Just to add fuel to the fire, there was this editorial in today's
Washington Post:

  http://www.antiwrap.com/?837
Northern Ire
Canadian Politics Are All About America

By Anna Morgan
Sunday, January 8, 2006; B02

TORONTO Barely 18 months ago, Canadian party leaders were out
campaigning for better health care policies, a cure for Quebec's
nationalist aspirations and an end to government corruption scandals.
But since the minority government put in place in June 2004 lost a
no-confidence vote late last November, the politicians have been back
out on the stump, preparing for a new election on Jan. 23. This time,
though, running in the two coldest months of winter, they've been
using that familiar demon -- the United States and all its evils -- as
the fuel to heat Canadian voters to a frenzy.

There's no denying that Canadians are in an even more anti-American
mood than usual, thanks to the Iraq war and the Bush administration's
perceived arrogance. And politicians here are playing to that mood. In
a blatant appeal for votes, candidates of every stripe, led by Prime
Minister Paul Martin and his ruling Liberal Party, are taking aim at
Washington, blasting it for taxing Canadian lumber imports, for
failing to fight global warming, for lax gun-control laws, for dealing
inappropriately with the war on terrorism. And all the while, they're
studiously ignoring Canada's own homegrown issues.

America-bashing became such a central part of the election landscape
last month that U.S. ambassador David H. Wilkins warned that
Canadian-American relations could take a turn for the worse if party
leaders didn't back off. But his words only prompted Canadian
politicians to lash back with admonitions of their own. Even Stephen
Harper, leader of the Conservatives, the party generally most
sympathetic to the United States, declared: "I don't think foreign
ambassadors should be expressing their views or intervening in an
election."

In keeping with a long political tradition, the United States ignores
Canada whenever possible. Nonetheless, the issues between the two
countries just keep piling up. Leading the way is the softwood lumber
dispute. Three years ago, the United States began imposing import
duties on Canadian lumber after American producers complained that the
Canadian government was all but subsidizing the lumber industry.
Canada objected, and last August, arbitrators for the North American
Free Trade Agreement decided in its favor. But Americans still have
not fully complied with the NAFTA ruling to lift the duties, so Prime
Minister Martin has made confronting Washington on this score a main
issue of his campaign, even though lumber represents less than 3
percent of Canadian exports to the United States.

While American non-compliance with NAFTA may be a legitimate beef for
Canadians, politicians have also been indulging in some inflated
rhetoric on other fronts where Canada isn't on such solid ground. The
specific attack to which Wilkins responded, for example, had to do
with the Kyoto environmental accord. In welcoming a United Nations
conference on global warming in Montreal last month, Martin criticized
the United States for not signing the agreement and urged it to pay
attention to the "global conscience."

In doing so, he conveniently neglected to mention that Canada, which
is one of the accord's major promoters, so far hasn't complied with
its emission reduction requirements. The United States, in fact, has
done a better job in dealing with greenhouse gases. A U.S. Department
of Energy report released in December noted that American emissions
for 2004 were 16 percent higher than in 1990. A similar study prepared
by Environment Canada reported that greenhouse gas emissions rose 24
percent here between 1990 and 2003. But in the current election
environment, the prime minister knows that it is hot air that really
counts.

The Liberal Party has been determined to divert attention from a
corruption scandal that has left it weakened in every province. It is
using its anti-American foreign policy as an election tool,
continuously reminding Canadians that the Liberal government kept the
country out of the Iraq war and the North American missile defense
system. Some pundits say that Martin, with no ammunition against
opposition candidates, has decided to run against George W. Bush.

The opposition has also played the America card. The Conservatives,
who support deep tax cuts, Thatcheresque deregulation of the economy
and a set of family values that could attract the vote of any
evangelical minister, are sympathetic with Bush's foreign policies but
vow never to mimic them. At the other end of the spectrum, the
quasi-socialist New Democratic Party has candidates who are so
anti-American that they sometimes sound like an undergraduate student
forum, performing stunts such as conducting "citizens' weapons
inspections" of American military bases in Washington state. The one
thing all the candidates have in common is their strenuous assertions
that they will not tolerate being bullied, even if they have to make
up the bullying.

