- Reaction score
- 146
- Points
- 710
Another piece worth the read in, gasp, the Toronto Star:
Why trade Kandahar for Kinshasa?
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/columns/article/797728--cohn-why-trade-kandahar-for-kinshasa
Quite. Though I'm sure the calculation is very few Canadian dead indeed in any Congo effort.
Mark
Ottawa
Why trade Kandahar for Kinshasa?
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/columns/article/797728--cohn-why-trade-kandahar-for-kinshasa
...Canada's military and political circles are abuzz about what to do with our battle-hardened soldiers, who by next year will be all kitted up with nowhere to go. With a rapidly approaching mid-2011 deadline set by Parliament to start pulling out of Afghanistan, an exit strategy is slowly firming up while a redeployment strategy would move some of those troops to Congo...
We are not just weary of the fight, but leery of the moral ambiguities: our wavering Afghan allies, the widespread torture, and the loss of 142 soldiers so far. But why hopscotch from Afghanistan's minefields to Congo's killing fields where similar moral quagmires await us?
UN peacekeepers are backing the Congolese army as it tries to wipe out rebels guilty of atrocities in a region where 5 million people have died during a decade of fighting. But the army is also guilty of torture and atrocities. The government of President Joseph Kabila is racked by endemic corruption and political treachery. And Kabila wants the UN force to leave later this year...
Congo is now the UN's biggest peacekeeping operation, with more than 22,000 troops from neighbouring African nations. Yet it remains a disorganized force that can't stop the slaughter. Peacekeepers were warned last year by UN legal advisers not to participate in Congolese army operations against rebels if they anticipated human rights abuses, which is precisely what happened.
The fledgling Congo mission would surely benefit from having Canada's outgoing army commander, Lt.-Gen. Andrew Leslie, helm the force, as Ottawa is quietly proposing. But if that opens the floodgates to a larger deployment, Canadians need to ask some hard questions.
After years of lonely slogging in Afghanistan without sufficient Western backup, why leave at the very time that American and British soldiers are finally providing a critical mass — and then jump to an under-resourced Congo mission? If our politicians lack the courage [emphasis added] to convince Canadians that our help is needed in Afghanistan, how are they going to persuade people that Congo is worth fighting and dying for?
Canada can't be everywhere. Despite our fondness for the moral certainties of peacekeeping, we must be mindful of our national interests [emphasis added].
We have deep entanglements in Afghanistan, and heavy obligations to nearby Haiti in its hour of need. Before we rush in to save Congo, we have unfinished business to take care of, and old promises to keep [emphasis added].
We seem to be rushing to pack up in Afghanistan because public support has collapsed; yet despite the Governor General's trip to Congo this week, do Canadians really have the appetite for casualties in Congo, and a willingness to dance with its dictator? From Kandahar to Kinshasa, and from Karzai to Kabila, it sounds like a hopscotch strategy from benighted Afghanistan to Africa's heart of darkness.
Quite. Though I'm sure the calculation is very few Canadian dead indeed in any Congo effort.
Mark
Ottawa