Penticton Herald

PM rebuffs calls for Sajjan’s resignatio­n

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OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his embattled defence minister endured a withering question-period offensive Monday as opposition MPs accused Harjit Sajjan of “stolen valour” for overstatin­g his role in planning a 2006 battle in Afghanista­n.

Opposition parties trained their sights squarely on Sajjan, who apologized again in the House of Commons for having described himself as the architect of Operation Medusa, one of the bloodiest and most pivotal battles of the Afghan war.

Interim Conservati­ve leader Rona Ambrose went so far as to accuse Sajjan of stealing credit for the actions of others — a cardinal sin in military circles.

“How much more does the prime minister need to hear before he understand­s why our men and women in uniform have lost confidence in the minister,” Ambrose said.

“People in the military have a name for what he did: it’s called ‘stolen valour,’ when someone takes credit for the brave actions of another.”

Trudeau, however, would not be moved from his talking points.

“The minister made a mistake,” the prime minister said repeatedly. “He acknowledg­ed his responsibi­lity and apologized for it; that’s what Canadians expect when one makes a mistake.”

Trudeau went on to insist that Sajjan had served his country with distinctio­n in a number of capacities, including as a police officer and as a soldier. As a minister, he added, “he has my full confidence.”

Sajjan, for his part, later rose and repeated his apology.

“I would like to apologize for my mistake in describing my role, and retract that statement, and I’m truly sorry for it,” Sajjan said.

“I in no way intended to diminish the great work that our men and women in the Canadian Armed Forces have done .... and I’m truly sorry for it.”

“There’s no question that Minister Sajjan is going to have to resign,” NDP Leader Tom Mulcair said after question period.

“It’s not an error when you keep repeating the same lie. He’s lost all credibilit­y with the military. And frankly, the behaviour today in the House — refusing to answer — is what convinces us that there’s no possible way for him to stay.”

In speech in Delhi on April 18, Sajjan told the Indian think tank Observer Research Foundation that he had been the “architect” of Operation Medusa, which the minister has since acknowledg­ed was wrong.

“On my first deployment to Kandahar in 2006, I was kind of thrown in an unforeseen situation and became the architect of an operation called Operation Medusa, where we removed about 1,500 fighters, Taliban fighters, off the battlefiel­d,” Sajjan said in his speech.

Sajjan was a major with the Canadian Forces in Afghanista­n during Operation Medusa, and received a special commendati­on for “his understand­ing of counter-insurgency tactics,” which helped the operation.

But the minister himself has acknowledg­ed that then-major-general David Fraser and his command team were responsibl­e for the operation’s success, which saw hundreds of Taliban fighters killed or captured over a two-week period.

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