Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Have Owned My Mistake, Now Time For Action On Defence File: Harjit Sajjan

Darpan News Desk, 04 May, 2017 12:01 PM
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says he could have gone to a fundraising dinner for Afghan war veterans this week to make amends for how he described his role in that conflict.
     
    But preparing for a speech Wednesday on the future of Canadian defence spending was more important, Sajjan told The Canadian Press in an interview Wednesday.
     
    "With veterans, with soldiers, I'm going to have many opportunities," he said.
     
    "As a minister, I am not here to step away from anything, I am here to own my mistake, but I also have a job to do to deliver for them."
     
    In a speech in India last month, Sajjan described himself as the "architect" of Operation Medusa, a major combat offensive in Afghanistan in 2006.
     
     
    The 15-day battle was overseen by then major-general David Fraser who was in charge of all NATO forces in southern Afghanistan. That Sajjan would describe himself as the architect raised eyebrows in military circles and, despite repeated apologies, he's faced opposition calls for his resignation for days.
     
    The Opposition Conservatives described his decision to skip the veterans' dinner as going into hiding.
     
    "Last night, the defence minister had the perfect opportunity to personally apologize to veterans of the Afghanistan campaign at a fundraiser for Afghan vets," interim leader Rona Ambrose told the Commons on Wednesday.
     
    "He was supposed to be there but, clearly, he felt so uncomfortable that he cancelled."
     
    Sajjan's office had said Tuesday that a scheduling conflict prevented the minister from attending.
     
     
    In the interview, Sajjan said his schedule had filled up with "other things," and he needed to prepare for Wednesday's remarks and the defence policy review, a blueprint expected to be released ahead of this month's NATO meeting.
     
    "I wanted to make sure that I'm well prepared for it," he said.
     
    "I'm going to be judged by my actions. I'm a minister of national defence and I need to make to sure I deliver on that and that's what I will do and when the defence policy is launched, I think there will be a very strong message on that."
     
    The speech in India wasn't the first time Sajjan has used the term architect; he told an interviewer in 2015 that chief of defence staff Jonathan Vance also referred to him that way.
     
    Vance has refused to comment, saying only that the minister has apologized and he views the matter as closed. Sajjan wouldn't say Wednesday whether Vance had actually used that phrase.
     
     
    "A lot of people characterized my role in different ways," Sajjan said.
     
    His job, Sajjan said, defied a singular definition. His task was figuring out the extent of the presence and strength of the Taliban in the area immediately outside Kandahar City known as the Panjwai district.
     
    Upon arrival in Kandahar, Sajjan began co-ordinating a weekly security leaders meeting held at the governor's palace. From those, he was able to glean information that he later followed up on during trips into the district over the spring of 2006.
     
    Understanding local grievances, the extent of the infiltration of the Taliban — he once caught a district governor stealing a man's bicycle — and also helping Canadian soldiers piece together the information they were gathering were all part of his job and helped inform the operation, he said.
     
    Sajjan said he understand the furor around his remarks. But he won't explain why he said what he did.
     
     
    "I can go through what was going through my head, all of those things, but at the end of the day I still made a mistake and once you make a mistake it's about don't make excuses, own it, acknowledge it first of all, and then learn from it and carry on," he said.
     
    "And the other thing, you shouldn't be talking about what you've done. I should be praising other people's work."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ex-Nurse Charged With Killing Eight Seniors Waives Right To Prelim

    Ex-Nurse Charged With Killing Eight Seniors Waives Right To Prelim
    WOODSTOCK, Ont. — A former Ontario nurse accused of killing eight seniors in her care has waived her right to a preliminary hearing and will go straight to trial.

    Ex-Nurse Charged With Killing Eight Seniors Waives Right To Prelim

    Surrey RCMP Seize Thousands Of Dollars In Allegedly Stolen Goods From Store

    Surrey RCMP Seize Thousands Of Dollars In Allegedly Stolen Goods From Store
    Surrey RCMP advises that a retail theft fencing operation was shut down recently in the City Centre area.

    Surrey RCMP Seize Thousands Of Dollars In Allegedly Stolen Goods From Store

    Ontario Passes Motion Calling 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Genocide, India Terms Move Misguided

    Ontario Passes Motion Calling 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Genocide, India Terms Move Misguided
    The Government of Ontario province in Canada on Friday passed a motion in the Legislative Assembly to officially recognise the 1984 anti-Sikh riots as “Sikh genocide” while calling upon “all sides to embrace truth and reconciliation.”

    Ontario Passes Motion Calling 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Genocide, India Terms Move Misguided

    Elderly Indian Woman Dies After Air Canada Flight's Emergency Landing In Calgary

    Elderly Indian Woman Dies After Air Canada Flight's Emergency Landing In Calgary
    Several people tried to help her, including two doctors and a nurse, and the plane made an emergency landing in Calgary so she could be rushed to hospital.

    Elderly Indian Woman Dies After Air Canada Flight's Emergency Landing In Calgary

    B.C. Heads To Polls May 9; NDP, Greens Challenge Four-Term Liberal Dynasty

    B.C. Heads To Polls May 9; NDP, Greens Challenge Four-Term Liberal Dynasty
    VICTORIA — The British Columbian election pits a battle-tested Liberal dynasty against a gloves-off New Democratic Party fixated on shaking its loser mantle, while the upstart Green party pushes for a political breakthrough.

    B.C. Heads To Polls May 9; NDP, Greens Challenge Four-Term Liberal Dynasty

    WATCH: Nikki Haley Booed Over Russia Answer

    WATCH: Nikki Haley Booed Over Russia Answer
    As she was answering questions during the session titled 'Trump's Diplomat: Nikki Haley' moderated by MSNBC anchor Greta Van Susteren, Haley was booed and heckled on several occasions.

    WATCH: Nikki Haley Booed Over Russia Answer