Although the government boasts about its non-cooperation with the
Americans on Iraq, it is desperate to keep quiet its cooperation on
the war on terrorism. Under the Liberals, Canada enacted Patriot
Act-style legislation with the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001. Recently,
it resisted calls to repeal provisions for increased police
surveillance and far-reaching powers of arrest and detention. Federal
authorities are currently holding five suspects under so-called
security certificates, which allow non-Canadians to be held
indefinitely if a judge is convinced they are a threat. These
policies, however, have been kept low-key, for fear of an
anti-government backlash in public opinion.

The problem is that silence on these issues during the campaign plays
into the growing anti-American sentiment and may eventually hinder
attempts to deal with terrorism. The best example of this is the case
of Abdullah Khadr, the Canadian media's current cause celebre. Khadr
is one of several Toronto-born sons of an Egyptian terrorist who was
killed in a shootout with police in Pakistan. U.S. authorities suspect
Abdullah of being a weapons supplier for al Qaeda and part of a group
that planned to assassinate Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. On
Dec. 2, he came back to Canada after 14 months in a Pakistani prison
and was soon arrested on an extradition warrant, issued at the request
of the United States, for conspiracy to murder Americans abroad.

Abdullah's 19-year-old brother, Omar, has also been in the news, as
the youngest person held in Guantanamo Bay, for allegedly throwing a
grenade that killed a U.S. Army medic in Afghanistan. The clan's
mother has given interviews saying she detests Western values and that
the only reason the family has returned to Canada is for the
subsidized health care. One would think few families could be less
popular with the liberal-minded Canadian public.

And yet in his current extradition battle, Abdullah is clearly winning
in the court of public opinion, if not in the court of law. A number
of prominent columnists and CBC News are questioning whether Canada
should cooperate with the U.S. government in this or any other
terrorism case.

Politicians here know that Canadians love to read, talk and debate
about U.S. transgressions. Newspaper articles point to ethnic
profiling at airports and long border waits as evidence that the war
on terrorism is a sham, and that Americans are simply looking for
excuses to harass Canadians for the country's multicultural society.
But just as it chooses to ignore weaknesses in Canada's environmental
policy, the public is also disinclined to take seriously the country's
problems with terrorism. Those problems may not be as exaggerated as
some Americans think they are -- just recently Montana's Sen. Conrad
Burns reiterated, then retracted, the popular myth that the 9/11
hijackers got into the United States through Canada -- but they are
certainly real.

The so-called millennium bomber, Ahmed Ressam, who planned to bomb Los
Angeles airport on New Year's Eve 2000, did come from Canada. In
another notorious case, Mohammed Zeki Mahjoub was arrested in Toronto
after being accused of belonging to a militant group with ties to an
Egyptian Islamic Jihad organization. Though he denied those links,
Mahjoub admitted he worked closely with Osama bin Laden himself during
his years in Sudan. The judge at Mahjoub's first hearing quoted from a
report issued by the Canadian Security Intelligence Services that
"there are more terrorist cells operating in Canada than in any other
country outside the Middle East."

Worry about alienating key constituencies in a hairline election has
silenced politicians here on these important issues. But Canada-U.S.
relations could reach a turning point if they're not addressed. Over
the past five years, Canada has stopped extraditing people to the
United States if they face the death penalty. The increasing
popularity of the notion that international terrorism suspects also
should not be extradited have led to some serious concerns about the
heavily trafficked border.

It's not just that Canada is starting to look like a safe haven for
America's Most Wanted; it's that America may be starting to view
Canada as a less-than-benign neighbor. U.S. Customs and Immigration
this year imposed passport requirements on visiting Canadians for the
first time, and there is talk of fingerprinting at the border as well.
At some point, the truck traffic that carries up to 70 percent of
Canadian exports south will start to bog down in security inspections.
That's when Canadians' anti-American bark will really start to bite.

In this electoral season, the public is looking for bellicose
rhetoric, but Canada's security cries out for sober management.
Whoever is elected will have to work publicly with the United States,
not just against it, to reduce anti-American sentiment while
addressing the problem of terrorism and cross-border control. If the
real need for cooperation with Canada's southern neighbor can't temper
the public's demand for criticism, the nation will be in for some
stormy weather in the next few years.

Author's e-mail:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Anna Morgan is a freelance journalist and author in Canada.

--

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