Canadian Government Seizes on Ottawa Shooting to
Promote Militarist, Anti-democratic Agenda
By Roger Jordan and Keith Jones
October 24, 2014 "ICH"
- "WSWS"
- -
Canada’s Conservative government is seeking to
exploit the killing of two Canadian Armed
Forces’ soldiers in separate incidents this week
to dramatically shift politics further to the
right.
Speaking
in parliament Thursday—the day after a gunman
fatally shot a soldier at Ottawa’s National War
Memorial, then entered the main block of the
national parliament—Prime Minister Stephen
Harper vowed to greatly strengthen Canada’s
national security apparatus.
“Our
law and police powers,” declared Harper, “need
to be strengthened in the area of surveillance,
detention and arrest.” He continued, “I assure
you that work—which is already underway—will be
expedited.”
Since
Monday’s hit-and-run killing of a Canadian Armed
Forces’ warrant officer in St. Jean-sur-Richelieu,
Quebec, Harper and his government have gone into
overdrive to promote the false narrative that
Canada is under “terrorist” assault.
The
government’s response to Wednesday’s events was
extraordinary. It enacted the Canadian state’s
National Anti-Terrorism Plan, which involves the
coordinated mobilization of all sections of the
national-security apparatus, including the
military; placed large sections of downtown
Ottawa under lockdown for ten hours; and ordered
Canadian Armed Forces’ bases across the country
to go on high alert.
In
conjunction with Washington, the joint
US-Canadian North American Aerospace Defense
Command (NORAD) increased its “alert posture,”
ordering additional fighter jets to be ready to
take to the skies at a moment’s notice.
Yesterday, heightened security remained in
effect across the country, at Parliament Hill
and the provincial legislatures, other public
buildings and on public transport. Politicians
and representatives of the police, military and
intelligence apparatus all made statements
warning Canadians to get used to enhanced
security measures disrupting day-to-day life
.
A
somber Harper went out of his way to paint
Canada as under siege in a brief,
nationally-televised address given Wednesday
evening—that is long after it had become
apparent, if it was ever in serious doubt, that
there had been only a single gunman.
He
repeatedly used the words “terrorist” and
“terrorist attack,” claimed the two incidents
constituted an attack on Canada and democracy,
and sought to channel popular revulsion over
them behind Canada’s leading role in the new US
war in the Middle East.
The
reality is that both of this week’s killings
were carried out by lone, misguided and
disorientated individuals. All reports indicate
that they were not members of a “homegrown”
anti-government group, let alone of a foreign
terrorist organization.
The
Ottawa shooter, Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, was living
in a homeless shelter in the days before his
shooting spree. Residents at the Ottawa shelter
told reporters he had behaved extremely
erratically.
At a
press conference yesterday afternoon, RCMP
Commissioner Bob Paulson confirmed that there
was no link between Zehaf-Bibeau and Martin
Couture-Rouleau, the “radicalized” Muslim
convert who carried out Monday’s attack in
St-Jean.
If the
Harper government, aided and abetted by the
corporate media, is framing these tragic
incidents as terrorist acts, it is because such
a narrative serves predetermined reactionary
politically ends.
The
immediate goal is to rally support for Canada’s
participation in the new Mideast war and to rush
through legislation giving further repressive
powers to the national-security apparatus.
In
doing this, the government and Canada’s ruling
elite are following a now well-trodden path.
Since the September 11, 2001 events, terrorist
attacks and scares have been repeatedly
exploited to advance an agenda of military
aggression abroad and attacks on democratic
rights at home. Right-wing measures that would
previously have been impossible to implement due
to public hostility have been pushed through in
a deliberately-fostered climate of fear,
hysteria and nationalist militarism.
Within
weeks of 9/11, Canada’s then Liberal government,
following the lead of the Bush administration,
adopted a draconian anti-terrorism law. Its
provisions include a catch-all definition of
“terrorism” that could be used to suppress
political strikes and vast new powers for the
Communications Security Establishment Canada (CSEC),
the Canadian partner of the US National Security
Agency or NSA.
