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Please post your replies to the Rebuttal to Jack Layton’s article in the Toronto Star here.
To further the debate here is the origional Jack Layton article, reproduced under the Fair Dealings Provisions of the Copyright Act.
To further the debate here is the origional Jack Layton article, reproduced under the Fair Dealings Provisions of the Copyright Act.
Why Canada must review mission
Sep. 26, 2006. 01:00 AM
JACK LAYTON
Debate over Canada's combat role in southern Afghanistan is growing. In the last few days, Canadians have had the opportunity to hear from Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
But who's listening to the millions of everyday Canadians who are reaching the conclusion that this is the wrong mission for Canada?
In his speech to the United Nations, Harper stepped up his efforts to justify the government's decision to extend this mission for, we now hear, as long as it takes.
The more we learn, the more it becomes clear that this mission is ill-defined, unbalanced and that Canada has no exit strategy. In short, this current mission is a strategic blunder by Harper, the Conservative government and the Liberals who helped them keep us there.
The Conservative government's insistence on a military solution to Afghanistan's insecurity is highly contestable.
Harper says Canadian troops must engage in warfare in Afghanistan to "eliminate the remnants of the Taliban regime once and for all."
This is not a view shared by Karzai who just this past Thursday told the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations, "Bombings in Afghanistan are no solution to the Taliban. You do not destroy terrorism by bombing villages."
Harper's stubborn and narrow approach to Afghanistan is a lift from President George Bush's tired playbook and one Canadians are having little difficulty seeing through.
Weeks ago, I called for the withdrawal of Canadian Forces from the combat mission in southern Afghanistan.
I called on the government to focus Canada's role on reconstruction, aid and development.
This mission is not balanced. It is overwhelmingly skewed toward military combat and away from development assistance and diplomatic efforts. In fact, for every dollar the Canadian government is spending in Afghanistan only 10 cents goes to reconstruction and aid, while 90 cents goes to the military.
It's not just everyday Canadians who are concerned about this mission. And certainly not just New Democrats.
Just last weekend Australia announced it was withdrawing its entire 200-strong special forces. Across Europe, member nations of NATO — including Germany, France, Italy and Turkey — are refusing to commit troops to the military offensive in Kandahar province where Canadian troops are stationed. With good reason: They share the NDP's unease about the viability of such an undefined and unbalanced mission.
Even those within the military are now expressing their concerns as well. Capt. Leo Docherty, a former aide-de—camp to a British commander, in an interview with the London Daily Telegraph called the NATO mission "grotesquely clumsy" and warned we have been "sucked into a problem unsolvable by military means." The mission, he added, has been "a textbook case of how to screw up a counter-insurgency."
Even Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor in March admitted that "there is no military solution there. The solution is economic."
Harper is arrogantly dismissing those who differ with his view of the world.
Perhaps Harper should listen to Najibullah Lafraie, the former foreign affairs minister in the pre-Taliban government who said: "If the international community wants to deny the Taliban and their allies an important recruiting tool, it must withdraw Western troops from Afghanistan as soon as possible."
What of the growing body of independent evidence that shows that bombing a country to pieces does not necessarily lead it to peace?
One Afghan commander in Kandahar told British researchers at the Senlis Council: "The foreigners came here and said they would help the poor people and improve the economic situation, but they only spend money on their military operations. The poor people are poorer now than when the Taliban were the government. We don't trust them anymore. We would be fools to continue to believe their lies."
This sentiment is echoed by Malalai Joya, a female Afghan MP.
"When the entire nation is living under the shadow of the gun and warlordism, how can its women enjoy very basic freedoms?
Contrary to the propaganda in certain Western media, Afghan women and men are not `liberated' at all."
It's time for a new approach. One that puts reconstruction, development and aid ahead of counter- insurgency.
It only makes sense in a conflict that both the minister of defence and the president of Afghanistan admit can't be won militarily. Now if only Harper would listen.