Stephen Harper's Military Strategy moves Canada from Humanitarian Peacekeeping Traditions to War Making
by Eugene Parks,
British Columbia Independent Editorialist
A "Canada First" military strategy is Stephen Harper's latest
promise. Of course one can be forgiven for asking, "What does that
mean?" When asked, the Prime Minister's Office produced no study
papers or plans of any kind. So what is the military point that the
Prime Minister is trying to make?
Under Liberal governments our military was used primarily for
humanitarian relief and peace keeping (with few exceptions). Since
the Trudeau era our military has not been used for just our own
direct protection and benefit. Rather we spent military resources,
and sometimes lives, to help others.
Presumably then, Prime Minister Stephen Harper is saying that using
our military as a humanitarian and peace keeping force is no longer
Canada's principle military objective. Given the Prime Minister's
insistence on hard combat in what is now a local civil war in
Afghanistan, we can also conclude that Mr. Harper equates a "Canada
First Military Strategy" with hard combat.
However, for nearly fifty years Canada has recognized that hard
military combat should not be the main purpose of military force.
Defending the peace through humanitarian relief and peace keeping
produces far greater returns than does deadly combat. Naturally,
military forces must be able to inflict and take casualties in
defence of its civilian population. However, our defence is greater
served through helping others and keeping the peace. Having an
increasingly effective DART capability would garner Canada the
greatest international acclaim and provide greater protection for
Canadians at home.
Unfortunately, we now have a Prime Minister that believes in war
making more than peace keeping -- present for combat in Afghanistan,
absent in relief for Myanmar and China.
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