In case some Americans might wonder why Canada is reluctant to 
back US imperialism.

Paul Phillips

Subject:                In light of recent remarks by US 
Ambassador to Canada, Paul Cellucci, it is wor
Date sent:              Sat, 5 Apr 2003 21:59:02 -0600

  In light of recent remarks made by US Ambassador to Canada, 
Paul   Cellucci, it is worth revisiting what we now know about the 
US-backed   "regime change" that happened in Canada 40 years 
ago.

1962-1963, 'Knocking Over' "Dief the Chief":
How the U.S. Ambassador Helped Engineer “Regime Change” in 
Canada
by Richard Sanders

  www.globalresearch.ca 31 March 2003 
The URL of this article is: 
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/SAN303D.html


Cellucci's Statements Speech by U.S. ambassador to Canada A. 
Paul Cellucci
to the Economic Club of Toronto MARCH 25, 2003 




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------

     “George Ball and I knocked over the Diefenbaker government by 
one   incautious press release.” (McGeorge Bundy, J.F.Kennedy’s 
National security advisor) 
   “My brother really hated only two men in all his presidency. One 
was Sukarno [President of Indonesia] and the other was 
Diefenbaker.”    (Robert Kennedy)
  In 1962, the U.S. Ambassador to Canada, Livingston Merchant 
and his   Second Secretary Charles Kisselyak, fuelled a plot 
among the Canadian   Air Forces, Canadian journalists and others 
to dispose of Prime Minister   Diefenbaker. Kennedy hated Dief 
largely for his anti-nuclear stance.
  Merchant and other U.S. embassy officers with extensive 
espionage   backgrounds, met at Kisselyak's home in Ottawa to 
feed journalists with  spaghetti, beer and anti-
Diefenbaker/pronuclear propaganda. Among the
  many participants in these off-the-record briefings was Charles 
Lynch of   Southam News.

  Diefenbaker later denounced these reporters as "traitors" and 
"foreign   agents." He lashed out against Lynch on a TV program 
saying, "You were   given briefings as to how the Canadian 
government could be attacked on   the subject of nuclear weapons 
and the failure of the Canadian   government to do that which the 
U.S. dictated."

  Merchant and Kisselyak worked with RCAF Wing Commander 
Bill Lee and   NORAD's number two man, Canadian Air Marshall 
Roy Slemon. Air Marshall   Hugh Campbell and the chair of 
Canada's chiefs of staff, Air Marshall   Frank Miller also approved 
Lee's campaign. Diefenbaker's avidly   pronuclear Defence Minister, 
Douglas Harkness, also knew of Lee's   effort.

  As head of RCAF public relations, Lee went to Washington twice 
a month   to confer with U.S. authorities. "It was a flat-out 
campaign," Lee later   said. "We identified key journalists, 
business and labour, key Tory   hitters, and...Liberals.... We 
wanted people with influence on members   of cabinet. In the end 
the pressure paid off."

  In 1962, new U.S. ambassador, William Butterworth, continued 
what Lee   called the "flat-out campaign" by holding discrete 
meetings at the U.S.   embassy to exert influence on Canadian 
journalists.

  Lester Pearson was the President's choice. Kennedy gave the go-
ahead to   his friend and America's leading pollster, Lou Harris, to 
become the   Liberal's secret campaign advisor in the 1962 
election. Diefenbaker   survived with a minority government.

  The plot to bring down Canada's government came to a head in 
January,   1963. On Jan.3, top U.S. Air Force General Lauris 
Norstad held an Ottawa   press conference. Prompted by 
questions from Lynch, and other reporters   briefed by U.S. 
intelligence, Norstad criticized Canada's antinuclear   stance. On 
Jan. 12, Pearson announced his new policy of supporting U.S.
  nuclear weapons in Canada. In protest, Pierre Trudeau called 
Pearson the   "defrocked priest of peace" and refused to run for the 
Liberals.

