its location in the west of the Himilayan mountain building regime, most of us feel that Afghanistan isn't supposed to have world-class resources.

Still, Aynak and nearby Darband and Jawkhar have seen copper working since ancient times, including excavations, pits, and the remains of smelting furnaces. In 1974, ancient deposits were rediscovered by Soviet geologists. Nowadays, the Anyak deposit is widely believed in specialized circles to be one of the largest undeveloped copper mines in the world.

Predictably, Canada's media rarely reports on the activities of Canadian companies abroad especially when they are losing bids on multi-billion dollar contracts. That's not news, is it?

China Metallurgical Group Corp (MCC) and Jiangxi Copper Co's plan to invest some $3.7 billion in developing a large copper mine in Afghanistan won against bids by other front-running companies: Hunter Dickinson of Canada, the London-based Kazakhmys Consortium, and the U.S. copper-mining firm Phelps Dodge, and Strikeforce Mining and Resources (SMR), a subsidiary of Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska's Basic Element investment group.

Radio Free Europe sees the Chinese project as a “litmus test” for other investors in Afghanistan. That would be good news, wouldn't it?

Hunter Dickinson is a private Vancouver mine developer which operates around the world in many parts of the mineral industry, from copper and zinc to gold, diamonds and platinum group minerals.

The 22-year-old Vancouver firm manages a stable of publicly traded Canadian companies, ranging from Taseko Mines Ltd. (TSX:TKO), Detour Gold Corp. (TSX:DGC), Northern Dynasty Minerals (TSXV:NDM) and Great Basin Gold (TSX:GBG). (CANOE Sep 21 07)


Aynak is the subject of a report by the British Geological Survey and published by the Afghanistan Geological Survey. MineWeb quotes the BGS report in brief.

In a new study, Integrity Watch Afghanistan says transparency and the inclusion of community input are essential to the success of the planned project. The 70-page report entitled, "Aynak Copper Mine: Opportunities and Threats for Development from a Sustainable Business Perspective," was compiled through interviews and document reviews. (BBC Monitoring via COMTEX Dec 17 07 Link added -jlt)


This episode branches into larger questions about why we are in Afghanistan and what resources other than copper may be there and in particular whether or not there is uranium. It also branches into another large question about the performance of Canadian companies abroad. Is Canada an imperial power? Is it appropriate to talk about a Canadian Empire? Or is Canada part of the American Empire?

But Bhadrakumar's discussion addresses the issue of multipolarity from a progressive Indian viewpoint, and that is a subject of which economic globalization—now in decline—forms a significant part.

Bhadrakumar goes on to identify Sinopec's $2 billion contract with the Iranian Oil Ministry for the development of the Yadavaran oil and gas fields in southwestern Iran as a second important move. Oil Minister Gholam-Hossein Nozari was quick to point out that the deal with China flies in the face of Washington's attempts to block foreign investments in Iran. (ATol Dec 15 07)

[Bhadrakumar has written about Russian-Iranian relations elsewhere. The re-publication of the Asia Times online by Japan Focus contains some useful photos and maps. -jlt]

The Canaian media have reported politely about Bush's attempts to play down the significance of the US National Intelligence Estimate conclusion that Iran had shut down its nuclear weapons program. Bhadrakumar believes that the NIE “conclusively debunked any conspiracies hatched by the neo-conservative coterie within the George W Bush administration for launching a military strike against Iran.” In his view, the prospect of war with Iran is a dead letter.

Bhadrakumar cites an anonymous scholar from the Institute of Asia and Africa under the Chinese Institute of Contemporary International Relations. Writing for the People's Daily this scholar writes openly about the steady decline of US influence in the Middle East.

In this view, Iran has no geopolitical competitors in the Persian Gulf region.

Since the US has fallen into the Iraqi quagmire, Iran concludes that the United States dare not use force against Iran. Therefore, it maintains strong strategic determination and refuses to make concessions on the nuclear issue. ... The United States cannot reverse its current downhill trend in the Middle East. Iran's rise and its challenging gestures will further accelerate the decline of the United States' presence within the region. (ATol Dec 15 07)


We would not expect this kind of discussion from the American administration. Governments cannot say that the war is not going so well. They cannot say If things keep up the way they are going, we will have to concede defeat. Governments are constrained to cheerlead for the wars they have decided to fight. This can result in the fight carrying on long after the final outcome has been decided.

When he visited Canada and the US in 2006, Musharraf tried repeatedly to let his allies know that the war in Afghanistan was over. What the military would be able to accomplish had been accomplished he said. Now (Summer 2006) it was time for the diplomats to go to work. Everyone agrees that the results were not good. The British and the Pakistanis didn't get the kind of support--or persistence, or even serious determination (see Annapolis)--from the NATO/US coalition that diplomacy required, and Canadians were ready to go in whatever direction the wind seemed to be blowing. Hillier was caught saying that Canada was trying to negotiate with the Taliban, but that position didn't last long in the restrictive media regime the Harper government has established. The interview disappeared quickly from the CBC website.

Why the CBC has chosen to position itself as Bush's megaphone on this issue is a question that concerns us all. Traditionalist war fighting culture will hold that this is the appropriate role for all media, whether they are owned by the government or not. That is pretty much a maple-leaf variation of Bill O'Reilly's position in the US. Once the war starts dissenters are expected to Shut Up.

