The Electronic Intifada 11 February 2015
The announcement that John Baird is to stand down as Canada’s foreign minister came about a year too late for Gaza.
For it was Baird who had gleefully embodied Canada’s ugly stance on last summer’s Israeli attack.
Not content simply to ignore the slaughter of sleeping children and unarmed civilians fleeing while waving white flags, Baird and his Conservative Party boss, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, rose to the unconditional defense of Israel, pretending the Palestinian question originated with Hamas, implying parity between the two “sides,” smoke-screening the longstanding siege of Gaza and blaming the dead for their own annihilation.
Curiously, some pundits in Canada’s mainstream press who seemed happy with Baird’s sledgehammer statecraft during his tenure, which includes cutting all diplomatic ties with Iran, have just now begun questioning his approach to Palestine.
Writing in The Globe and Mail, for instance, Middle East correspondent Patrick Martin observes that “There were times, when John Baird was foreign minister, that people weren’t quite sure in what country’s cabinet he served.”
“Baird, for all his intelligence and charm, chose not to untangle the Arab-Israeli complexities and help build a bridge between the parties,” Martin adds, “but to take a side, that of Israel, to which he gave carte blanche.”
While many would say these observations are far too little and much too late, there’s no doubt this view is widely shared by Palestinians and their supporters.
Saeb Erekat, chief negotiator for the Palestinian Authority, wrote an opinion piece headlined “It is John Baird who needs to apologize to the Palestinian people.” According to Erekat, the Western-backed PA “has been engaged in a diplomatic effort to obtain those very same ideals Canadians hold dear — to achieve freedom and dignity. We have been working tirelessly to exercise our right to self-determination and establish a state of our own — a state that lives in peace and security with its neighbors, including Israel.”
In practice, as many Palestinian critics of the PA have pointed out, this has meant making endless concessions to Israel on fundamental issues such as settlements and Jerusalem, as well as collaborating closely with Israeli occupation forces against any form of Palestinian resistance.
“Instead of rewarding the Palestinians for their insistence on pursuing peace and for their deep commitment to the stability and security of the region,” Erekat added, “Mr. Baird has chosen to deride and stand against Palestinians at every corner.”
An absent opposition
One could be forgiven for thinking that free-flying spittle seems rather un-Canadian, and admittedly the international media have bigger fish to fry than documenting the increasingly cynical immorality of the country’s foreign policy under Harper and his sidekick Baird.
And while we’re at it, it’s only fair to note that their ill-considered and ahistorical views went virtually unchallenged by either of the country’s putative “opposition” parties. There’s the formerly progressive New Democratic Party, one of whose legislators, Sana Hassainia, quit over her party’s failure to condemn Israeli aggression in Gaza, and was subsequently subjected to a smear campaign.
And then there’s the formerly centrist Liberal Party, now led by Justin Trudeau, whose father, the late former Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau, was the only real statesman to have led Canada during my lifetime.
My Lebanese-Canadian grandparents were so loyal to the pro-immigrant Liberals of their day, they kept a framed picture of their local member of Parliament (MP) on the mantelpiece alongside family photos.
In fact, at the height of last summer’s Gaza onslaught, a group of eight Liberal and Conservative MPs embarked on a “fact-finding mission” to Israel sponsored by the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs.
Not one of those MPs — who remain mute to this day on Israel’s targeting of UNRWA schools, the four-figure Palestinian death toll and Israel’s near-daily ceasefire violations — set foot in Gaza on this quest for “facts.” Instead, their time was spent visiting injured Israeli soldiers to offer sympathy and condolences.
Still, I confess to a soft spot for the former Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien, whose swan song consisted of refusing the invitation by US President George W. Bush and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair to help invade Iraq.
Contrast that with Baird’s ennobling cri de coeur: the announcement on 18 January of a formal pact between Canada and Israel to fight efforts to boycott Israel.
As The Electronic Intifada has reported, the move was denounced by Palestine’s Boycott National Committee, the steering group for the global boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement, which accused Canada of “further deepening its collaboration with Israel’s occupation and launching a shameful, propagandistic attack on free speech in the process.”
