Posts Tagged ‘Rick Hillier’

Megapundit: Rosie DiManno vs. the U.S. Army

By selley - Monday, June 9, 2008 - 0 Comments

WEEKEND ROUNDUP
Must-reads: …Rosie DiManno on female police in Afghanistan, and on American troops’

WEEKEND ROUNDUP

Must-reads: Rosie DiManno on female police in Afghanistan, and on American troops’ enemy-making skills; Scott Taylor on Kandahar prison; Daphne Bramham on the children of the FLDS: Lawrence Martin on Liberal incivility; Thomas Walkom on Roy Romanow; Dan Gardner on pesticides and science; Greg Weston on the lost promise of openness and accountability.

Ils accusent
It’s official: the pundits have absolutely nothing good to say about federal politics. And away we go…

If anyone’s going to investigate the unlikely prospect that Maxime Bernier’s left-behind documents represented a security breach, Lysiane Gagnon suggests it be the foreign affairs department, and if necessary CSIS and the RCMP. Committee hearings would be “a joke,” she writes in The Globe and Mail—a “partisan circus,” just like they’ve been at the Schreibergelder hearings. If MPs are really this desperate for something to occupy their well-paid time, she suggests they discuss military equipment, Omar Khadr and the private members bills “that many fear might eventually lead to the criminalization of abortion.”

The Toronto Star‘s Chantal Hébert says Stephen Harper’s “crafting [of] a bipartisan consensus on the future of the Canadian mission in Kandahar” was a rare snapshot of successful “Conservative statesmanship”—a triumph of “finesse” over his manifest preference for “brute strength.” This recollection seems a tad airbrushed to us, but she’s quite right that the government’s been pretty much crap since then, if not before. The positive contributions of Jim Prentice and David Emerson in cabinet are routinely undone by Peter Van Loan’s “overly partisan tone,” she argues, and it’s needlessly damaging the government’s reputation.

Continue…

  • BTC: This space for sale

    By Aaron Wherry - Sunday, June 8, 2008 at 10:28 PM - 0 Comments

    Is there anyone left who would dispute that in the matter of Harper v. the Parliamentary Press Gallery, the Prime Minister has thoroughly trounced the fourth estate? For all the bluster and angst, for all the projections of inevitable karmic comeuppance at the hands of aggrieved and all-powerful scribes, can the Conservatives not now claim complete and total victory in the battle to control who and how this government is defined?

    For sure, these past two weeks have included some of the Harper administration’s least flattering moments. Never minding even the dramatic unravelling of Maxime Bernier’s political career, this government has struggled mightily to maintain its equilibrium. With the Prime Minister in Europe, desperate for good news, the PMO wrongly (or at least prematurely) announced the Italians willing to do more in Afghanistan. With the Bernier affair still making news upon Stephen Harper’s return, James Moore was then dispatched, bizarrely, to reintroduce the infamous Cadman tape—an attempt to discredit the opposition that was counter-productive at worst, silly at best.

    Now, with revelations of Julie Couillard’s personal life still emerging every couple of days, a confidence vote to come Monday and law enforcement authorities due to testify publicly about what they knew and when about Bernier’s companion, the Harper government should be staggering toward the summer recess.

    And yet. If this administration has lost control of itself, it has not lost control of the message. Continue…

  • You can't beat the smooth, mellow flavour of a legally-produced cigarette

    By selley - Thursday, May 8, 2008 at 1:46 PM - 0 Comments

    Must-reads: …Barbara Yaffe on Insite; John Ivison on contraband smokes; Don MacPherson on corporate

    Must-reads: Barbara Yaffe on Insite; John Ivison on contraband smokes; Don MacPherson on corporate welfare bums; Graham Thomson on social funding in Alberta.

    Ol’ Man Harper, he’s set in his ways
    No drugs, no new ideas, no sassback—and put out that dodgy cigarette, you punk!