  The coup's final blow came when the U.S. State Department 
issued a press   release which called Diefenbaker a liar on nuclear 
issues (Jan. 30).   This tactic was suggested by Willis Armstrong, 
head of the State   Department's Canada Desk in Washington. 
Butterworth added his    suggestions and sent his senior embassy 
advisor, Rufus Smith, to   Washington to draft it. "With Armstrong 
chairing, half a dozen officials  from State, the White House and 
the Pentagon...shaped...the rebuke." The  draft was polished by 
Under Secretary of State George McGhee and  approved by acting 
Secretary of State, George Ball, and national  security advisor, 
McGeorge Bundy.

  The Canadian media had a heyday attacking Diefenbaker. Fights 
broke out  in Cabinet. Diefenbaker recalled Canada's ambassador 
from the U.S. On  Feb. 5, Defence Minister Harkness announced 
his resignation and Pearson  called for a non-confidence vote. 
Dief's minority government fell, or  rather, it was 'knocked over.'
  Kisselyak was the U.S. embassy's contact to Pearson's election 
campaign.  The Liberals had the strong advantages of a friendly 
media and Harris'  state-of-the-art, computerized polling tactics. 
Diefenbaker, facing a  primed hostile media, ran a stridently anti-
U.S. campaign. Pearson's  victory was hailed by newspapers 
across North America. Within days, the  new External Affairs 
Minister, Paul Martin Sr., was approached by  Butterworth to 
negotiate the acceptance of U.S. nuclear weapons. The  warheads 
were deployed in Canada on New Year's Eve and there was
  partying in Washington.



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  Key Quotations on the events of January 1963

  Trudeau's summary of the events of January 1963

  "Do you think General Norstad... came to Ottawa as a tourist?... 
Do you   think it was by chance that Pearson... quoted the 
authority of Norstad?
  Do you think it was inadvertant that on January 30 the state 
department   gave a statement to journalists reinforcing Pearson's 
claims and crudely  accusing Diefenbaker of lying? You think it 
was by chance that this  press release provided the Leader of the 
Opposition with the arguments  he used abundantly? You believe it 
was coincidence? Why [should] the  U.S. treat Canada differently 
from Guatemala when reason of state  requires it and 
circumstances permit?" (Pierre E. Trudeau)

  On General Norstad's Media conference, Jan. 3

  "[Norstad's] purpose was to establish a basis for Pearson's 
conversion  to U.S. nuclear policy." (Diefenbaker)

  "Kennedy sent Norstad to do this hatchet job on us. It was 
American  imperialism of the highest order." (Alvin Hamilton, 
Agriculture  minister)

  "This was another American turn of the screw to bring down the
  Conservative government." (Charles Ritchie, Canada's 
ambassador to the  U.S.)

  On Pearson decision to reverse Liberal Policy and accept U.S. 
nuclear  warheads into Canada (if elected), Jan. 12

  "Kennedy achieved his dearest Canadian wish. Pearson 
progressed... to   embracing the U.S. position on arming with 
nuclear weapons the Bomarcs  and, no doubt, yielding to U.S. 
demands for storage of all manner of  nuclear devices in Canada." 
(Diefenbaker)

  "A pure example of Pearson's willingness to accept the 
leadership of the  U.S. on any vital matter." (Hamilton)

  Liberal policies were "made in the U.S."  (Tommy Douglas, NDP 
Leader)  On the U.S. press release, Jan. 30

  "It was as deliberate an attempt as ever made to bring down a 
foreign  government." (Ed Ritchie, former under secretary of state 
for external  affairs)

  "This action by the State Department of the U.S. is 
unprecedented...it   constitutes an unwarranted intrusion in 
Canadian affairs... [Canada]   will not be pushed around or accept 
external domination or interference  in making its decisions." 
"President Kennedy was going to obliterate us.
  I dared to say to him that Canada's policies would be made in 
Canada by   Canadians." (Diefenbaker)

  "An absolute outrage, the most blatant, heavy-handed, intolerable 
piece   of bullying." (Charles Ritchie)

  "Like a bombshell"   (a Diefenbaker aide)

  "Brazen interference."   (Howard Green, External Affairs Minister)

  "The U.S. should know from this Parliament that they are not 
dealing  with Guatemala...or Cuba." (Douglas)

  "Kennedy decided the government had to go...[I] wouldn't put it 
past him  to say, 'Get rid of the bastards.'" (R.Bell, Immigration 
Minister)
  "Very useful. Highly beneficial in advancing U.S. interests by
  introducing realism into a government which has made anti-
Americanism...  practically its entire stock in trade." (William 
Butterworth, U.S.  ambassador to Canada)

  "For God's sake, it was like tossing a match into dried hay."
  (Rufus Smith, senior advisor to Will Butterworth)

  Source: From K.Nash, Kennedy and Diefenbaker: Fear and 
Loathing Across
  the Undefended Border, 1990.


