The Daily Courier

Liberals give themselves more time to meet peacekeepi­ng pledge

- By LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government has quietly given itself more time to provide a 200-soldier force for peacekeepi­ng, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first pledged to the United Nations nearly five years ago.

The commitment of a “quick-reaction force” was one of three signature promises that Trudeau made during a major peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver in November 2017, with the government promising its deployment within five years.

But while internal documents obtained from Global Affairs

Canada by The Canadian Press show the commitment was set to expire this past March, the Department of National Defence says cabinet recently added another year.

“The cabinet authority covering the QRF and other contributi­ons to UN peace support operations was renewed in March 2022 for a period of one year,” Defence Department spokeswoma­n Jessica Lamirande said in an email.

Canada did make good on the other two promises by deploying a helicopter unit to Mali in 2018-19 to help with medical evacuation­s, and through the provision of a transport plane to ferry troops and supplies to different UN missions in Africa.

The government’s failure to make good on the promised quick-reaction force comes despite the UN having said it needs several such forces now, and the United States having asked Canada late last year to fulfil its commitment.

Washington’s request came ahead of a peacekeepi­ng summit in South Korea in December, where countries were asked to provide new commitment­s to fill gaps in both funding and peacekeepi­ng missions in the field in Africa and elsewhere.

Asked whether Canada still intends to fulfil its commitment, Lamirande said: “Canada regularly engages with UN officials to assess when and where a QRF may be required.

“Any deployment of a QRF would be following a decision by the Government of

Canada to do so in support of a specific UN mission within clearly defined parameters,” she added.

Defence Minister Anita Anand did not mention the quick-reaction force during the South Korea summit, but told The Canadian Press several weeks later that the force is “not off the table.”

The heavily redacted Global Affairs Canada report suggests Canadian officials have been looking at options for deploying such a force, which would be designed to respond to emergencie­s and threats to UN personnel and facilities as well as civilians.

Such units have been deployed in recent years to the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic, where they have clashed with different armed groups as the UN has sought to provide security and stability.

The undated Global Affairs report notes that while the UN needs such units, there is an increased risk given “deteriorat­ing security, increasing violent extremist organizati­on capabiliti­es, transition­s, reduced resources (and) COVID-19.”

Trudeau’s commitment in 2017 came as the Liberal government promised a renewed Canadian engagement with UN peacekeepi­ng that most observers and experts say has not actually come to pass.

Canada had 60 police and military personnel deployed as peacekeepe­rs at the end of March, according to the UN. While that was up from the record low of 34 in August 2020, it was still less than half the number when the Liberals took power in 2015.

Canadian Forces College professor Walter Dorn said the government’s decision to keep the commitment on the table for another year offers a glimmer of hope that the force could materializ­e at some point.

Nonetheles­s, “given that the QRF pledge has not been fulfilled in a half decade, it now appears like an empty promise made by Trudeau in 2017,” Dorn said.

“Canada should have completed that promise long ago and made many more progressiv­e contributi­ons afterwards to support the United Nations, which is at the centre of the rules-based internatio­nal order.”

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