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    Yves Engler: Canada's Anti-War Movement needs to Challenge Government Archived Message

    Posted by sashimi on October 18, 2020, 10:52 am

    (quote)
    Should antiwar forces challenge power or praise government officials
    in the hopes of getting some crumbs for their pet issue?

    Douglas Roche's recent Hill Times column suggests the latter. In an
    article extolling Canada's new ambassador to the UN Roche writes:
    "When Canada lost its bid for a seat on the UN Security Council the
    second successive time last June, I thought a foreign policy review
    from top to bottom was the solution to get Canada back on track
    internationally. But I've changed my mind for two reasons: the world
    is in multiple crises revolving around COVID-19 that need to be acted
    on now, and Bob Rae has arrived on the scene. I don't mean to present
    the estimable new Canadian ambassador to the UN as a world saviour,
    but he has quickly established himself as a champion of the UN
    humanitarian agenda, which centres around reducing the grotesque
    economic inequalities that the pandemic has worsened."

    In essence Roche is saying that a few months ago he was troubled by
    the world's rejection of Canadian foreign policy but now that Rae and
    Prime Minister Trudeau have delivered a couple of high-minded,
    internationalist statements there's little need to challenge
    government policy.

    But things are far from all fine and dandy. The Trudeau government
    refused to join 122 countries at a UN conference to ban nuclear
    weapons in 2017 and has failed to sign the resulting treaty. They have
    announced a 70% increase in military spending, oversaw record (non-US)
    arms exports last year and dispatched troops on US and NATO missions
    to Iraq and Latvia (not to mention breaking their promise to rein in
    Canadian mining companies' abuses, support for a repressive Haitian
    president, unprecedented campaign to overthrow Venezuela's government,
    anti-Palestinian positions, etc.)

    Rather than representing a break from the Liberals' pro-US,
    pro-militarist and pro-capitalist policies, Rae's appointment reflects
    a continuation of this outlook. As I detailed in "New UN ambassador
    Bob Rae pushes pro-US, militarist and anti-Palestinian positions", Rae
    aggressively promoted bombing Libya in 2011, allied with Stephen
    Harper to extend the occupation of Afghanistan and has repeatedly
    undercut Palestinian rights.

    A few high-minded speeches by Rae and other government officials does
    not make a just foreign policy. Rather than make nice with Rae, peace
    and antiwar minded individuals should directly confront the Trudeau
    government's foreign policy. The two recent national days of action at
    dozens of MPs' offices against purchasing new fighter jets and selling
    arms to Saudi Arabia are a good step. So was the "no Canada on UN
    Security Council" campaign.

    Unfortunately, Roche's perspective on this issue matters. A former
    ambassador for disarmament, Progressive Conservative MP and senator
    has significant influence in peace circles. He's influential within
    the Canadian Network for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons and two
    weeks ago Roche did an event with World Beyond War. But, Roche's
    perspective is deleterious even if you stick to Roche's main issue:
    nuclear disarmament.

    If we are serious about forcing Ottawa to sign the UN nuclear ban
    treaty we need to grow the broader
    peace/demilitarization/anti-imperialist movement. More specifically,
    if many begin agitating against fighter jets and arms exports, or for
    Canada to leave the nuclear armed NATO alliance the government is more
    likely to concede to a push to sign the nuclear ban treaty.

    Roche's column praising Bob Rae should serve as a wake-up call to
    antiwar activists. The movement is far too focused on insider lobbying
    and policy wonkery. It needs to be much more oriented towards broad
    principled positions and social movement mobilization.
    (/quote)
    -- https://dissidentvoice.org/2020/10/canadas-anti-war-movement-needs-to-challenge-government/

    Message Thread:

    • Yves Engler: Canada's Anti-War Movement needs to Challenge Government - sashimi October 18, 2020, 10:52 am