    “Sadly,” writes the Vancouver Sun‘s Barbara Yaffe, “the decision about Insite’s future will not be made based on what is good or bad for the addicts or for the city of Vancouver,” but instead “on political considerations.” Luckily, however, the preponderance of evidence is so supportive of the safe-injection site’s continued operation (even if only to study its efficacy further), and the advocacy from the medical, political and academic communities is so convincing, that “boarding up Insite would cost [the Tories] support.” Right-wing ideologues or not, says Yaffe, now “is not the time for Harper’s party, pretty well tied with Liberals in polls, to be making moves that could cost support.” This is all perfectly logical and faultlessly argued. The fly in the ointment is the Harperites’ well-established penchant for needlessly inflicting pain upon themselves.

    The Harper gang “is all about old-time religion,” says The Globe and Mail‘s Lawrence Martin—”all boilerplate and old stuff, … as dated as an Ed Broadbent suit.” Don’t believe him? He’s got corroborating evidence. Continue…

  • Canada—Stagflating towards the poorhouse since 2008

    By selley - Monday, April 28, 2008 at 1:58 PM - 0 Comments

    WEEKEND ROUNDUP
    Must-reads: Doug Saunders on “re-Talibanization”; Scott Taylor on Rick Hillier’s successor;James

    WEEKEND ROUNDUP

    Must-reads: Doug Saunders on “re-Talibanization”; Scott Taylor on Rick Hillier’s successor; James Travers on our crumbling democracy; David Olive and George Jonas on air travel; Greg Weston on the in-and-out.

    Law and Order: Canadian Criminal Intent
    In which rowdy hockey fans put cops to the test, star chambers impose human rights orthodoxy on unsuspecting Christians and the Supreme Court vows to keep dogs out of our backpacks. Continue…

  • Revisiting Hillier

    By Philippe Gohier - Monday, April 21, 2008 at 9:28 PM - 0 Comments

    I’m not convinced Michel Vastel‘s is the consensus view in Quebec about Gen. Rick…

    I’m not convinced Michel Vastel‘s is the consensus view in Quebec about Gen. Rick Hillier (or the war in Afghanistan, for that matter). But it’s worth pointing out Vastel may have been the first to write a scathing review of Hillier’s run as defence chief, all while his colleagues in the English press were busy fantasizing about the departing general’s jockstrap:

    No, I won’t join the chorus of hypocrites saluting the great general Rick Hillier and sparing no praise about him.

    “The general also knew for more than two years he would need at least 1,000 more soldiers to defeat the insurection and help the Afghan army take control of the south. Hillier therefore knew Canadian deaths were useless.

  • Take your chickpea patties and bugger off

    By selley - Monday, April 21, 2008 at 5:19 PM - 0 Comments

    Must-reads: Peter Worthington on Rick Hillier; Lysiane Gagnon on China.
    The long, cod-flavoured goodbye…

    Must-reads: Peter Worthington on Rick Hillier; Lysiane Gagnon on China.

    The long, cod-flavoured goodbye
    The official mourning period for outgoing Chief of Defence Staff Rick Hillier is now over. Let the backlash begin!

    Here’s The Globe and Mail‘s Lawrence Martin on November 8, 2007: “Gen. Hillier has done his thing and has done it efficiently. It is no longer imperative that he stay on as our military leader.” And here he is today: Hillier’s resignation is “disappointing and objectionable”—all the more so if a “concrete long-term offer” was on the table for him to stay on—because Afghanistan is “his war,” because “by most accounts, [it] is not being won,” because “he let down the troops he loved and who loved him,” and because “he still had much to do in terms of the military restructuring.” Wha’ happen, Mr. Martin?

    Hillier presided over “a slight improvement” in the number of regular force troops, Scott Taylor writes in the Halifax Chronicle-Herald, “but this does not match the projected expansion that the Big Cod envisioned.” Recruitment will struggle to keep up with retirements, he predicts, “the transformation of the Canadian military command structure is not yet complete,” and there’s the small matter of the Afghanistan mission itself to manage. “Relaxed, confident and oozing self-deprecating Newfoundlander down-home charm, Hillier had the media once again eating out of his hand” last week, says Taylor. But regardless of why he left, his “successor will have some enormous shoes to fill.”

