Canadians want to ensure foreign policy is developed with Canadian values
Joanne Laucius , with files from Norma Greenaway, CanWest News Service; Ottawa Citizen
Published: Friday, August 04, 2006
OTTAWA - Public support for Canada's military involvement in Afghanistan will be affected by a complex interplay of issues, from events in Lebanon to how Canadians feel about Prime Minister Stephen Harper, say pollsters.
Bruce Anderson of Decima Research said the challenges the government is facing are broader than Afghanistan.
Foreign policy has emerged as a more significant set of risks for this government, he said. At first, Canadians liked the idea of participating in the war on terror. Since then, many Canadians have lost faith in the way the United States has proceeded, including the war in Iraq.
"They approach the idea with a foot on the gas and a foot on the brake," said Anderson. There is also increasing pressure to illustrate that there has been progress in the mission in Afghanistan and it has been hard to assess those achievements.
"As casualties mount, people look to the government for greater and greater clarity," said Anderson.
Meanwhile, the war in Lebanon has resulted in a heightened sense of anxiety, and increasing concern that Canada is aligned with the U.S.
"The challenge for the government is not to convince people that it's doing the right thing, but that policy is developed with Canadian values," said Anderson. "Canadians are signalling a questioning of where we're going in this region."
Support for military involvement in Afghanistan will likely decline, but not support for the government, said Conrad Winn, president of the polling firm COMPAS.
"The paradox is that people who live in a democracy hate killing and war," said Winn. "But they'll also say, 'Let's not cut and run.'"
Whether the loss of four more Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan Thursday affects the Conservatives' popularity depends on public perception, he said.
"If the public concludes that the Conservatives are belligerent and love war, they will lose. If they conclude that the Liberals got us into this and didn't provide the protections that good governments provide for their soldiers, then they'll win."
A poll by COMPAS released Thursday concluded that an overwhelming majority of Canadians 82 per cent are concerned about a terrorist attack on Canadians soil.
Meanwhile, the poll also found Harper has a high proportion of "passionate supporters" for his Middle East policy. Sixty per cent said Harper has earned a good performance score, higher than three-quarters of the performance scores earned by Jean Chretien and Paul Martin's Liberal governments, according to the poll of 502 Canadians interviewed between July 27 and Aug. 1. The poll is deemed accurate to within 4.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
Polls are very misleading, he said. In some ways, they are a lagging indicator. "People lose their confidence long before it shows up on a poll."
In the end, support for Canada's mission in Afghanistan will depend on how to government responds.
"People don't turn against a government on single events. It's all in the interpretation," said Winn. "'Do we want to lose soldiers?' is a different question than whether we want to cut and run. Policy has 25 choices.
''Polls are better at voter intentions than policy. A ballot only asks one question."
Ultimately, factors other than Canadian losses in Afghanistan will decide whether the Conservatives win the next election, said Winn. "Voters are like retailers. It's just-in-time voting.''
Military analyst David Rudner said the latest bloodshed ups the pressure on Harper to justify the Afghan mission to Canadians.
"The question is, is war the worst alternative? And the answer is no, the worst alternative here would be a Taliban victory in Afghanistan," said the Carleton University professor.
He said Harper has no time to waste to make his case to Canadians that they are engaged in a new form of warfare, and that this is no time to pick up and run.
Rudner said Thursday's deaths do not mean the NATO forces will be unsuccessful in bringing the Taliban to heel.
"Nobody enjoys the costs of war," he said. "But this is a new form of warfare against an enemy who, if they should be allowed to win in Afghanistan, would be catastrophic firstly for the Afghans, but secondly would put Canadian interests, and the interests of the democracies, in grave danger."