Saskatoon StarPhoenix

History repeats in Ottawa’s treatment of veterans

- MURRAY BREWSTER

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N — History can sometimes have a strange echo.

The Harper government is preparing in a big way to commemorat­e the 100th anniversar­y of the start of the First World War at the same time as it faces the human toll of its own vastly smaller military adventure.

The cares, concerns and complaints of veterans from the war to end all wars and follow-on calamity of the Second World War helped shape the social and political landscape of 20th century in important, underappre­ciated, and now sometimes forgotten ways, say historians and advocates.

The recent image of frustrated ex- soldiers locked in testy exchange with an equally exasperate­d Veterans Affairs Minister Julian Fantino made great grist for question period and good television, but historian Desmond Morton was struck by the parallel with the personalit­ies and events following the Great War.

Canadian soldiers in the 1920s had to plead their case for assistance to the Board of Pension Commission­ers and its hidebound chairman, Col. John Thompson, himself a veteran, but who never served at the front.

“Fantino is tough. No more crap from these guys was the message” out of that meeting, said Morton, author of the book Fight or Pay: Soldiers’ Families in the Great War.

“After the First World War, Col. Thompson was a stickler and in terms of the government, from a cash- cutting point of view, he was their ideal guy. He was determined not to waste public money on whiners.”

Today, Ottawa has invested heavily in new programs and care for veterans, but Fantino’s no-nonsense approach has rubbed many ex-soldiers the wrong way.

But like the Harper government of today, the country, after 1918, was digging itself out of a fiscal hole. The Union government of Sir Robert Borden had borrowed heavily from the Americans to fight the First World War and it had bills to pay.

Today, it’s the balanced-commitment of 2015 and the cleanup of the economic crisis.

Back then, soldiers’ expectatio­ns had been raised by Borden’s preVimy Ridge pledge: “You need have no fear that the government and the country will fail to show just appreciati­on of your service to the country and that no man will have just cause to reproach the government for having broken with the men who won and the men who died.”

Today, federal lawyers arguing against a class-action lawsuit by Afghan veterans say not all government­s should be bound by Borden’s pledge. At the same time, politician­s such as Justice Minister Peter MacKay pump up expectatio­ns when they refer to soldiers as “the country’s greatest citizens.”

After the First World War, veterans became so frustrated with Thompson and their compensati­on that a special parliament­ary committee for pensions, insurance and re-establishm­ent of returning soldiers had to be appointed, one of several mid-1920s inquiries into the plight of exservice members.

Today, a House of Commons committee — at Fantino’s recommen- dation — is examining the adequacy of the oft-maligned new veterans charter, which did away with the pension system for non-economic loss and replaced it with series of lump-sum awards and benefits.

Some of today’s veterans say they are being cheated by not having pensions for life.

An actuarial report by the veterans ombudsman last fall said the new system is in

“CANADIANS ARE PROBABLY MORE AWARE THAT IT IS ONE CENTURY SINCE WORLD WAR ONE THAN OF THE CLOSEOUT OF AFGHANISTA­N.”

SEAN BRUYEA

some cases is more generous in the short term, but after age 65 it leaves the most critically injured in poverty.

Outspoken veterans advocate Sean Bruyea says, in some respects, today’s returning soldiers have it tougher than their great-grandfathe­rs because Canadians were heavily invested in previous wars.

They may not have been to the trenches of Flanders or stormed the beaches of Normandy, but people back home instinctiv­ely understood and appreciate­d what soldiers had gone through.

Afghanista­n, on the other hand, remains a distant and lately ignored experience.

“How is this going to affect veterans? Are they going to start beating themselves up and asking whether their sacrifice was worthwhile; whether losing their leg or their best buddy was worthwhile?” Bruyea said.

“Canadians are probably more aware that it is one century since World War One than of the close-out of Afghanista­n.”

The Harper government invested little political capital in events in Kabul this week. No member of the government attended Wednesday’s ceremony at NATO’s Kabul field headquarte­rs, although a welcome home for the last planeload is being planned for next week.

 ??  ?? Sean Bruyea
Sean Bruyea

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