“Aversion to justice”
The pact with Israel came on the heels of Baird’s pronouncement that the Palestinian bid to join the International Criminal Court (ICC) was “a huge mistake.” This view was challenged forcefully by Paul Heinbecker, the country’s last ambassador to sit in the UN Security Council and a foreign policy advisor to former Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.
Describing the ICC as “a court of last resort,” Heinbecker writes that “Ottawa’s bluster in response to the Palestinian initiative looks more like an aversion to justice than a devotion to principle.”
There was precedent, of course. On 16 July, just a week after Israel’s 51-day-long summer assault on Gaza began, Harper’s Conservative party released the video Through Fire and Water, Canada Will Stand with You, a two-and-half-minute-long blank check for any acts of terror or criminality Israel might undertake.
To the beat of military drums and a backdrop of flags waving in slow motion, Harper offered this context for Canada’s unconditional support: “At the great turning points of history, Canada has consistently chosen — often to our great cost — to stand with others who oppose injustice and to confront the dark forces of the world.”
Those unfamiliar with Canadian history might wonder about the “turning points” to which Harper refers. Perhaps he’s talking about the resolution of the 1956 Suez Crisis, which earned Lester B. Pearson, the Canadian president of the United Nations General Assembly, the Nobel Peace Prize in 1957.
In fact, just six weeks after the release of Through Fire and Water, B’nai Brith, an influential Canadian Jewish and pro-Israel organization, nominated Harper for the same prize to widespread outrage.
The comparison might seem risible until one considers Pearson’s proactive role in helping to create Israel in the first place. Before he took the helm at the UN General Assembly, Pearson had chaired the UN Special Committee on Palestine which supported existing plans to carve up the land, and rejected a one-state solution proposed by the Arab Higher Committee in which all religious and ethnic groups would live side by side and be entitled to equal rights.
In fact, throughout the country’s history there has often been tension between Canadians’ self-regard as decent, honest brokers and its less principled policies. Nonetheless, Canada’s foreign policy has reached its nadir under Harper.
The writing was on the wall back in 2010 when Canada lost its bid for a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council for the first time in history. In response, then Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon perversely declared that “some would even say that, because of our attachment to [democratic and human rights principles] we lost a seat on the council. If that’s the case, then so be it.”
I’m not sure my friends at some of Canada’s human rights organizations shared Cannon’s analysis of the unprecedented loss, nor the misplaced chutzpah his remarks exposed. The bigger question is whether Canadians at large will recognize how far the country is shifting away from a growing consensus on Israeli aggression and Palestinian rights, and whether they’ll prioritize rehabilitating Canada’s global standing.
Juliana Farha is a Canadian writer based in London. She blogs at www.twowords.ca on politics, feminism and social issues.
Comments
Canada’s blank check for Israel
Permalink Hanna Kawas replied on
Please sign Canada Palestine Association's petition to "Oppose Canadian complicity in Israeli Apartheid" https://www.causes.com/campaig...
do the right thing canada. It
Permalink Yosef Pharaon replied on
do the right thing canada. It is your global responsibility and moral obligation. You can be a leader of peace once again
MORE THAN JOHN BAIRD
Permalink Peter Loeb replied on
This article by Juliana Farha provides us with background and much-
needed knowledge about John Baird who now exits as Canada's Foreign
Minister.
I should like to suggest that Canada's support of Israel and opposition to
Palestinians extends further than one man. Following votes in the UN General
Assembly on key issues, one will find that Canada invariably follows the
US and Israel assuming the role of their proverbial "poodle" to borrow the British condemnation of former UK PM Tony Blair's obedience to George W. Bush.
I am heartened that there are those in Canada who do not share these
reactionary views presented as though they represented all of Canada united.
[This manner of presentation is automatically assumed by all Heads of
State who purport to represent all "the American people" etc.]
One can only hope that Canadians arise to make their disagreement known
by their government and in the world.
As a footnote, the suggestion of an "apology" to the PA mentioned is
pathetic. What is needed is a change in policy, not a few meaningless words
in an "apology". And certainly not to the PA as suggested by Saeb Erekat of
the PA!]
---Peter Loeb, Boston, MA, USA
more than john baird
Permalink Juliana Farha replied on
Thank you for your comment, Peter. A couple of notes.
Erekat's reference to an 'apology' was in response to John Baird's demand that Erekat apologise for comparing Israel to Islamic State. Still, your observation about this pathetic notion draws attention to the shallow conceptual framework within which Canadian foreign policy currently operates.
