Cross-Cultural Understanding
| www.ccun.org | Opinion Editorials, April 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
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      Political Poison: Zionism and Canadian Politics
		 By Eric Walberg ccun.org, April 6, 2008 This year's sixth international Cairo Conference against imperialism and Zionism continued the same themes as last year: dialogue between the left and Muslims, the struggle against Islamophobia, press censorship, torture and dictatorship, and the chance for Western peace groups to network on Middle East issues. The most inspiring project was the growing campaign to boycott Israel in the West and plans to coordinate this on an international level with the long- standing Arab and Muslim boycott campaign. 
			Otherwise, there was little to gladden activists, for the wars in 
			Iraq and Afghanistan continue apace, not to mention the increased 
			brutality of Israel against the Palestinian people. There are 
			changes going on in Western countries, with increased activism of 
			students and trade unionists. But the political scene is dismal, 
			despite the overwhelming unpopularity of US-NATO/Israeli wars, as 
			governments continue to bow to Zionist pressures -- both internal 
			and external. 
			A case in point is Canada, which was 
			unofficially represented at the conference by 14 members of the 
			Canadian Peace Alliance (CPA) and others from student organisations. 
			Delegates to last year's conference were attacked in the right-wing
			National Post 
			and Ottawa Citizen 
			for consorting with "terrorists" and "shouldn't be surprised if they 
			come under scrutiny of the Canadian security services", simply for 
			their willingness to dialogue with Muslims fighting the various wars 
			now being inflicted on them. But they were not intimidated and 
			returned full of energy. The conference gave them the opportunity to 
			continue to share their experiences and make valuable contacts in 
			the anti-war struggle. Al-Ahram Weekly 
			spoke with several delegates about what is happening in the land of 
			the maple leaf.  
			The Canadian political scene has been transformed in the past year, 
			and not for the better. The 2,500 Canadian troops in the dangerous 
			southern Kandahar region of Afghanistan had their mission extended 
			to 2011 on 13 March in what was billed as a fateful parliamentary 
			vote, as the pro-war Conservatives have only a minority government 
			and the war is deeply unpopular among Canadians. In a recent poll, 
			only 15 per cent favoured extending the troop presence to 2011, with 
			60 per cent in favour of bringing the troops home now. In fact, the 
			vote was a walk-over, with the Liberals voting alongside the 
			minority Conservative government, with only the small social 
			democratic New Democratic Party (NDP) and the Bloc Quebecois voting 
			against.  
			How was this possible? The Liberal Party leader, Stephane Dion, 
			should be a natural opponent of the war. In fact, as Liberal critic 
			for foreign affairs in 2006, he voted against extending Canada's 
			original commitment of troops, which was to end in 2005. Quebec 
			politicians -- mainly Liberal -- opposed WWI and WWII, and the 
			federal governments of the time dared not introduce conscription, 
			fearing the collapse of the Canadian confederation.  
			Yet Dion was manipulated into supporting the Conservative Prime 
			Minister Stephen Harper and forcing his own Liberals to vote against 
			what is clearly a violation of Canada's sacred role as peacemaker in 
			international affairs. Despite strict pressure by party whip Karen 
			Redman, 20 Liberals didn't show up and one -- Newfoundland MP Bill 
			Matthews -- dared vote against. Redman issued a statement saying she 
			"would make whatever decisions need to be made" to punish the 
			truants and the lone rebel. Meanwhile, in a less than subtle 
			propaganda ploy to counter French-Canadian distaste for "fighting 
			other people's wars", the media is always highlighting Quebecois 
			troops bravely fighting the "detestable scumbags and cowards", as 
			Canadian Chief of Defence Staff General Rick Hillier famously called 
			the Taliban. 
			A partial answer to Dion's political about-face was revealed at a 
			bi-election meeting two days after the parliamentary vote, on 15 
			March in Toronto. Bob Rae, an ex-NDP leader and born- again Liberal, 
			was running in a safe Liberal constituency. When CPA members heard 
			about the meeting, 10 snuck in the back door, raised their anti-war 
			banner and demanded to hear why, in a democracy, the overwhelming 
			opinion of the electorate was being ignored by the leading 
			candidate. Dion, who was present, was paralysed, while Rae smoothly 
			offered the protesters their 30 seconds but proceeded to ignore 
			their question. When establishment journalists took up the theme, he 
			neatly sidestepped the issue and escaped unscathed. Interestingly, 
			Rae, a committed Zionist -- his wife is vice-president of the main 
			pro-Israeli lobby, the Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) -- came second 
			to Dion during the last leadership convention, and is clearly being 
			preened as the heir apparent when the Liberals collapse in the next 
			election. 
