Posted on 01/24/2006 4:14:17 PM PST by neverdem
An unexpected Election Day, shaped by unexpected forces, could yield unexpected results for Canadaand the world.
Canadas January 23 elections were triggered when opposition parties coalesced to bring down the corruption-plagued government of Prime Minister Paul Martin with a no-confidence vote in late November. After trailing Martins Liberal Party for months on end, the Conservative Party recently surged ahead in polls, with a plurality of Canadians saying they favor the opposition party over the Liberal Party, which has been in power since 1993. But whats just as intriguing is how these elections are being energized by something few people on either side of the border normally identify with Canadanationalism.
For years, not being American was perhaps the one thing that united Canadians and separated them from the colossus to the south. But if the tenor of this election is any indication, Canadas strange strand of non-nationalism may be giving way to more traditional nationalism.
Consider the anger Americas genteel northern neighbors have expressed over reports that U.S. submarines have been traversing the icy waters around the North Pole without Ottawas permission. Arctic waters are Canadian and are sovereign waters, Martin intoned in December. Canada will defend its sovereignty.
The USS Charlotte, which apparently visited the North Pole in November without prior notification, was the most recent culpritor perhaps better said, the most recent case of which we are aware. There are reports that other submarine-armed navies have been playing in Canadas waters, too. As Gordon OConnor, a Conservative M.P. and former brigadier general, told the Canadian Press last month, it is common knowledge among Canadian national-security experts that nuclear submarines from the United States, Russia, France, and Great Britain pass through our territory without necessarily seeking permission.
Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper promises to be tougher than Martin when it comes to protecting Canadas borders and waters. To punctuate his commitment to Canadian sovereignty, Harper has dubbed his defense strategy Canada First.
He wants to erect an arctic sensor system to detect incursions, set up new military bases in the arctic, deploy a new airborne unit and acquire new long-range lift capabilities. Along the way, he plans to pour billions into Canadas emaciated military, vowing to boost defense spending to $20 billion annually.
With Martin himself promising $12.8 billion in new military spending over five years (the largest increase in two decades) and Harper promising $1.8 billion annually above and beyond Martins proposal, tomorrows Canada could have the muscle and the will to be much different than todays.
The single most important duty of the federal government is to protect and defend our national sovereignty, Harper noted last month. You dont defend national sovereignty with flags, cheap election rhetoric, and advertising campaigns, Harper argued during his bid for Martins job. You need forces on the ground, ships in the sea, and proper surveillance.
Harpers reference to defending Canada with flags has to do with Martins clumsy handling of a territorial dispute with Denmark over tiny Hans Island, the uninhabited chunk of land sandwiched between Danish-controlled Greenland and Canadian-controlled Ellesmere Island. Both countries have claimed it for more than 30 years.
Denmark has sent ships and/or troops to the island at least five times over the last 17 years. Three times between 1984 and 2004, Danish forces even raised their colors. Canadian forces raised their flag over the rock in mid-2005.
In a fit of frustration or foolishness, Canadian Defense Minister Bill Graham then visited the island in July 2005. We are making sure the Danes know that this is part of Canadian territory, he said during his walk across the frozen isle. Denmark responded by sending a ship to Hansand by planting another Danish flag. Canada then sent a three-ship taskforce to the island, displaying what the British newspaper The Independent called a new and almost bellicose determination to protect the sovereignty of its northernmost boundaries.
By September of last year, the sides agreed to resolve the matter at the U.N., setting the Doomsday Clock back for these two NATO juggernautsat least for now.
The incident may sound silly, but to some it appeared that Canada essentially backed down. After all, if the island is important enough to send the defense minister and a detachment of troops, why defer it to the U.N.?
The answer may be Canadas ever-weakening defenses. Hans Island is just the latest example of how Ottawas pitiful defense outlays force it to conduct a toothless foreign policy by default. Recall that Canadas paltry defense budget of $13 billion accounts for just 1.1 percent of its GDP, ranking it 128th in the world.
It wasnt always this way. Historian Derek Leebaert notes how Canada, whose GDP was about a tenth of the United States, shouldered a third of the cost of deploying the radar stations that guarded North America against Soviet bombers during the Cold War. As the CBC detailed recently, at the end of World War II Canada had the third-largest fleet of warships in the world. Today, Canada has just 30 ships and four submarines. Canada dispatched a million men to fight in World War II. Today, it has just 1,200 troops deployed overseasmost of whom had to be delivered by U.S. transport planes.
In international law, as General OConnor bluntly concludes, sovereignty must be enforced to be recognized. Perhaps Canada, at long last, is remembering this truthand summoning both the tools and the will to rejoin the ranks of the sovereign.
Alan Dowd is a contributing writer with The American Enterprise, a weekly columnist at The American Enterprise Online, and a senior fellow at Sagamore Institute for Policy Research.
(((.)))
I have a feeling this article's over-blowing the importance of the submarine transgressions on the Canadian people but if not, STFU.
Not only do they have an armed force but they assiduously take turns practicing with the rifle and get classroom training on .50 cal machine guns for if they ever get one.
Partially, but mostly it was due to an evangelical belief on the part of the government of the time of the power, mystique, and moral righteousness of the UN. One wonders how that government felt about the Easter Bunny.
Dudly Do-Right rides again...
Oh my God... there are conservative in homosexual Canada?
Sorry Canada, it just doesn't work in French.
Canada Ping!
Please FReepmail me to get on or off this Canada ping list.
<< Canada dispatched a million men to fight in World War II. Today, it has just 1,200 troops deployed overseasmost of whom had to be delivered by U.S. transport planes. >>
But it's pro-rata competitive with the Limeys.
In troop numbers and in needing US transport - and every other kind of support - to get there and to be there.
Those who serve under the Maple Leaf are very professional and quite competent. I trained with the RCAF at Cold Lake, Alberta and despite the obvious lack of govt. support, they knew their business (and can drink)(Cold Lake is a Great base - two rinks)
Bring it on!!!
Have at 'em Captain. I'll lend you a Bren gun.
That'll leave 22 in the armory. :)
Go ahead, keep making fun of Canada & Canadians...
I guess that's the way you make friends...
Jeez, that brings back memories. I actually fired that damn
thing many times. I preferred the 105mm on my Centurion. ;)
Sure. Here's his housecleaning staff.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.