Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Email To Clinton: Canadian Foreign Affairs Types Really Hated The Harper Tories

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2015 11:24 AM
  • Email To Clinton: Canadian Foreign Affairs Types Really Hated The Harper Tories
WASHINGTON — A U.S. official expressed amazement at how deeply detested Canada's Conservative government was by some employees of the Foreign Affairs Department.
 
That impression was described in a note sent three years ago to Hillary Clinton, who was then the secretary of state and whose emails are now being publicly released.
 
It was contained in a message where a U.S. official described how his colleagues across the border pleaded for his help lobbying the Canadian government not to cut a program for Haiti.
 
The U.S. special co-ordinator for Haiti said Canadians were worried about budget cuts that would have slashed down an operation from 11 employees to four, for a country that was ostensibly a major Canadian foreign policy priority.
 
"I was a little astonished at how openly the career folks at the foreign and assistance ministries disliked their new political masters and wanted us to convince them not to cut Haiti," said Tom Adams, in a May 2012 email forwarded to Clinton and released Monday.  
 
"In my many years here I have never seen such open disloyalty with a change of administrations. Although the political appointees told me there was no need to have the Secretary talk to Baird about Haiti, the senior career folks, on the margins, implored me to have this done."
 
The dynamic described in that email was on public display recently after the federal election, when employees at the foreign ministry cheered during a visit from their new Liberal bosses.
 
Clinton replied that she was happy to call her counterpart John Baird, if necessary. The presidential contender's emails are now being released in instalments, after an uproar over her use of a private home-based server that couldn't be searched for freedom of information requests.
 
The latest released batch includes another interesting exchange about Canada.
 
There was delight in Clinton's office over news that Omar Khadr was being released from the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay and repatriated to a prison in his home country.
 
 
The newly released emails show the then-secretary of state's response to news that the young man was being transferred to Canada: "Thank you for all you did to get this resolved."
 
She was writing to the State Department's legal adviser — who was ecstatic at the 2012 development.
 
"So glad we got this done," said the adviser, Harold Koh. "After spending the last 10 years on GTMO, at least this young man finally has another chance."
 
Canada's then-Conservative government was far less enthusiastic about approving Khadr's return, which was delayed amid sniping between Canada and the U.S.
 
In his written decision allowing the transfer, then-public safety minister Vic Toews expressed five points of concern about bringing home a young man he described as a known al-Qaida supporter and convicted terrorist.
 
Khadr's advocates describe him as a child soldier. And the Obama administration wanted him out of Guantanamo, amid its years-long effort to close the detention centre in Cuba.
 
He was of grade-school age when his father moved the family to Afghanistan, and after 9-11 was convicted on murder for throwing a grenade that killed U.S. Army medic Christopher Speer and seriously injured another soldier.
 
He spent a decade at Guantanamo, was transferred to a Canadian maximum-security prison in 2012, then to medium security in 2014, and was released on bail earlier this year under an Alberta court decision contested by the Harper government.
 
But Koh, the State Department lawyer, wrote of Khadr's transfer: "Gtmo is 1 down!! Yayy!" When another colleague congratulated the team on its work, he replied again: "Hooray! Thanks for the call to FM Baird!"
 
 
Those references to Baird were among several in Clinton's emails, as the foreign ministers occasionally discussed ongoing international files ranging from multilateral meetings to crises like Syria.

MORE International ARTICLES

World's Shortest Man Chandra Bahadur Dangi Dies In American Samoa

World's Shortest Man Chandra Bahadur Dangi Dies In American Samoa
The world's shortest man, Chandra Bahadur Dangi of Nepal, died in American Samoa in the Pacific early Friday following a brief illness , a family friend said in Mumbai.

World's Shortest Man Chandra Bahadur Dangi Dies In American Samoa

Indian-American Doctor kirpal Singh Rains Peers In Robot-Assisted Surgery

Indian-American Doctor kirpal Singh Rains Peers In Robot-Assisted Surgery
Kirpal Singh, a surgeon at St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital in Illinois, has so far performed about 450 operations using the $2 million da Vinci robot. 

Indian-American Doctor kirpal Singh Rains Peers In Robot-Assisted Surgery

Indian Tourists Boost Tourism In Australia

Indian Tourists Boost Tourism In Australia
India is among the top 10 countries which have helped Australia record its strongest tourism year since the Sydney Olympics Games in 2001

Indian Tourists Boost Tourism In Australia

New Zealand Students Learn Kathak For Arts Contest

New Zealand Students Learn Kathak For Arts Contest
A group of girl students in New Zealand has learned the Indian classical dance Kathak as part of a wearable arts contest that draws big sponsors from around the country's North Island region

New Zealand Students Learn Kathak For Arts Contest

Slammed Indian Grandfather Sureshbhai Patel Testifies At US Cop's Trial

Sureshbhai Patel, 57, was called to the stand as the trial of former police office Eric Parker, 26, began in a Huntsville, Alabama federal court

Slammed Indian Grandfather Sureshbhai Patel Testifies At US Cop's Trial

Bobby Jindal Blames Republicans For Obama Victory On Iran Deal

Indian-American Republican presidential hopeful Bobby Jindal has blamed his party's lawmakers for getting badly outplayed in their efforts to sink President Barack Obama's nuclear deal with Iran.

Bobby Jindal Blames Republicans For Obama Victory On Iran Deal