[R-G] Canada's Secret War in Iraq

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Wed Feb 13 15:30:50 MST 2008


Canada’s secret war in Iraq
Common Ground February 2008  
Richard Sanders
How easy it is to make people believe a lie, and how hard it is to undo that work again! – Mark Twain

		    On
March 25, 2003, during the “shock and awe” bombardment of Iraq, then US
Ambassador Paul Cellucci admitted that “… ironically, Canadian naval
vessels, aircraft and personnel... will supply more support to this war
in Iraq indirectly... than most of those 46 countries that are fully
supporting our efforts there.”
 Cellucci merely scratched the
surface of Canada’s initial “support” for the Iraq War, but he had let
the cat out of the bag. As then Secretary of State Colin Powell had
explained a week earlier, “We now have a coalition of the willing… who
have publicly said they could be included in such a listing.... And
there are 15 other nations, who, for one reason or another, do not wish
to be publicly named but will be supporting the coalition.”

Canada was, and still is, the leading member of this secret group,
which we could perhaps call CW-HUSH, the “Coalition of the Willing to
Help but Unwilling to be Seen Helping.” The plan worked. Most Canadians
still proudly believe that their government refused to join the Iraq
War. Nothing could be further from the truth. Here are some of the ways
in which we joined the fray: 

Escorting the US Navy: Thirteen hundred Canadian troops aboard Canada’s
multibillion dollar warships escorted the US fleet through the Persian
Gulf, putting them safely in place to bomb Iraq. 

		      Leading the coalition Navy: Canadian Rear Admiral Roger Girouard was in charge of the war coalition’s fleet.

Providing war planners: At least two dozen Canadian war planners
working at US Central Command in Florida were transferred to the
Persian Gulf in early 2003 to help oversee the war’s complicated
logistics.

Commanding the war: In 2004, Canadian Brigadier General Walt Natynczyk
commanded 10 brigades totalling 35,000 troops. He was Second-in-Command
of the entire Iraq War for that year. When Governor General Clarkson
gave Natynczyk the Meritorious Service Cross, her office extolled his
“pivotal role in the development of numerous plans and operations
[which] resulted in a tremendous contribution… to Operation Iraqi
Freedom, and… brought great credit to the Canadian Forces and to
Canada.”

Helping coordinate the war: Canadian military personnel working aboard
American E-3 Airborne Warning and Control System warplanes helped
direct the electronic war by providing surveillance, command, control
and communications services to US war fighters.

Providing airspace and refuelling: Countless US troop and equipment
transport aircraft have flown over Canada, to and from the Iraq War,
and many refuelled in Gander, Newfoundland.

Providing air transport: At least three Canadian CC-130 military
transport planes were listed by US military to supply coalition forces
during the Iraq War.

		      Freeing up US troops: Canada’s major role in Afghan war has freed up thousands of US troops for deployment to Iraq.

Providing ground troops: At least 35 Canadian soldiers were directly
under US command, in an “exchange” capacity on the ground,
participating in the invasion of Iraq.

Testing weapons and drones: Two types of cruise missiles (AGM-86 and
-129) and the “Global Hawk” (RQ-4A) surveillance drone, used in Iraq,
were tested over Canada.

Depleted uranium (DU) weapons: Canada is the world’s top exporter of
uranium. Our government pretends that Canada’s uranium is sold for
“peaceful” purposes only, but absolutely nothing is done to stop the US
from using DU in their weapons. America’s A-10 Wart Hog warplanes have
fired DU munitions in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq, while each
cruise missile contains three kgs of DU ballast. Providing RADARSAT
data: Eagle Vision, a US Air Force mobile ground station, ­which
controls Canada’s RADARSAT-1 satellite and downlinks its data­, was
used from the start of the Iraq War.

Diplomatic support: Former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien supported the
“right” of the US to invade Iraq, although Kofi Annan said it was an
illegal occupation. Chrétien criticized Canadian citizens who
questioned the war, saying they provided comfort to Saddam Hussein.

Training Iraqi police: Canada has spent millions sending RCMP officers
to Jordan to train tens of thousands of cadets for Iraq’s paramilitary
police force.

Training Iraqi troops: High-level Canadian military personnel joined
the “NATO Training Mission in Iraq” to “train the trainers” of Iraqi
Security Forces who are on the leading edge of the US occupation. A
Canadian colonel, under NATO command, was chief of staff at the
Baghdad-based training mission. Canada was the leading donor to this
centre, providing an initial $810 thousand.

Funding Iraq’s interior ministry: Canada provides advisors and
financial support to this ministry, which has been caught running
torture centres. Thousands of its officers have been withdrawn for
corruption, and it has been accused of working with death squads that
executed a thousand people per month in Baghdad alone in the summer of
2006.

Military exports: At least 100 Canadian companies sold parts and/or
services for major weapons systems used in the Iraq War. Quebec’s
SNC-TEC sold millions of bullets to the US military forces occupying
Iraq. General Dynamics Canada, in London Ontario, sold hundreds of
armoured vehicles to the US and Australia. Between October 2003 and
November 2005, these troop transport vehicles logged over six million
miles in Iraq. Winnipeg’s Bristol Aerospace sells cluster-bomb
dispensing warheads used by US aircraft in Iraq.

Canada Pension Plan investments: Canadians are forced to invest their
pension money in hundreds of military industries, including most of the
world’s top 20 weapons producers, which are the leading prime
contractors for virtually all the major weapons systems used in Iraq.

So the next time a proud fellow citizen tells you that Canada didn’t
join the Iraq War, remind them of Mark Twain’s famous quip: “It ain’t
what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for
sure that just ain’t so.” 

		    For more information on the myth of Canada’s role as a global peacemaker, read Press for Conversion, http://coat.ncf.ca or
write to COAT, 541 McLeod St., Ottawa, ON, K1R 5R2. Richard Sanders is
the coordinator for the Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade.



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