I think we have
three vital interests at play in Afghanistan:
1. Self-defence - the (Taliban) Government of Afghanistan provided real support to the 'base' organization (al Qaeda) which attacked us;
2. Staying allied with allies - we are a
charter member and a one-time and would-be-again leader of the West. We were asked to 'step up' and shoulder some of the burden of
peacemaking. We did, as we should have; and
3. Responsibility to Protect. I believe that some Canadians - not very many, I hasten to add - actually believe in the R2P doctrine which we pushed so hard in the UN throughout the '90s.
Each, in and of itself, is
insufficient to justify sending Canadian troops and treasure into battle but any two, taken together might be, when all three are factored in it is an easy choice.
What about e.g. Darfur?
R2P is, certainly, at play but none of the others, (self defence, alliance obligations, economic interests) are
operative so I say No! to Darfur. Ditto Haiti, for now, anyway – but I am prepared to understand that that the current government may want to use it as part of the ‘neighbourhood’ argument and there is a modestly important
kith and kin argument in three or four Montreal area electoral ridings. Those two factors could see us in Haiti, again. I have heard
beer fuelled rumours to the effect that some planners want a two mission profile:
1. Haiti – assigned, primarily, to 5th and 34th brigades; and
2. Afghanistan – assigned to almost everyone else.
It makes just enough
political sense to have some basis in fact; there is an overwhelming
desire in Ottawa for generals to want to be politicized bureaucrats and bureaucrats to want to be military operations planners. Everyone always wants to piddle in the other fellow’s pool.
In short: I have trouble imagining, right now, how we might find one vital interest sufficient to justify sending troops into battle – but two or three together are in play, right now, in Afghanistan.
If the government of the day is serious about wanting Canada to play a
leadership role (and I’m not convinced that’s very high on the PM's ‘to do’ list) then PM Harper needs to stop governing by poll and point the foreign affairs
machine in the right direction. Now I understand, from the media and the
rumour mill that the PM is trying to push the striped pants brigade into line but it’s a slow, arduous process. Foreign Affairs is only a pale, weak imitation of the powerhouse department it was until the 1970s. It may be necessary to rebuild the department before it can do much useful. (The civil service is divided into two very distinct
classes. The
upper class was (until
circa 1970) found in External Affairs, Finance and, of course, the PCO; the
lower classes were in all other departments. (Briefly, in the early ‘40s, CD Howe’s team joined the
upper class.) Now there are only two departments in the
upper class: Finance and PCO.)
Edit: I have hear
d beer fuelled rumours to