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Canada: Israel’s New Army Buddy - Military Aid, Operation
Proteus, Arms Trade
07 April 2011 By Lia Tarachansky
It used to be that when you counted Israel’s top
allies, the obvious names came to mind: Germany, the
UK and, of course, the US. These days, Canada seems
determined to soar to the top of that list, confirming
the judgment of Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s Foreign
Minister. While visiting Canada in 2009 he said,
“Canada is so friendly that there was no need to
convince or explain anything to anyone… We need allies
like this in the international arena.”
And again, the current Canadian Prime Minister
reaffirmed this relationship in his speech at a
conference that equated criticism of Israel with
antisemitism, where he declared that “There are, after
all, a lot more votes in being anti-Israeli than in
taking a stand. But as long as I am prime minister,
whether it is at the United Nations, the Francaphonie,
or anywhere else, Canada will take that stand,
whatever the cost”.
Indeed, while presenting itself as an honest broker,
Canada’s been an uncritical friend to Israel,
especially since the election of the Conservative
minority government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
Under his leadership Canadian aid was redirected from
UNRWA, the special UN agency that works exclusively
with Palestinian refugees. Domestically, funding was
cut to KAIROS, a faith-based group falsely connected
to the global boycott movement, sending a chill
through NGOs dealing with the Middle East conflict.
But Harper’s critics have been too quick to point the
finger. Canada’s support for Israel runs across party
lines and extends back decades. And while most
Canadians view their country as a peacekeeping nation,
Canada’s arms trade, military assistance, and
intelligence cooperation with Israel paint a different
picture. Indeed, Canada’s involvement in the areas of
the conflict that have direct impact on the ground,
such as Canadian corporations constructing the Israeli
settlements and segregation wall in the West Bank,
make that peacekeeping image seem like nothing more
than an illusion.
Canada’s Military Aid
Canada has long played an important role in backing US
foreign policy. While America was busy in the
overthrow of Haitian president Bernard Aristide,
Canadian forces trained the Haitian police despite
continuing accusations of extra judicial killings,
rape and torture. Canadian troops are also training
the Afghan security forces associated with the
US-backed government of Hamid Karzai. Here too, the
forces were accused of torture, leading to Canada’s
own military refusing to hand over detainees to the
Afghan forces in 2009.
The same form of political selectivity and Canadian
complicity plays itself out in occupied Palestinian
territories. When US Lieutenant General Keith Dayton
established his training program for the Palestinian
Authority security forces, Canada jumped on board. It
continued to support the PA despite the fact that its
electoral mandate expired in 2008 and the programme’s
popularity fell when Palestinians discovered that
these forces collaborate with the Israeli army. In
essence, Canada began training one faction of the
Palestinian leadership while working to weaken the
others.
This involvement amounts to 55 Canadian personnel, the
military’s second largest on-land deployment after
Afghanistan (that is until last week’s addition to the
Libyan effort). It may not seem like much but it’s not
the size of the contingent that matters, it’s how you
use it. This deployment is named Operation Proteus and
gives the Fatah-led PA the means to crack down onHamas
activists in the West Bank. After 9/11 Canada was
second only to the US in placing Hamas on a list of
terrorist organizations and freezing all its assets
(despite it having nothing to do with the attack).
Canada was also the first country to sever all ties
with Hamas when it won the 2006 election in Gaza. At
the same time, Canada pledged $300 million in aid to
its rivals, the PA.
While categorized as part of the global war on terror,
this policy towards Hamas is inconsistent, considering
most of the people who make up the PA forces were also
once involved in armed struggle against Israel, as
members of the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO). Many even served lengthy prison terms and were
incorporated into the security forces because of their
experience in armed struggle.
While thousands of Palestinians demonstrate in Gaza
and the West Bank demanding that factions come
together, crackdowns continues on both sides. In 2010
alone PA forces arrested 3,000 Hamas activists in the
West Bank and in Gaza; Hamas returned in equal
measure.
Operation Proteus
As a result of the training being undertaken by the
US, the EU, and Canada, the PA forces will comprise
25,000 troops, according to security officials within
the Authority. 8,500 will serve as a standing army,
7,200 as officers, 3,500 in intelligence, 3,000 as a
secretive CIA-trained internal security service, 600
will work in civil defense or as firemen, and the PA
President (currently Mahmoud Abbas) will even get
2,000 men as part of an elite force answering strictly
to him.
