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. . . and the retort.
Harper slams Martin on Afghanistan mission comments
Allan Woods, CanWest News Service
Published: Wednesday, September 27, 2006
BUCHAREST - It is irresponsible for former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin to criticize Canada's military mission in Afghanistan when he was the one who originally sent troops to the country and approved a decision to place soldiers in the country's most dangerous region in the south, said Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
The Conservative prime minister was responding to a published interview in which Martin said that Canada's military efforts have gone off track and are now disproportionately focused on combat fighting, not reconstruction and aid.
"We are doing the defence," Martin told the Toronto Star newspaper. "But are we doing the amount of reconstruction, the amount of aid that I believe was part of the original mission? The answer unequivocally is that we're not. And I believe that we should."
Harper was asked about Martin's comments following a meeting in Bucharest with Romanian President Traian Basescu, where they also discussed the shared effort in Afghanistan where the two countries are involved in a NATO-led mission to support the Afghan government and eliminate the Taliban.
He said that the current mission in Kandahar, which lasts until 2007, is the same mission that the former Liberal government approved. Harper's Conservative government voted in May to extend Canada's stay in the country until 2009 after this mission ends.
The prime minister has spoken in the past about the need to bring security to the country, through force if necessary, before real aid and reconstruction can begin. But instead of repeating that explanation,
Harper lashed out at his predecessor saying that such a mindset illustrates why he was no longer fit to lead the country after just 18 months in office.
"When you make those kinds of decisions as a prime minister you have to be able to take responsibility for them and stick with them," Harper said. "The fact that Mr. Martin is unable to do that ... illustrates why he is no longer prime minister."
NATO defence minister are meeting in Slovenia starting Thursday where there are expected to be formal offers to send additional troops to Afghanistan. Leaders from the international defence organization have admitted that they underestimated the strength and organization of the Taliban, who are receiving supplies and reinforcements through the porous border with Pakistan.
Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor recently asked Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf for permission to station Canadian troops inside the Pakistan border to cut off that pipeline, but Canada received its answer Wednesday.
Musharraf told CBC television in an interview that the request has been denied, and that he took the request as a slight to his own forces.
"I would not like to challenge the Canada troops, but I can assure you our troops are more effective, and we have more experience of war, and this shows a lack of trust in Pakistan," he said.
He also dismissed the outcry by Canadian families and legislators over the controversial mission, saying that a country engaged in a major military effort such as Afghanistan should not be surprised by deaths. Besides, he said, Canadian losses are nothing compared to the deaths suffered by his own troops.
"You are talking to the president of a country which has suffered 500 casualties. So you suffered two dead, and there's a cry all around the place that there are coffins," he said in an interview with CBC. "Well, we've had 500 coffins."
If Canada is not prepared to suffer casualties in the fight against terrorism "then don't participate in any operation," he said.
Harper was asked about Musharraf's comments in Bucharest, but said he had not been briefed on what was said. However, the prime minister reiterated that Pakistan is an important ally in the fight against terrorism in Afghanistan and that movements by the Taliban and its supporters through Pakistan is an issue "we are all aware of."
Thirty-six Canadian soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since the country joined the American-led war on terror in 2001. Fighting has been particularly intense this summer.
"When a soldier puts on a uniform and he joins the army, is this for fighting, or for peacekeeping?" asked Musharraf, who is also promoting a new autobiography. "When you get involved in places like Iraq or Lebanon or Afghanistan, yes indeed, you have to suffer casualties, and the nation must be prepared to suffer casualties."