Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former Grit foreign affairs minister upset by Liberal opposition to Iraq mission

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2014 11:08 AM

    OTTAWA - Former foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy says he's perplexed and disappointed that federal Liberals have effectively turned their backs on the responsibility-to-protect doctrine championed by a previous Grit government.

    But he's also disappointed that Prime Minister Stephen Harper hasn't framed Canada's commitment to a six-month combat mission in Iraq as a crucial test of that international doctrine.

    If he had emphasized the doctrine and dispensed with political games, Axworthy believes Harper could have won all-party support for committing Canadian fighter jets to participate in U.S.-led air strikes against Islamic extremists in Iraq.

    Axworthy was foreign affairs minister in 1999 when the Liberal government of Jean Chretien was faced with a similar decision over whether to join a NATO air campaign against the former Yugoslavia — a mission which ultimately won support from all five parties in Parliament at the time.

    The air strikes accomplished their goal of ending Yugoslavia's brutal war in Kosovo and set a precedent that eventually led the United Nations to adopt the responsibility-to-protect doctrine.

    The doctrine, which Axworthy says Canada effectively authored, requires the international community to step in if a country cannot protect its own people from atrocities.

    "I think if the (Iraq) mission had been put forward in those terms ... then I think it would have developed a much stronger bipartisan base for consensus in Parliament and in the country," Axworthy said in a telephone interview from Italy, where he doing academic work on the doctrine as resident at the Rockefeller Foundation's Bellagio Centre.

    "This is not the time to be playing sort of silly, petty politics on this. I mean this is a serious, significant issue. Thousands of people are being murdered."

    But even if the Harper government didn't adequately make the case for the responsibility to protect, Axworthy said he can't understand why Justin Trudeau's Liberals did not.

    "That's my disappointment was here's a chance for Canada to really say, 'Look this is one of the most crucial issues of our time. How do we stop this kind of wilful murder and violence and atrocities that we've seen in Rwanda and northern Congo?'

    "You've got to realize that diplomatic niceties are not going to work, humanitarian aid is not going to work if people are going to be shot in their beds ... At times, you have to toughen up."

    Axworthy's comments came as Trudeau was fending off suggestions that Liberals are divided over the Iraq mission. Several party luminaries from years gone by have supported the mission and one current MP, Irwin Cotler, abstained from a vote on it on Tuesday night.

    Both the Liberals and New Democrats, who also voted against the Iraq combat mission, are skeptical that Canada's military involvement can be kept to a mere six months. While he hasn't ruled out seeking parliamentary approval to extend the mission, Harper has vowed not to let it evolve into a years-long, messy "quagmire."

    Axworthy criticized all parties for promulgating the notion that the responsibility to protect innocent civilians can be contained to a few months or even a few years.

    "If you're going to really provide that kind of international protection, you've got to be prepared to do it properly and do it in a way that doesn't simply allow you to pack your bags and get out as soon as you can," he said.

    Axworthy said Canada and its allies can't repeat "the big mistake" they made in Libya in 2011, when an international air campaign succeeded in stopping the killing by Moammar Gadhafi's brutal government but then "everybody packed up and went home and they left a vacuum for the warlords and militias to fill in again."

    Noting that Canada stationed peacekeepers in Cypress for 30 years, Axworthy said: "Why do we all of a sudden come to the conclusion that our international responsibilities are sort of short, 30-second clips?"

    He believes ground troops may eventually be necessary to root the Islamic extremists but he said they don't necessarily have to come from Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    32 Killed In Dussehra Event Stampede In Patna

    32 Killed In Dussehra Event Stampede In Patna
    At least 32 people, including women and children, died in a stampede Friday evening after the burning of the Ravana effigy at the Gandhi Maidan here, officials said.

    32 Killed In Dussehra Event Stampede In Patna

    Canadian Satellite Finally To Be Launched By India

    Canadian Satellite Finally To Be Launched By India
     The launch of a Canadian satellite, postponed amid tensions in the Ukraine, is finally scheduled for liftoff — one year behind schedule. The M3M communications satellite  was originally to be launched aboard a Russian rocket

    Canadian Satellite Finally To Be Launched By India

    Rob Ford Told Cancer Has 50/50 Survival Rate

    Rob Ford Told Cancer Has 50/50 Survival Rate
    TORONTO - The hardest part of battling a rare and aggressive form of cancer has been explaining it to his school-age children, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford said Thursday, admitting he sometimes cries himself to sleep.

    Rob Ford Told Cancer Has 50/50 Survival Rate

    Vancouver Police Probe Targeted Home Invasion Involving Alleged Gang Associate

    Vancouver Police Probe Targeted Home Invasion Involving Alleged Gang Associate
    VANCOUVER - A man Vancouver police believe to be a gang associate is recovering from multiple stab wounds after a targeted home invasion.

    Vancouver Police Probe Targeted Home Invasion Involving Alleged Gang Associate

    Shooting Suspects Sought After Abbotsford, B.C. Police Find Body In Car

    Shooting Suspects Sought After Abbotsford, B.C. Police Find Body In Car
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. - Abbotsford, B.C. police say a young man was found dead in a residential neighbourhood Thursday evening.

    Shooting Suspects Sought After Abbotsford, B.C. Police Find Body In Car

    Iconic Canadian photo, Wait for Me Daddy has dual meaning for B.C. boy now senior

    Iconic Canadian photo, Wait for Me Daddy has dual meaning for B.C. boy now senior
    VANCOUVER - It's credited as the most famous Canadian photo of the Second World War, a little boy running from his mother for the outstretched hand of his soldier father, but for Warren "Whitey" Bernard his image as a five year old is more powerful for what it doesn't show.

    Iconic Canadian photo, Wait for Me Daddy has dual meaning for B.C. boy now senior