Others viewpoints differ fundamentally. Some hold that the media has an important democratic role to play in informing the public even in wartime. Others actually believe that it is the proper role of the media to challenge the government line and break down barriers to the full disclosure of information relevant in public decision making.

Can the press do anything but PR if it is completely embedded with the military? Certainly the military sees the press as playing a vital role in Fourth Generation Warfare, a view which constitutes part of what the establishment thinks it learned from the Vietnam War.

Needless to say, these positions imply ideas about democracy that the ruling elite in our country does not hold.

Has our media gone the way of the Americans? What is the proper role of the media when the country is involved in a war of choice far from its national boundaries. The last wars on nominally Canadian territory were the War of 1812 and the Riel Rebellion.

For many Canadians the First and Second World Wars stand as archetypal expressions of the view that our soldiers sacrifice their lives to protect liberty, human rights and other democratic values.

Since the end of the second war, Canadian Forces have been deployed in numbers roughly equivalent to those currently in Afghanistan only twice before: during the October Crisis of 1970 in and during the Oka crisis (July 11, 1990).

The nation's public radio stations have some history in dealing with unpopular wars, and it's not pretty.

All this makes the remarks of the anonymous Chinese scholar all the more welcome because they provide relief from the unremitting propaganda we get from the US and, sadly, from our own news organizations. Expanding the field of view from the Persian Gulf to the Middle East region generally, the Chinese scholar concludes that “the United States cannot reverse its current downhill trend in the Middle East.”

By contrast, Bhadrakumar thinks that “the Indian strategic community was shell-shocked by the NIE.” Delhi had just imposed banking restrictions on Iran even beyond what was required by two Security Council resolutions. It was not that long ago that India voted against Tehran in the IAEA. Alienating the Iranians and losing out on oil development projects to the Chinese has left India all too hungry for the energy boost implicit in the US-India nuclear deal which is now in the stage of developing a 123 (implementation) Agreement.

Bhadrakumar expresses his disappointment most clearly when he observes that India is “facing collateral damage” from American policy fumbles in the Middle East and Persian Gulf.

He criticizes Delhi's belief that “it was always safe to hitch its diplomatic wagon to the US-Israeli caravan in the Middle East” and warns that “playing poodle to Washington” hasn't advanced any but short term Indian interests.

Bhadrakumar's meditation concludes with a well-informed reflection on this folly. Delhi has swallowed whole the American delusions about Israel's importance as a determinant of Middle Eastern security. Indian business interests waited for the Israeli-American interests to squash Ahmadinejad before concluding any serious arrangements with Iran.

For example, talk about the "north-south transportation corridor" connecting India to Afghanistan, Central Asia and Russia was suspended. Strategic dialogue with Iran on regional security issues was put on hold. The 25-year gas pipeline project from Iran via Pakistan to India is in deep hibernation, and the new banking restrictions “will discourage even normal trade and investment.”

Meanwhile, Bhadrakumar conveys a unique view of the US-Israel bloc that includes Indian vulnerability to American influence because of the pending nuclear deal.

The Israel lobby, he says, “gave a big helping hand canvassing support for the nuclear deal on the Capitol Hill.” Clearly, Israel expects to be next.

Has India's new strategic partnership with the US gone too far too fast? How far should India go in harmonizing India's regional policies with the US's global strategies?

Bhadrakumar concludes that India's policy toward the Persian Gulf and the Middle East is “simplistic,” “one-dimensional” and “untenable.” However, he recognizes that it is “difficult to jettison” as long as it continues to be “dovetailed to the US regional agenda.”

The same might be said of Canada since the Liberals moved to join the Americans against the rest of the world in its position on certain key UN resolutions related to Israel-Palestine. The Conservatives were only too happy to jump on the bandwagon. Even before he was officially sworn in, Prime Minister-elect Stephen Harper rejected the election of Hamas and re-iterated the famous three demands: affirm previous agreements with the PLO; recognize Israel; and give up violence and/or terrorism.

The demand that Hamas should affirm previous agreements with the PLO as representatives of the Palestinians is particularly interesting in light of Harper's refrain that “the liberals did it.” This he repeats at every opportunity, including most recently the re-opening of the Chalk River NRU reactor despite 2-year-old safety concerns.

Creative Commons License


This article is published by James Terral under a Creative Commons licence. You may republish it free of charge, wholly or in part, with attribution and for non-commercial purposes following these guidelines. Commercial media must contact me for permission and fees. Some postings on this site are published under different terms.


This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. I am making it available in order to advance understanding of the issues. I believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law and 'fair dealing' under sections 29.1-29.3 in Canada's Copyright Act. In accordance with Title 17 USC Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational purposes. For more information check the code. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.


Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, December 14, 2007

Canada plans to keep a base in Kandahar until 2015, The Canadian Press, December 14, 2007.

OTTAWA — The Foreign Affairs Department has developed plans to keep a Canadian provincial reconstruction base in Kandahar until at least 2015, federal officials say.

The department has also started recruiting diplomatic staff to fill posts at the base for one-year assignments that stretch beyond Parliament's self-imposed deadline of February, 2009, for an end to the military mission.