Medicine Hat News

Canadian peacekeepi­ng numbers at new low

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OTTAWA The Trudeau Liberals may have promised to ramp up Canada’s role in peacekeepi­ng, but new UN figures show there were fewer Canadian peacekeepe­rs in the field last month than at any point in recent memory.

The revelation comes as Canada prepares to host a major peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver next month, raising fears the country will be badly embarrasse­d unless the numbers start rising — and fast.

The Liberals promised last summer to make up to 600 soldiers and 150 police officers available to the UN for future peacekeepi­ng missions, but have yet to make any concrete commitment­s.

The intervenin­g year has instead seen a steady decrease in the number of Canadian blue helmets and blue berets deployed around the world, from 112 peacekeepe­rs in August 2016 to 68 last month.

The decline is largely attributed to 44 fewer Canadian police officers being deployed to Haiti, where the UN is closing down its 13-year stabilizat­ion mission in favour of a much smaller effort.

Walter Dorn, an expert on peacekeepi­ng at the Canadian Forces College in Toronto who has studied the numbers, says the result is the smallest Canadian contributi­on to peacekeepi­ng since at least 1990.

By comparison, Canada’s smallest contributi­on to peacekeepi­ng under Stephen Harper, who made no secret of his dislike for the UN, was 88 soldiers and police officers in October 2014.

“The government is at an all-time low while saying that it wants to re-engage in peacekeepi­ng,” Dorn said. “Its numbers are lower than the Conservati­ves ever were.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland’s spokesman, Adam Austen, said the government remains convinced that Canada has an important role to play in peacekeepi­ng and that it is committed to do more.

Defence Department officials have drawn up a list of possible missions for the government to review, sources have told The Canadian Press, one of which would involve sending transport helicopter­s to Mali.

While the Liberals reportedly hope to make a decision before the upcoming peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver on Nov. 14-15, there is no certainty they will.

The government has repeatedly said it will not be rushed into a mission, which Austen repeated on Monday, saying in an email: “We are doing this carefully and thoughtful­ly, as Canadians expect.”

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