National Post (National Edition)
Trudeau’s sloppy stance on diplomacy
Keller suggested that, either no cross-checking was carried out, or the objections of the RCMP and PCO were ignored by the PMO because Atwal was well-known in Liberal political circles.
Either way, it reflects an extremely sloppy approach to the serious business of international diplomacy.
“They obviously decided they were going to do things differently and put their guy out there. But this has done irreparable damage to the relationship,” said Keller.
It is generally understood that Twitter retweets and links are not endorsements. But appearing in a posed photo with the prime minister does transmit an impression of legitimacy that is, far too often in the case of this government, undeserved.
Last March, Trudeau posed with Veluppillai Thangavelu, a former vicepresident of the World Tamil Movement, a group Canada has outlawed as a terror organization. The picture was taken at a large political event and the prime minister could be forgiven for having been ambushed by someone he didn’t know, who happened to be associated with the Canadian front organization for the Tamil Tigers guerrilla group.
But the same excuse does not stand up in relation to the meeting with Joshua Boyle, the former hostage now facing criminal charges relating to incidents that took place after he was rescued from Pakistan.
Trudeau met Boyle, his wife and three children in his office in Ottawa before Christmas, two weeks before the former hostage was arrested.
The Prime Minister said all his meetings were cleared by his national security advisers and intelligence agencies.
That seems remarkable, says Keller.
“I worked on the Boyle case for a number of years and it was completely hinky,” hesaid.
Do we really have a national security apparatus as proficient as the buttonpusher on a Hawaiian ballistic missile drill?
Calls to the RCMP’s automated media line went unreturned but, presumably, not because the Horsemen were asleep at the switch.
More likely, there is a political culture inside the Prime Minister’s Office that is prepared to take political risks in order to get Justin Trudeau in as many pictures with as many people as possible — even if they are widely known to be attempted murderers.
In that kind of cavalier environment, warnings from the security services can be dismissed as alarmist; impediments to the great political project of getting Trudeau and his team re-elected in 2019.
The Liberals have long been accused of moral relativism when it suits them. Atwal’s horrific acts of politically motivated violence should not be obscured because he is a prominent Liberal or because the cause was Khalistani, not Quebec, separatism.
Trudeau’s government has now been burned too often for them to play the innocents at home, or abroad.