General Keith Dayton, who began the programme and was
recently replaced in Tel Aviv by Major General Michael
Moeller, has a four decade-long history with the US
army. He served in Iraq, Israel/Palestine, Russia, and
is now based in Germany. As he describes himself: “I
had been the defense attaché of the United States in
Russia, but in my heart, I’m an artilleryman.”Speaking
at the Washington Institute on Near East Policy, a
think-tank with deep connections to all branches of
the government, Dayton answered the $64 million
question: “Why was a U.S. general officer chosen to
command this thing?”
“Well, three reasons”, he answered. “The first was
that senior policymakers felt that a general officer
would be trusted and respected by the Israelis. Put
that one in the ‘yes’ block. The second was that a
general’s prestige would help leverage Palestinian and
other Arab cooperation. You can put that in the ‘yes’
block. And the third idea was that a general officer
would have greater influence over the US government
interagency process. Two out of three isn’t bad.” The
general’s sense of humor was welcomed with applause
and laughter.
But the Canadian leader of the programme, Colonel Fred
Lewis, was more diplomatic, portrayingit as an
exercise in democracy: “It’s all in order to create a
sense of confidence and get rid of any apprehensions
that Israel might have with a Palestinian state next
door.” In the same interview for the military
publication, The Maple Leaf, Dayton added, “We simply
couldn’t do this job without the Canadian
contribution”.
And following the Americans in Haiti and Afghanistan,
Canada’s training programme with Palestinians has not
stopped the forces from perpetuating violations and
being accusedof torture. The Ramallah-based
civil-rights NGO, Al Haq, took thousands of
testimonies from sworn witnesses detained by the PA.
Its report describes such practices as “psychological
torture, an increase in arbitrary arrests, and arrests
and detention carried out in violation of the
Palestinian Basic Law and penal procedural laws. And
while government officials have pledged to bring the
security forces into line with the law and punish
those responsible, the reality on the ground remains
bleak.”
In 2010 Al Haq followed up on the initial report in a
statement addressed to the EU signed together with
other Palestinian NGOs. It reads: “The PA has adopted
a pattern of oppressive policies to stifle political
dissent and to generate a sense of intimidation within
Palestinian society, turning the latter into what
resembles a ‘police state’ void of democratic values
and the rule of law.”
In fact this involvement extends beyond the military.
In a February 2010 article in The Maple Leaf, Leslie
Craig writes: “Operation Proteus, though military in
origin, has grown to encompass a whole-of-government
approach, with team members from the Department of
Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the Canadian
International Development Agency, Justice Canada, and
the Canadian Border Services Agency [bringing] their
expertise to the table.”
And indeed Canada’s political meddling in the conflict
doesn’t end overseas. It also plays out at home. In
the 1990s and after, Canadian intelligence agents
harassed opponents of the Olso Accords, the now failed
peace process. More recently, agents have harassed
Canadian activists involved in the global campaign of
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against
Israel. In 2008 Canada signed a security cooperation
agreement with Israel, formalising such practices.
Canada-Israel Arms Trade
Perhaps the most significant assistance Canada
provides in support of Israel’s military aggression is
through the arms trade. Canadian forces use
Israeli-made drones in Afghanistan and the IDF uses
Canadian-made electronics in its operations in the
West Bank and Gaza.
The Canada-Israel free trade agreement, alongside
provincial agreements and indirect sales through the
US, make this trade very lucrative. I investigated
this in detail in a video report for The Real News and
interviewed Yves Engler, the author of Canada and
Israel: Building Apartheid as well as Richard Sanders,
the Coordinator of the Coalition to Oppose the Arms
Trade.
While Canadian foreign policy has been historically
one-sided, the current government is strengthening its
relationship with Israel diplomatically, militarily
and through trade. Of course a country has the right
to pick its allies, but when it does so it carefully
weighs the consequences. Considering the PA’s
submission to Israel as revealed by the Palestine
Papers, its willingness to cooperate with the Israeli
army to carry out the occupation on behalf of the
occupiers and the state of the Middle East, Canada’s
choice is dubious in the extreme. While the government
employs the rhetoric of democracy, its actions speak a
different language.
Lia Tarachansky (lia@therealnews.com) is an
Israeli-Canadian journalist and the director of the
upcoming documentary, Seven Deadly Myths. Most
recently she worked as a Middle East correspondent
with The Real News Network. Her writings and videos
are available at www.liatarachansky.com
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