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Military scandals: More misconduct or more accountability?
Experts question whether the Forces are being more forthcoming about misdeeds by its members, writes Giuseppe Valiante.
By Giuseppe Valiante., Canwest News Service July 11, 2010 4:04 AM
Experts are wondering if the string of scandals involving high-profile Canadian Forces brass -- including this week's dismissal of the top Canadian military commander in Haiti -- are a result of an unprecedented number of misconducts, or a sign of a more accountable military willing to publicly prosecute its leaders.
"I hope it's the latter," said Jack Granatstein, a military historian who served in the Canadian Forces until 1966.
He said there was a period in the 1990s where there was a sense that "everything was being covered up," referencing events relating to the beating death of a Somali teenager by Canadian soldiers during the military's intervention in the country in 1993.
"I hope we're finding out these things because the military is determined to run a clean ship," he said.
On Friday, it was announced that Canada's most senior-ranking military officer in Haiti has been forced from his command over a number of allegations, including engaging in an inappropriate relationship. Col. Bernard Ouellette, chief of staff to the United Nations Haiti mission, was relieved on June 26 after a yearlong deployment to quake-ravaged Haiti.
Ouellette joins a who's who of high-ranking military officers dismissed over scandal.
The former commander of CFB Trenton, Col. Russell Williams, was arrested and charged in February with two counts of first-degree murder. He has since been charged with 82 more offences relating to break-and-enters and theft.
At the end of May, Brig.-Gen. Daniel Ménard, Canada's top soldier in Afghanistan, was dismissed from his job after he was accused of sexual misconduct with a female subordinate. He has since been reassigned to a desk job in Ottawa.
And last month, 12 current and former soldiers were charged with more than 70 drug-related offences, including some related to producing hallucinogenic drugs in a lab close to their barracks at Alberta's CFB Wainwright.
Michael Byers, an author who holds a Canada Research Chair in Global Politics and International Law at University of British Columbia, said he believes the military is taking the no-sex rule more seriously than they have in the past. However, he said the two recent sex scandals might also reflect the increasing number of women in the ranks of the Canadian Forces.
He added that there is no definitive evidence that the events of the past few months reveal a more open military.
For example, Byers said "there certainly hasn't been a whole lot of transparency" with regards to the accusations that Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan knowingly transferred their prisoners to local authorities to be tortured.
Moreover, the military only announced Ouellette's dismissal after a journalist in Haiti noticed he was missing, Byers said.
Lt.-Col. Chris Lemay, spokesman for the Canadian Expeditionary Force Command, said there have been no rule-enforcement policy changes in the Canadian Forces.
"I wouldn't say that the Canadian Forces have been more proactive in their application of the rules," he said. "I would say that whenever the case, whatever the rank, the rule has been applied."
Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Military+scandals+More+misconduct+more+accountability/3263055/story.html#ixzz0tNB1E7B6
Military scandals: More misconduct or more accountability?
Experts question whether the Forces are being more forthcoming about misdeeds by its members, writes Giuseppe Valiante.
By Giuseppe Valiante., Canwest News Service July 11, 2010 4:04 AM
Experts are wondering if the string of scandals involving high-profile Canadian Forces brass -- including this week's dismissal of the top Canadian military commander in Haiti -- are a result of an unprecedented number of misconducts, or a sign of a more accountable military willing to publicly prosecute its leaders.
"I hope it's the latter," said Jack Granatstein, a military historian who served in the Canadian Forces until 1966.
He said there was a period in the 1990s where there was a sense that "everything was being covered up," referencing events relating to the beating death of a Somali teenager by Canadian soldiers during the military's intervention in the country in 1993.
"I hope we're finding out these things because the military is determined to run a clean ship," he said.
On Friday, it was announced that Canada's most senior-ranking military officer in Haiti has been forced from his command over a number of allegations, including engaging in an inappropriate relationship. Col. Bernard Ouellette, chief of staff to the United Nations Haiti mission, was relieved on June 26 after a yearlong deployment to quake-ravaged Haiti.
Ouellette joins a who's who of high-ranking military officers dismissed over scandal.
The former commander of CFB Trenton, Col. Russell Williams, was arrested and charged in February with two counts of first-degree murder. He has since been charged with 82 more offences relating to break-and-enters and theft.
At the end of May, Brig.-Gen. Daniel Ménard, Canada's top soldier in Afghanistan, was dismissed from his job after he was accused of sexual misconduct with a female subordinate. He has since been reassigned to a desk job in Ottawa.
And last month, 12 current and former soldiers were charged with more than 70 drug-related offences, including some related to producing hallucinogenic drugs in a lab close to their barracks at Alberta's CFB Wainwright.
Michael Byers, an author who holds a Canada Research Chair in Global Politics and International Law at University of British Columbia, said he believes the military is taking the no-sex rule more seriously than they have in the past. However, he said the two recent sex scandals might also reflect the increasing number of women in the ranks of the Canadian Forces.
He added that there is no definitive evidence that the events of the past few months reveal a more open military.
For example, Byers said "there certainly hasn't been a whole lot of transparency" with regards to the accusations that Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan knowingly transferred their prisoners to local authorities to be tortured.
Moreover, the military only announced Ouellette's dismissal after a journalist in Haiti noticed he was missing, Byers said.
Lt.-Col. Chris Lemay, spokesman for the Canadian Expeditionary Force Command, said there have been no rule-enforcement policy changes in the Canadian Forces.
"I wouldn't say that the Canadian Forces have been more proactive in their application of the rules," he said. "I would say that whenever the case, whatever the rank, the rule has been applied."
Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Military+scandals+More+misconduct+more+accountability/3263055/story.html#ixzz0tNB1E7B6