Archive for March, 2003

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Aid to the North?

Friday, March 28th, 2003

Coming to aid of ‘family’ a myth.

The idea that the U.S. would rush to save us is touching. The reality is less comforting, says historian James Laxer and this is his take (I agree) on the issue:

   When U.S. ambassador Paul Cellucci said that his country was disappointed because Canada was not at America’s side in the Iraq war, he claimed that if Canada faced a security threat “there would be no debate. There would be no hesitation. We would be there for Canada.”
   That’s the way things ought to be when you’re dealing with “family,” the ambassador told a Toronto business audience.
   The idea that the United States would rush to our side is touching.
   The only problem is that there has not been a single case to which anyone can point when the U.S. has come to our side to meet a security threat to Canada since the Thirteen Colonies declared their independence in 1776.
   The two countries have been allies in previous conflicts when Washington and Ottawa decided that their interests were parallel. In the two world wars, the Americans sat out the first couple of years of the conflicts while Canada was at war.
   Indeed, during World War I while it was still neutral, the United States continued to export Canadian nickel to Germany.
   As an Ontario Royal Commission later reported, some of that nickel went into the production of munitions that were used against Canadian soldiers in the trenches.
   Early in World War II, when Canada dispatched an RCMP vessel to Greenland to ensure that the island not be taken over by the Nazis, the Americans, perhaps fearing the rise of a Canadian empire, issued a stiff official complaint to Ottawa.
   Later, in the war, the U.S. occupied Greenland.
   By no stretch of the imagination could anyone claim that the United States entered any of its many foreign conflicts over the past two centuries out of concern for the security interests of Canada.
   The truth is the U.S. has relentlessly stood up for its own interests in a long list of security conflicts with Canada.
   Several acute boundary disputes between the two countries � on the East Coast, the West Coast, and over the Alaska boundary � came close to generating military conflict between Canada and the U.S.
   At the end of the American Civil War, the U.S. secretary of state suggested that Americans would get over their hard feelings toward the British for selling naval vessels to the Confederacy if Britain would hand over Canada to the United States.
   Indeed, there remains a very potent territorial dispute between the United States and Canada over the question of Arctic waters.
   While Canada claims the waters of the High Arctic as Canadian territory, the U.S. rejects that claim, insisting the Northwest Passage is an international waterway. Twice the U.S. has sent warships through that passage, without seeking the permission of Ottawa, to keep its claim alive.
   In his speech to the Economic Club of Toronto, Cellucci said “we’ll have to wait and see if there are any ramifications” as a result of the current squabble. Analysts and right-wing Canadian politicians who have warned darkly of the economic consequences that could flow from offending our largest trading partner, apparently have not given much thought to the nature of Canadian exports to the U.S.
   The overwhelming bulk of our exports to the U.S. are autos and auto parts, pulp and paper, nickel, oil and natural gas, and other primary products � most of this shipped south by U.S.-owned corporations.
   To punish Canada, Washington would have to shoot itself, or more exactly, General Motors, in the foot.
   In the few acute trade disputes Canada has with the U.S., it seems not to make much difference how Canada behaves.
   Sending Canadian troops to serve under a U.S. commander in Afghanistan did nothing to win Washington over to Canada’s position on softwood lumber.
   The Chrétien government decided that it was not in the interest of Canada to participate in an arguably illegal assault on a small country that poses no direct threat to the United States.
   For a middle size country like ours, multilateralism and respect for international law are essential to our survival as a sovereign country. The government of Canada was acting in our national interest.
   Cellucci was not wrong when he suggested that the U.S. and Canada are like members of a family, although a rather dysfunctional one. The older sibling left home early, while the younger sibling stayed home hoping that mom would help fend off assaults from big brother.
   In practice, living next door to a superpower means that the superpower can be counted on to defend you against everyone except itself.
   Former Social Credit leader Robert Thompson got it right when he remarked, “The United States is our best friend whether we like it or not.”

