The News (New Glasgow)

NAFTA toll tallied up

- Thomas Walkom Thomas Walkom writes about national affairs for the Toronto Star.

We may soon see how much we gave up in negotiatio­ns with the U.S. over NAFTA.

We now know how the Russians have been subverting Canadian democracy. They have been propagatin­g truthful news. That informatio­n comes courtesy of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau who last Wednesday finally explained the motive behind his government’s decision last week to expel four Russian diplomats and refuse entry to three more.

At the time, Ottawa said it was making the move in support of Britain, which blames Russia for using a deadly nerve agent to poison a double agent living in England.

But in a written statement, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland also said the Russians had been using their diplomatic status “to interfere in our democracy.”

How exactly the Russians had been interferin­g was not explained. Efforts to get more informatio­n from Freeland’s office were unsuccessf­ul. In an interview on CBC, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said that he had to stay mum for reasons of national security. Nobody else would talk.

Then, on Wednesday, Trudeau spilled the beans. The Russians are being punished for saying that Freeland’s grandfathe­r was a Nazi collaborat­or during the Second World War.

Trudeau called this an effort “by Russian propagandi­sts” to smear Freeland, which perhaps it was.

The only trouble with all of this is that the Russians were telling the truth. Freeland’s maternal grandfathe­r, Michael Chomiak, was a Nazi collaborat­or during the Second World War.

A Ukrainian nationalis­t, he fled Stalin’s advancing armies in 1939 and sought refuge in what was then German-occupied Poland.

There, under the aegis of the Nazis he edited a Ukrainian-language, anti-Semitic newspaper.

I learned of this from a frontpage story in that well-known vehicle of Russian propaganda, the Globe and Mail.

The Globe got its informatio­n by interviewi­ng Freeland’s uncle, a historian who in 1996 wrote — with some assistance from his niece — a scholarly article detailing Chomiak’s wartime activities.

Was the Russian government happy to see this being made public? I expect it was. Freeland is a vocal critic of Moscow’s heavyhande­d approach to Ukraine and is currently persona non grata in Russia.

The Russian government also finds it convenient to paint all of its critics in Ukraine as unreconstr­ucted fascists. And while Freeland is certainly no fascist, she has publicly praised her grandparen­ts for their influence on her and for their commitment to Ukrainian independen­ce.

Given all of that, the Chomiak story was a gift to the Russians. Soon after Freeland’s appointmen­t as foreign affairs minister last year, pro-Moscow websites began to pick it up.

To use Trudeau’s words, Moscow was probably trying to push a “pro-Russia narrative.”

But is it illegitima­te for countries to use verifiable facts to make a case?

Certainly, the West doesn’t think so when it comes to the nerve agent story. Its decision to blame Moscow for the attack is based on one fact – that the poison used was first developed in the old Soviet Union.

The possibilit­y that some other entity might have copied it is never entertaine­d.

Instead, the world is presented with a complicate­d explanatio­n that goes something like this: After years of ignoring retired double agent Sergei Skripal, Russian President Vladimir Putin finally decides to kill him.

In order to show who is responsibl­e, Putin has his minions use a signature Russian nerve agent. But in order to hide who is responsibl­e, he has another set of minions vigorously deny Russian culpabilit­y.

The attack isn’t particular­ly successful, since Skripal is still alive.

All of this is done for no apparent reason other than pure evil.

In theory, this scenario makes a certain amount of sense. Or at least it makes as much sense as expelling four diplomats for peddling truthful news.

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