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  CIA Fingerprints:
  The Americans behind the Plot to Oust John Diefenbaker

  Willis Coburn Armstrong
  He was a translator at the U.S. embassy in Moscow (1939-1941);
  Minister-Counselor (ambassador's "right hand man" (1958-1962) 
and  interim charge d'affairs in Ottawa (1962). At least six of the 
U.S.  diplomats that he selected for Canada had espionage 
backgrounds (Lisee,   p.31). Armstrong told Lisee, that he had 
been an advisor to the CIA  (p.175)1 As Director of the State 
Department's Office of British  Commonwealth and Northern 
European Affairs, he attended secret meetings  on the Vietnam war 
with U.S. and U.K. heads of state and their top  intelligence 
officials (1964)2 1. Floyd Rudmin, U.S. "Ambassador Spies:
  1960-1980," Jul.6, 1995. 2.
  www.state.gov/www/about_state/history/vol_i/28_69.html 

  George W. Ball
  He was director of the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, London 
(1944-45);  served in JFK's successful campaign (1960) and 
became Deputy Secretary  of State under JFK and Johnson.1 Ball 
was a friend of Mike Pearson.2 He  was stationed in Cuba (1962), 
Brazil (1964) and Iran (1978).3 1.  Obituary by R. Curtiss, 
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,  July/Aug. 1994 
www.washington-report.org 2. Nash, p.241-242. 
3.www.pir.org/quickie.html 

  McGeorge Bundy
  He was a boyhood classmate of JFK. As a WWII intelligence 
officer, he  helped plan the invasions of Sicily and France. Bundy's 
brother Bill  "scaled the ranks of the CIA and held senior posts in 
the Defense and  State departments.".1 As Special Assistant for 
National Security Affairs  under JFK and Johnson, M. Bundy 
forcefully advocated expanding the  Vietnam war and was a 
principal architect of U.S. foreign policy. He  played a major role in 
the invasion of Cuba, the Cuban missile crisis,  the escalation of 
the Vietnam War and the U.S. military intervention in  the 
Dominican Republic.2 He was posted to Chile (1964).3 1. 
BookReview  of The Color of Truth, McGeorge and William Bundy 
by Kai Bird, Biography   Magazine, Sept. 1998 2. Encyclopædia 
Britannica   
www.britannica.com/bcom/eb/article/3/0,5716,123343+1+113090,00
.html and
  
www.britannica.com/bcom/eb/article/3/0,5716,18343+1+18080,00.h
tml
  3.www.pir.org/quickie.html 

  William W. Butterworth
  During WWII, he was an economic warfare specialist in Spain and 
Portugal   and was one of two Office of Strategic Services (OSS) 
contacts with  German chief of military intelligence, Walter 
Schellenberg.1 The other  was future CIA director, Allen Dulles. 
After the war, he was posted to  China.2 Butterworth was the U.S. 
ambassador to Canada (1962-1968). At  least six espionage 
officers joined his staff in 1962. Source: Floyd  Rudmin, "Questions 
of U.S. Hostility Towards Canada." 1. A.C.Brown, Body  Guard of 
Lies, Vol.1, 1975, p.507; Who's Who in America, 1965, p.300. 2.  
Biographic Register, 1968, p.78.

