Penticton Herald

Reputation­s still on the line

Canada’s peacekeepi­ng commitment still may not win UN Security Council bid

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OTTAWA — Canada’s new commitment to United Nations peacekeepi­ng has left some internatio­nal observers questionin­g whether it will be enough to accomplish another big foreign policy goal: eventually winning a seat on the UN Security Council.

After promising a year ago to provide UN peace operations with up to 600 troops and 150 police officers, the Trudeau government announced this week plans for a rapid reaction force of just 200 soldiers, as well as the services of six helicopter­s and two transport aircraft, including necessary personnel. Where those soldiers would go remains an open question.

Restoring Canada’s reputation as a peacekeepi­ng nation was a key plank in the Liberal foreign policy platform during the 2015 election, part of a broader goal of re-engaging with global institutio­ns, especially the UN.

The government is also planning to run for a temporary two-year seat on the powerful Security Council starting in 2021; to do so, winning the support of two-thirds of the UN’s 194 members is an absolute must.

But the large numbers of votes in Africa and Asia — where peacekeepe­rs are most urgently needed — has some questionin­g whether the Liberals have hurt their chances with huge voting blocks in the UN General Assembly.

“You gain an image, a reputation in the United Nations over years, and it’s very hard to build up and it’s quick to be lost,” said John Trent, a retired University of Ottawa political science professor and the editor of an ongoing series of reports that examines Canada’s relations with the UN. “This is part of that image building. And if the other countries see that we’re weak-kneed … they don’t really want to elect weak-kneed people.”

By his count, Trent said, Canada has turned down four major requests from the UN to contribute to peacekeepi­ng operations in the last two years. The major hotspots are in Africa — notably Mali, where 80 peacekeepe­rs have been killed since 2013, the year a 12,000-member UN force was establishe­d to counter militants.

Canada declined the opportunit­y to supply the commander for the mission, a role that was seen as a good fit for the country in largely French-speaking west Africa.

Trent said it won’t be easy for Canada to win votes in Asia and Africa, since its reluctance to commit to missions in those hotspots sends a message that “it’s too dangerous for us (but) it’s OK for other countries.”

One Western diplomat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said their country has come away from peacekeepi­ng discussion­s with Canada with a firm impression we were “traumatize­d” by a decade in Afghanista­n, where more than 150 troops were killed.

Peace support operations are now dangerous and involve combat, replacing the traditiona­l benign blue-helmeted peacekeepi­ng.

“What did we think? We thought it was going to be easy, just a stroll in the park and a walk along the border in Cyprus,” said Ian Smillie, a veteran of internatio­nal developmen­t.

Looking at Canada’s next campaign, which pits it against Ireland and Norway, Smillie said the numbers don’t look good for Canada. Ireland has 540 personnel committed to UN peacekeepi­ng, compared with Canada’s 68.

Canada’s other competitor for the Security Council seat is Norway, which has only 69 peacekeepe­rs. But Norway scores big on another issue the UN values: it is one of the handful of countries that has met the UN target for developmen­t spending — 0.7 per cent of gross national income — while Canada’s is below 0.3 per cent.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his son Xavier review an honour guard as they arrive at the Internatio­nal Peacekeepi­ng and Security Centre in Yavoriv, Ukraine, in 2016.
The Canadian Press Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his son Xavier review an honour guard as they arrive at the Internatio­nal Peacekeepi­ng and Security Centre in Yavoriv, Ukraine, in 2016.

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