Canada
also took on a major role in the invasion and
occupation of Afghanistan, deploying combat
troops to that impoverished country for a decade
and embarking on a rearmament drive. By 2011
Ottawa was spending more in real,
inflation-adjusted terms on the military than
any time since the end of the Second World War.
Harper
has been among the most bellicose of western
leaders, defending Israel’s war crimes against
the people of Gaza and stoking NATO’s
confrontation with Russia over Ukraine. Most
recently, his government deployed a fleet of
fighter planes and almost 700 military personnel
to join the new war the US has unleashed on the
Middle East, so as to shore up and extend
Washington’s domination of the world’s most
important oil-exporting region.
Harper
and the ruling elite are acutely aware that
there is widespread popular opposition to their
war agenda—that is, to their plans to secure the
Canadian bourgeoisie a “place at the table” in
the imperialist reordering of the Middle East
and Eurasia. Asked in early September why he
hadn’t endorsed the US-British call for all NATO
countries to spend at least two percent of GDP
on the military, Harper was forced to concede
that the Canadian people would not “understand”
such a decision.
Harper’s gratuitous reference to the war in the
Middle East in his Wednesday night speech makes
clear the Conservatives intend to use this
week’s events to try to silence and intimidate
the war’s millions of opponents and create the
political climate to expand Canada’s role.
Already last week, the head of the armed forces
said the deployment, currently slated for six
months, will most likely have to be extended.
As
Harper indicated in his remarks to parliament
Thursday, the government was already planning to
give the country’s national-security agencies
significant new powers. Indeed, a draft bill was
to have been tabled in the House of Commons on
Wednesday.
The
government had signaled that this legislation
would allow CSEC and Canada’s premier spy
agency, the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service (CSIS), to work even more closely with
the NSA and the other foreign intelligence
agencies, including in the tracking of Canadian
“terrorist” suspects who go abroad.
The
government had also said that it would amend the
2001 Anti-Terrorism Act to give CSIS informants
blanket immunity. This would mean not only that
the identity of CSIS informants would have to be
protected in all legal proceedings, but that
they could not be questioned by defence lawyers
and even judges.
The
government has not announced a new date for the
tabling of this legislation. This strongly
suggests that it intends to redraft it to
include still more anti-democratic measures,
calculating that it can now stampede them
through.
These
changes will add to the broad range of
capabilities already at the disposal of the
intelligence services. Since 2001, CSIS and CSEC
have seen their budgets explode. With the
government’s full support they have arrogated
new powers, such as the right to systematically
spy on the metadata of Canadians’ electronic
communications.
No one
should be under any illusion that the opposition
parties will mount any serious resistance to the
government’s plans to use this week’s events to
intensify its militarist foreign policy and
attack on democratic rights.
The
Conservative government has only widened and
deepened the right-wing policies of its Liberal
predecessor. The trade union-supported New
Democratic Party (NDP) has supported Canada’s
participation in a series of US-led wars and
interventions, including the 1999 war on
Yugoslavia, the Afghan war, the 2004 overthrow
of Haiti’s elected president and NATO’s 2011
“regime change” war in Libya.
These
parties’ opposition to the current Canadian
Armed Forces’ combat mission in Iraq is an
exercise in cynicism and hypocrisy that has been
motivated by electoral calculations, concerns
that the current war, like the 2003 Iraq war,
will redound against imperialist interests, and
fears it will fuel social opposition at home.
Both
the Liberals and the NDP have kept an almost
total and complicit silence about CSEC’s spying
on Canadians and its major role in the NSA’s
gargantuan global spy network.
Predictably they have responded to Wednesday’s
events, by rallying round the Harper
Conservative government, lending credence to its
tendentious claims that Canada is under attack.
NDP
leader Thomas Muclair said the Ottawa shooting
had been “designed to strike at the very heart
of our democracy—at the heart of who we are.” In
a display of “national unity,” Mulcair embraced
Harper following the prime minister’s right-wing
address Thursday morning.
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Cross-Canada Anti-War Demonstrations This
Weekend:
Together, let’s take to the streets to demand:
The immediate end of Canadian participation in
this new aggression coalition which has been set
up for the strategic interests of the US empire
and its allies;