  Louis Harris
  In 1960, J. F. Kennedy was the "first national candidate to make
  important use of polling.1 "As his personal contribution toward the
  defeat" of Diefenbaker, Kennedy "gave his unofficial blessing to 
Lou   Harris - the shrewd public opinion analyst - to work for the 
Liberal  Party. Using a pseudonym [Lou Smith] and working in 
such secrecy that   only half a dozen key people were aware of his 
activities,  Harris...conducted extensive studies of Canadian voting 
behavior. They  were key contributions to the Liberal victory of 
1963."2 Harris' "in  person" polling was conducted by 500 women.3 
David Moore, author of The  Super Pollsters, cites Harris as "the 
biggest most flagrant example" of   polling manipulation.4 Likewise, 
Professors L. Jacobs and R. Shapiro  argue that the way Harris 
used polling during Nixon's campaign for  presidency "violated 
professional standards of conduct."5 1. Theodore  Roszak, The 
Cult of Information, 1994, p.213. 2. Peter Newman, Renegade
  in Powers, 1963, p.267. 3. Knowlton Nash, Kennedy and 
Diefenbaker, 1990,  p.167. 4. Interview by B.Lamb with D.Moore, 
Booknotes Transcript, May  10, 1992. 5. "Presidential Manipulation 
of Public Opinion: The Nixon   Administration and the Public 
Pollsters" (September 1995)

  Livingston Tallmadge Merchant
  He worked on war production issues for the State Department 
(1942). As  the U.S. exerted efforts to support the Nationalist 
forces, he was  counselor at the embassy in China (1948-49).1 He 
was Deputy Assistant  Secretary of State, Far Eastern Affairs 
(1949-51) and State Department's  liaison to the CIA's covert action 
arm, comprised of former OSS staff  (1950). He initiated counter-
insurgency operations in the Philippines  (1950);2 was Assist. 
Secretary of State for European Affairs (1953-56,  1958-59) and 
U.S. ambassador to Canada (1956-58, 1961-62). His First  
Secretary (1961) was Louis Wiesner, a former OSS officer. At least 
eight  espionage officers joined his staff in 1961. He was U.S. 
Under-Secretary  of State for Political Affairs (1960-61).3 Source: 
Floyd Rudmin,  "Questions of U.S. Hostility Towards Canada." 1. 
W. Blum, The CIA: A  Forgotten History, 1986, pp.15-20. 2. Z. 
Grant, Facing the Phoenix,  1991, p.89 3. Who's Who in America, 
1964.
  Merchant attended top secret meetings with J.F.Kennedy and top
  intelligence officials to destabilize Cuba.1 He suggested the
  assassination of Fidel and Raul Castro and Che (1960).2 He was 
posted to  the Congo (1960).3 1.
  www.state.gov/www/about_state/history/frusX/01_15.html 2. 
Thomas Powers,  Strategic Intelligence 
www.strategicintel.com/dirty1.htm 3.
  www.pir.org/quickie.html 

  Lauris Norstad  He was Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence of 
General HQ Air Force  (1940)1 and was responsibility for planning 
the nuclear bombing of  Japan.2 He was director of the War 
Department's Plans and Operations  Division (1947). He helped 
draft the National Security Act that created  the CIA and the 
National Security Council.3 He became Commander in  chief, 
USAF Europe (1950); Commander in chief, U.S. 
EuropeanCommand
  (1956-1963).4 1. www.af.mil/news/biographies/norstad_l.html 2.
  unitedstates-on-line.com/minnesota/norstad.html 3. CIA historian 
Arthur  Darling, The C.I.A. 
4.www.af.mil/news/biographies/norstad_l.html 

  John Diefenbaker's "Made in Canada" Policies

  "Diefenbaker promoted Canadian independence with evangelical 
zeal... 'We   are a power, not a puppet,' the Chief thundered during 
the controversy  over the placement of U.S. nuclear warheads in 
Canada. 'His rampant  nationalism alienated the entire ruling class: 
Bay Street, Wall Street,  his civil service and politicians from all 
parties. [George] Grant  credited the Chief with the strongest 
stance against satellite status  ever attempted by a Canadian. This 
stance came at a high price." Source:  Laurence Martin, Pledge of 
Allegiance, The Americanization of Canada in  the Mulroney Years, 
1993.