    The Toronto Sun‘s Peter Worthington accuses Canadian journalists embedded in Afghanistan of “so-so” reporting when it comes to issues like reconstruction work, the performance of Canada’s new tanks and especially the activities of the JTF-2 commando force. But it’s difficult, he concedes, to report effectively when you’re hamstrung by regulations from a government that wants “to harness the unexpected popularity of soldiers, but at the same time cut any risk for embarrassment.” “Having a secret army within the army is neither democratic nor traditional in our military,” he writes of JTF-2. And he implores the media to find some way of not letting the micro-managing feds get away with it.

    A spring election… about abortion?
    L. Ian MacDonald
    believes the departure of former MPs and current Liberal candidates Eleni Bakopanos and Paddy Torsney from Stéphane Dion’s “close circle” of advisors—and the “fond farewell” Dion released to the press—could be indications that the Grits are “finally getting ready to break camp and force an election, with the immigration-reform bill as the trigger.” The Conservative brand certainly hasn’t been this weak in a while, he argues in the Montreal Gazette, given Maxime Bernier’s Afghan pratfalls and the RCMP’s raid on Tory HQ, and there are, as always, plenty of restless Liberals dying to hit the campaign trail. (Blows to MacDonald’s anemic credibility in today’s effort: (1) referring to the pretty much debunked theory that Elections Canada tipped off the Liberals to the raid as fact; (2) misspelling Torsney’s name throughout the column.)

    Chantal Hébert, writing in the Toronto Star, assesses the chances that Ken Epp’s private member’s bill on “injuring or causing the death of an unborn child while committing an offence” might make abortion a preeminent and wholly unwelcome election issue. Considering the “solid social conservative group within the Liberal caucus,” she argues, Dion’s insistence that he has the votes to defeat the bill—which some see as a backdoor approach to recriminalizing abortion—may be “wishful thinking.” And Stephen Harper’s stated promise not to reopen the issue extends only to the end of his first mandate. The Liberal-dominated Senate would almost certainly kill the legislation, she notes, but if that’s “all that stands between an attempt to recriminalize abortion and a future Parliament,” she says that’s bad news for the Tories.

    Duly noted
    The Globe‘s John Ibbitson predicts “a modest but respectable victory for Ms. Clinton in Pennsylvania tomorrow.” This, he hastens to add, “is as good as another defeat,” because only a big win could “stem the steady trickle of superdelegates” towards Barack Obama. That’s pretty much the whole column right there.

    Lorne Gunter, writing in the National Post, suspects Earth Day in Edmonton was a bit of a flop on account of all the wintry late-April weather. But he’s also sure that wintry late-April weather won’t calm the global warming fanatics. Faced with a planet that hasn’t warmed appreciably in a decade, he says, they’ve already switched to calling it “climate change”—”so any weather extreme [can] be interpreted as an omen of impending doom.” Other than that, it’s pretty much your standard anti-hippie rant: “composting your own human waste” or otherwise not flushing it down the toilet, “chickpea patties,” etc.

    Back in the day, Norman Spector writes in the Globe, a British Columbia Premier’s international obligations went little further than the odd trade mission. No more. And Gordon Campbell doesn’t seem to be handling the transition particularly well. His promise to attend the Olympic opening ceremonies in Beijing while most other politicians around the world declined or hedged seemed clumsy, says Spector. And his government’s persistence on the biofuel issue while food riots spread across the Third World will, he predicts, “reinforce doubts … that the gain the Premier sees accruing from his [climate change] policies is worth the pain he is asking the rest of us to bear.”

    It takes a great deal of myopia for western nations to look at China’s arms-for-oil arrangement with the Sudanese and not see parallels in their own dubious histories, Lysiane Gagnon writes in the Globe, and “it takes a great deal of bad faith not to recognize that the Chinese are much freer (and considerably more prosperous) today than 20 years ago.” Bashing Beijing may be morally exhilarating, she argues, but systematically humiliating a relatively progressive nation as it “emerges on the world scene after a prolonged period of isolation” cannot possible be a good strategy. (Nor, we would add, is giving such a country the Olympics.)

From Macleans