Machine Rolls On

Wednesday, March 26th, 2003

Just a quick note as the war machine rolls on in Iraq, this is from a British journalist independent in Baghdad:
Robert Fisk: ‘It was an outrage, an obscenity’
27 March 2003 – - The severed hand on the metal door, the swamp of blood and mud across the road, the human brains inside a garage, the incinerated, skeletal remains of an Iraqi mother and her three small children in their still-smouldering car. read more >>>

And then there is the view you get from mainstream media, nicely commented on here.

The French strike back

Saturday, March 22nd, 2003

Asia Times
By Julio Godoy
PARIS – Intellectual force has arrived to back the political and popular French opposition to the United States over the question of Iraq.
   In new debates, books and columns, French analysts are going back to the days before September 11, 2001 to recall US interventions from Chile to Guatemala to Vietnam. Historian Christine Durandin argues in La CIA en Guerre (The CIA at war) that the US secret services intervened in all Latin American countries since the 1950s, and that “everywhere these interventions prepared the way for brutal military dictatorships”.
Also from PBS in the U.S.A., there are still some free thinkers down there showing a time line for this whole Iraqi thing. No conspiracy theories allowed here, just the facts please:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/iraq/etc/cron.html

http://www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid=6008

Now What?

Friday, March 21st, 2003

   Newscasts in North America of southern Iraqis dancing in the streets and welcoming American GI’s as they tear down posters of Sadamm Hussein. The Arab News has this:

It was almost like a normal Friday. Children kicked footballs in the sunshine, men and women shopped at corner stores – but everyone wondered when the next US missiles would start raining from the sky. “We were playing count-the-explosions yesterday,” said Umm Hiba, a mother of four who had hunkered down with her children in Baghdad as US and British air strikes hit the heart of the city the night before. “We were expecting the bombing so we prepared the children psychologically,” she said.
The Iraqi capital’s five million residents were bracing for a third night of missile attacks but with Washington so far not making good on its pledge of “shock and awe” bombardments except on the palaces and word of that has not been let out yet, many seemed to take their day of rest in stride. This sense of domestic disquiet is the lot for most in this city of five million people. In such a sprawling metropolis, it is nearly impossible to pinpoint where the missiles are falling. And tall buildings offering a sweeping vantage point are rare. The skyscraper Meridian-Palestine and Sheraton-Ishtar hotels have been swarmed by journalists.

   Let’s hope the rest of the invasion goes just as well and the suicide bombers don’t start coming out of the woodwork and the next city (Basra), falls just as easily as the Iraqi seaport and borders. Of course that would mean Bush and Rummy were right and the odds of that happening are pretty slim. Having Israeli operations on the Jordan border with Iraq is not going over too well with many Muslims and Putin still has his legitimate fears, as they remember how WWI started with an assassination and Austria and Serbia having problems.
   Russian President Vladimir Putin also warned Friday that the war on Iraq threatens to spill over to other regions and may destabilize volatile states in the former Soviet Union. �The crisis has already spilled over from a local conflict, and today poses a potential threat to stability in other regions of the world, including the CIS�, Putin said.
   It may feel good on TV right now for the USA, but the Bush Doctrine of unilateral engagement is sure to keep the rest of the world uneasy and there are some really bad people out there like Kim Jong Il that unlike Saddam actually have weapons of mass destruction and the ability to use them. Funny to hear the Russians and former eastern bloc call for peace, maybe they know or remember something the west doesn’t eh? In the words of a famous crook named Henry Kissinger:
“The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer.”

Blitzkrieg

Wednesday, March 19th, 2003

   Less than 8 hours to go for Bush’s get out of town edict and then the blitzkrieg can start at any time. 3,000 missiles and bombs in less than two days is going to create quite a fireworks show, the largest amount of ammo in the shortest amount of time in the history of the world. The propaganda machines are running full tilt too, Charlie Reese has a good take on the Hollywood aspect here.

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