Author Archive

Will the real Success in Afghanistan be the Acceptance of a Timely Withdrawal?

Friday, March 26th, 2010

As Operation Moshtarak continues at this very moment it is pertinent to once again draw our attention to the tactics being deployed on the ground in Afghanistan. The spotlight has recently been on the political attempts to bring stable government to the country in the form of President Karzai’s premiership but the foundations of this will truly be built by the military actions of the ISAF. It is this need that has brought about Operation Moshtarak. With time running out before the withdrawal of troops begins, large offensives will be the order of the day in an attempt to create a legacy of stability from which the West-backed Karzai can act.

While it is all too easy to scrutinize and criticize tactics from the safety of our homes, there needs to be a realization of what lies ahead. However, simultaneously, the ISAF forces need to take action and snatch the initiative. Inaction would be just as deadly and allow the Taliban to seize upon this passivity. It is this conflict of ideas, along with numerous other factors, that causes the current situation inside the country to be so precarious.
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2010 is a Year of Unrivalled Opportunity for Canada’s International Image

Sunday, January 17th, 2010
Photo Credit: Toronto Star

Photo Credit: Toronto Star

The coming year will be integral to the rebuilding of Canada’s international image. Regardless of one’s views concerning the Copenhagen climate summit, it is unarguable that Canada’s position in the world has been damaged due to it. The perceived image of Stephen Harper’s government put forward by the majority of the international press was overwhelmingly negative. More importantly, it was seen as a fall from grace by a country popularly looked upon as America’s more liberal, and green, cousin, particularly in Europe.

I recently attended an orientation for a job at the 2010 Winter Olympics. As expected, one of the central themes was the history and tradition of the Olympic Games, from their beginnings in ancient Greece to the global brand of the new millennium. However, it was one particular aspect of the presentation that strikes a chord with Canada’s needs coming into 2010. I was informed that the Olympic movement is a celebration of three pillars: Sport, Culture and Sustainability. It is this last pillar that it is necessary for Stephen Harper and the government to grasp in the forthcoming year.
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Should Canada’s Stance on Climate Change be Singled out for Criticism in Copenhagen?

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009
Should they share the blame? Photo Credit: The Age

Should they share the blame?
Photo Credit: The Age

As the world turns its attention to the climax of the climate summit in Copenhagen this week, it is worth considering some of the criticism that has been aimed at the Canadian government over the last month or so. Much of it has been vitriolic in nature and seemingly unrelenting in the build up to the meeting in the Danish capital. And as has been the case in the preceding months, much of it has centred on the issue of the Athabasca Oil Sands and the lingering fallout from Canada’s failure to adhere to their Kyoto pledge of lowering carbon emissions. The question though, is whether this sustained anger is justified?

George Monbiot, writing for the British Guardian newspaper last month, declared that ‘’this thuggish petro-state is today the greatest obstacle to a deal in Copenhagen.” And while Monbiot is known by some in his home country for his reactionary journalism and bluntly made points, it was still enough to provoke a reply from the Canadian government. In an article, also published in the Guardian, Jim Prentice, Canada’s minister for the environment, claimed “Canada will continue to play an active and constructive role at Copenhagen.” Prentice’s claims seem to have been in earnest, as UN climate change chief Yvo de Boer commented last week that Canada has been “negotiating very constructively” in Copenhagen.
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Is 2011 a Realistic Date for the Withdrawal of Troops in Afghanistan?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

The last few weeks have seen a flurry of promises, dates and opinions regarding the potential withdrawal of ISAF troops from Afghanistan.  While both President Obama and Gordon Brown have publicly declared a surge in troop numbers for their respective countries’ armed forces, Canada has stuck to its guns.

Wednesday’s announcement by foreign minister Lawrence Cannon that Canada’s government would not change its planned withdrawal in 2011 seemed to show solidarity with Obama’s pledge, repeated this week, that the withdrawal of American soldiers would begin in mid-2011 despite an additional 30,000 being deployed in the coming months.  The question though, is whether a strict end date can be placed upon an operation that has seen its objectives muddied and targets missed time and time again?
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