			An earlier bi-election last year in another supposedly safe Liberal 
			riding in Quebec backfired even more spectacularly for the Liberal 
			leader. Outremont has been Liberal for 68 of the 73 years it has 
			existed, and the NDP traditionally fares abysmally in Quebec. Yet 
			they won 48 per cent of the vote there in an election that NDP 
			leader Jack Layton called a "referendum on Afghanistan". Layton is 
			called "Taliban Jack" by pro-war critics, just one step away from 
			being put on a terrorist watch list like last year's Cairo 
			Conference delegates presumably have been. His is virtually the only 
			clear anti-war voice on the national scene, despite the solid 
			anti-war sentiment in Canada, which stubbornly refuses to bow to the 
			pro-war media.  
			The Afghan debacle has already cost over 80 Canadian soldiers' lives 
			(vs Britain's 91), and the Canadian taxpayers well over $5 billion 
			(official figures are $3 billion by 2009), as the government hurries 
			to slash social spending. An intelligent and brave politician should 
			be able to take this issue and run with it. But just as Democratic 
			presidential contender Obama Barack's anti-war position is now being 
			deriding by US media as his "weak point", no Canadian politician is 
			allowed to do what should come naturally in any democracy worthy of 
			the name. 
			All this is in fact an eerie replay of John Mearsheimer and Stephen 
			Walt's argument about the Israeli lobby in the US, whose "core" is 
			"American Jews who make a significant effort in their daily lives to 
			bend US policy so that it furthers Israel's interests." Its Canadian 
			counterpart, led by the CJC and Bnai Brith, through extensive media 
			control and privileged access to the highest levels of government, 
			has poisoned the Canadian political scene, paralysing the anti-war 
			majority and choking all debate, pushing the Liberals into the 
			Conservatives' arms on the one issue that could win them the next 
			election. Canada's continued agony in Afghanistan is vital to the 
			Israeli lobby; after all, a rejection of the Canadian role in the 
			genocide in Afghanistan is a step down the slippery slope of a 
			rejection of blind support for Israel's genocide in Palestine.  
			Instead, the Liberals are now very likely to lose -- probably 
			resoundingly, with their indecisive leader flip-flopping on the one 
			issue that could secure him victory. Just as McCain is now the 
			favourite of the US pro-Israeli lobby and US anti- war sentiment is 
			stifled and ignored, Harper has earned their Canadian counterpart's 
			favour and anti-war proponents are silenced, allowing the 
			Conservatives to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat in the next 
			election, with the media cheering him on and a disillusioned 
			electorate splitting the vote among lesser parties or merely staying 
			home.  
			This poison has unfortunately infected the NDP as well as shown by 
			its caving in to the Zionist lobby on its campaign to boycott Durban 
			2, the UN Conference against Racism to be held next year in South 
			Africa. The upcoming conference was loudly denounced by both Harper 
			and Dion for daring to criticise Zionism as a form of racism, and 
			NDP foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar, apparently without clearance 
			from Layton, joined the chorus. When CPA activists protested to 
			Layton personally, he claimed ignorance and to his credit had all 
			references to this criticism of the UN conference removed from NDP 
			websites. However, he did not actually support the conference and 
			certainly would never dare criticise Israel or Zionism in any 
			significant way. On the contrary, several NDP MPs are outspoken 
			supporters of Israel. None openly support Palestine. So the rot goes 
			deep into all parties on the Canadian political scene. 
			An interesting footnote to poor Canada's plight 
			is how it is being used as a Trojan Horse to encourage more NATO 
			troops to actively fight the Taliban alongside Canadian troops. CAP 
			activist Sid Lacombe told the Weekly 
			his Dutch and German colleagues explain that their foreign/defence 
			ministers would never try to convince unsympathetic electorates that 
			the US needs help. Instead, they talk about how "Canada helped 
			liberate us from the Nazis," arguing "we Europeans owe them one." 
			The sorry state of Canada's political scene is 
			replicated in Britain, according to peace activist Ian Taylor, who 
			told the Weekly 
			the one hope to fight their Israeli lobby, George Galloway's newly 
			minted Respect Party, is collapsing under the weight of too many 
			expectations and media loathing. Labour was long ago co-opted by the 
			Zionists (the latest bribery political scandal involves Labour 
			Friends of Israel). A trip through Western "democracies" surely 
			would turn up similar sad cases of political near death from 
			poisoning. Where is the antidote? 
			*** 
			Eric Walberg can be reached at
			
			www.geocities.com/walberg2002/  | 
 
 
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