Also, I am beyond heartened that some Canadians don't share these views. I'm downright astonished, especially when I visit Canada and am exposed to the one-sided perspective and cynical cherry picking of 'facts' presented across all media there. I wasn't able to cover this in my piece, but to your point about the issue going beyond one man, I think the total media whitewash is a significant factor in allowing Canada's hawkish swing to occur virtually uncontested. Even those who disagree never hear their views echoed in the public realm. I know things aren't great in the American mainstream media, but some very good commentary originates there, from issue-specific websites like Electronic Intifada and Mondoweiss to Counterpunch and The Nation. 'Alternative' for sure, but important voices nonetheless...
power dynamics
Permalink Eric* replied on
The so-called "Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs" replaced, a few years ago, the Canadian Jewish Congress, which some elite Jews apparently deemed too communitarian, too democratic and not sufficiently pro-Israel (though what they had to complain about was not obvious).
BTW, your "soft spot for the former Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien, whose swan song consisted of refusing the invitation by US President George W. Bush and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair to help invade Iraq" is misplaced. Chretien had to choose during a Quebec election campaign in which his provincial Liberal counterparts appeared to be in trouble, and during which a Montreal demonstration against the planned war attracted an estimated 250,000 people.
Furthermore, the Chretien government did support the war, just not openly:
-- high-ranking Canadian soldiers helped plan the invasion from U.S. command in the Gulf States
-- Canadian soldiers 'seconded' to U.S. forces participated in the invasion
-- a Canadian frigate helped enforce the illegal blockade of Iraq in the Gulf
-- Canadian companies supplied bullets and other materiel to U.S. forces
None of these reflect a policy of truly opposing the invasion.
Chretien looks good only in comparison with Harper, who called for open Canadian participation in the invasion.
* I hope I'm not blocked, as was my previous comment to EI.
Arrest Harper and Baird
Permalink Andrew Abbass replied on
Canadians want them both arrested for inciting genocide.
change.org/p/intlcrimcourt-arrest-harper-for-inciting-genocide-against-muslims
Treason
Permalink Dbash replied on
Harper and Baird must be brought to justice and charged of betraying the Candian people.
EVERY CANADIAN NEEDS TO SEE THIS NOW!
Permalink Cousin C replied on
"And then there’s the formerly centrist Liberal Party, now led by Justin Trudeau, whose father, the late former Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau, was the only real statesman to have led Canada during my lifetime."
This one statement shows just how detached you are from reality. Trudeau is the biggest POS this country has had...he committed treason by allowing our Public Bank (for the people nationalized in 1938) to be taken over by the BIS and central bankers. Just do a quick search right now on Rocco Galati and Comer...they launched a lawsuit the biggest case in Canada's history and the media is completely silent! Why? Because it will expose TREASON by every Prime Minister since Trudeau who have not only allowed but further enslaved the people to a foreign entity who now controls our money supply. This further goes to the crime committed against every man and woman at birth...look on the back of your Birth Certificates...there is a red number there...that is a Cusip number required for anything to be traded on the stock exchange....so what is that doing on the back of every birth certificate...the ALL CAPS NAME? That is the fiction that governments own...THIS IS NOT YOU AS A MAN OR WOMAN IN LAW.... the gov is terrified the people are finding this out because once it reaches the masses...you will see these parasites called lawyers and these courts shut down and restored to the rule of law for man.
educate yourself people...we are surrounding by criminals only because we have allowed our consciousness to be compromised....WAKE UP!
Every Canadian needs to watch these
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Harpers' Agenda
Permalink Richard Barran replied on
The Canada I loved and respected is gone forever. This is in large part due to Harper and others of his ilk. This man has literally single-handedly destroyed our reputation as nation of peace-makers. He and his NATO allies have been creating chaos and rushing in with a "solution" in the Middle-East and Africa. They manage, with an ever compliant mainstream media, to collectively pull the wool over our eyes as they trample over everyone and everything. They most recent example is the newest form of actual terror : the newest piece of "anti-terrorism" legislation - designed to keep us, the people in check and curtail more of our long held freedoms. We, in turn are like sheep being led to the slaughter, An 80 % approval for this draconian piece without having read a single page!