  Cuban Missile Crisis:
  When U.S. spy planes showed missile sites being constructed in 
Cuba,  Kennedy decided to blockade Russian ships en route to 
Cuba. Despite  NORAD, the Canada-U.S. Permanent Joint Board 
on Defense and NATO,  Kennedy neither consulted nor informed 
the Canadian government until  [two hours] before his TV speech 
on Oct. 22, 1962. The U.S. asked the  Canadian government to 
move our military to an advanced state of  readiness. Diefenbaker 
did not comply. Nonetheless, Canada's military  moved 
immediately to advanced readiness without the Prime Minister's  
authorization. Canada's chief of naval staff ordered the Atlantic fleet 
 to sea. Canada's Minister of Defense ordered the military's Chiefs 
of  Staff to special preparedness. General McNaughton's 1941 
remark is  painfully relevant: "The acid test of sovereignty is control 
of the  armed forces."1 Howard Green, Canada's anti-nuclear 
External Affairs  minister, pleaded that cabinet reconsider "blindly 
following the U.S.  lead, particularly since the President had not 
kept the commitment to  consult Canada over the impending 
[missile] crisis. 'If we go along with  the U.S. now, we'll be their 
vassal forever.'"2

  Footnotes:


  1. C.P. Stacey, Canada and the Age of Conflict, Vol.2, p.349.
  2. Peter Newman, Renegade in Power: The Diefenbaker Years, 
p.337, p.337.

  Source: Robin Mathews, Canadian Foundations web site
  www.ola.bc.ca/online/cf/module-4/usrel.html 

  The Avro and the Bomarcs:
  Diefenbaker cancelled the Avro Arrow fighter plane program (1959)
  because the U.S. wouldn't buy any of them. Although then 
expected to arm  Canada's Bomarc missiles with U.S. nuclear 
warheads, Diefenbaker  refused.

  Operation Sky Hawk:
  Dief cancelled a U.S. nuclear war-related training exercise over 
Canada   (1959).

  Cuba:  Diefenbaker refused U.S. demands to stop trading with 
Cuba, and instead  increased Canada's trade (1960).

  Apartheid:   At a Commonwealth conference (1961), Diefenbaker 
was the only white  leader to support the African and Asian 
members against allowing South  African membership.

  Immigration:  After Diefenbaker's Bill of Rights (1960), the 
government reduced  immigration restrictions based on racial 
grounds and began to accept  more Asian and black immigrants.

  Women:  Dief appointed the first women cabinet minister and 
senator.

  First Nations:   Native people allowed to vote for the first time 
(1960).
  OAS:  Dief resented JFK's speech to Parliament urging Canada 
to join the  Organization of American States, because Dief had 
already refused  (1961).

  China:  Diefenbaker refused U.S. requests to cut off wheat 
supplies to China if  they continued supporting Vietnamese 
independence efforts (1962).
  Nuclear Test Ban:  Kennedy pushed for opposition to the treaty, 
but Canada voted for it  (1962). The U.S. and most NATO countries 
abstained.
  Sources: Knowlton Nash, Kennedy and Diefenbaker, 1990 and
  www.canschool.org/relation/history/7turbu-e.asp 


  For further reading on this US plot to Oust Diefenbaker:

  Kennedy and Diefenbaker, 1990 by Knowlton Nash, 

  "Is the Sky Falling, or What?," Feb. 20, 1995. by Floyd Rudmin

  Lament for a Nation, 1982 by George Grant

  The Fight for Canada: Four centuries of Resistance to American
  expansionism by David Orchard, 1993, 1998

  The Chief, 1968 By Thomas Van Dusen

  Renegade in Power: The Diefenbaker Years, 1963 by Peter 
Newman

  This Game of Politics, 1965 By Pierre Sevigny

  Articles by Professor Floyd Rudmin:

  "Questions of U.S. Hostility Towards Canada: A Cognitive History 
of   Blind-Eye Perception"
  http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~ucurrent/uc5/5-rudmin.html 

  "U.S. Ambassador Spies: 1960 to 1980" 1995
  http://www.jdkoftinoff.com/canal70.html 

  "IS THE SKY FALLING, OR WHAT?" 1995
  http://www.jdkoftinoff.com/canal57.html 

  "A BRIEF HISTORY OF UNSEEN ESPIONAGE IN CANADA" 
1996
  http://www.jdkoftinoff.com/canal79.html 



  The above material was originally published in Press for 
Conversion!   magazine, December
  
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