Toronto Star

Time for Canada to be ‘nuclear nag’ once again

- Linda McQuaig

So insistent was Canada in pushing for nuclear disarmamen­t that we became known among top NATO generals as the “nuclear nag.”

Make no mistake — that was meant as an insult. But it gives me a shiver of pride to think that Canada was smeared because of our insistence on challengin­g NATO’s top brass over its determinat­ion to keep the world armed to the teeth with nuclear weapons.

There have been impressive moments in our history when Canada, under previous Liberal government­s, asserted itself as a feisty middle power by supporting, even occasional­ly leading, the push to get nuclear disarmamen­t onto the global agenda, which makes the retreat by our current Liberal government all the more disappoint­ing.

It’s certainly tragic that Canada’s oncebrave resolve on the nuclear front should wither at such a critical moment. Not only does the world find its fate in the hands of arguably the two most infantile men ever to control nuclear weapons, as North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and his U.S. counterpar­t play a game of nuclear chicken, but the world’s nations have just come together as never before in an effort to dismantle the globe’s nuclear arsenal.

This unpreceden­ted action, the first such breakthrou­gh in the 70-year effort to avert a nuclear war, happened at the United Nations last month. After months of talks, two-thirds of the UN’s 192 nations agreed to a 10-page treaty aimed at ultimately destroying all nuclear weapons and prohibitin­g the creation of new ones.

Canada was not among those nations, having boycotted the process, as demanded by Washington. (In a letter last fall, the U.S. insisted NATO countries boycott the talks, and almost all complied.)

Canada argued that, with no nuclear powers at the table, the talks were pointless.

So why do the majority of the world’s nations keep yammering on about something that, admittedly, does seem hard to imagine happening?

Perhaps it’s just a perverse desire to live. There’s also the precedent of how similar big-power resistance was overcome, enabling the signing of internatio­nal treaties banning biological and chemical weapons, cluster bombs and landmines. Today, anyone harbouring or using such weapons is treated as a pariah.

Yet nuclear weapons, the most deadly and world-ending of armaments, are somehow regarded as legitimate (at least for our side to have). NATO documents describe them as “essential.” Imagine a NATO general saying that about chemical weapons!

Canada played a particular­ly impressive role in achieving a global ban on landmines. Despite initial opposition from the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, then Canadian foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy took extraordin­ary measures, creating a parallel set of internatio­nal negotiatio­ns that became known as the “Ottawa process.” Through sheer effort, ingenuity and close co-operation with popular movements, that led to the global ban in 1999.

Ottawa also acted boldly in challengin­g the NATO leadership over its staunch pro-nuclear stance, obliging it to carry out a review in 2000.

Canada showed resolve again in 2002 when it broke rank with Washington and NATO by voting in support of a UN disarmamen­t resolution advanced by a group of middle powers.

In 2003, Canada took this gutsy action again, this time prompting seven NATO countries to follow its lead, and again in 2005, with 14 NATO nations coming on board.

“It took bravery for Canada to do this,” notes Douglas Roche, who served as Canadian ambassador for disarmamen­t in the 1980s.

For that matter, a spirited refusal to accept the nuclear status quo was behind Pierre Trudeau’s one-man peace mission to the world’s nuclear capitals in 1983.

Roche said that former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev once told him that Pierre Trudeau’s anti-nuclear efforts helped set the climate for the 1986 Reykjavik summit where Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan famously contemplat­ed the complete abolition of nuclear weapons.

“In my profession­al experience,” Roche said, “I have always found that Canada had influence, particular­ly in building the global security agenda, beyond our population size.”

Unfortunat­ely, Justin Trudeau decided not to support the current push for a UN treaty banning nuclear weapons, perhaps out of fear of annoying Washington.

Still, it’s not too late — now that it’s negotiated, countries will begin signing the treaty Sept. 20.

Memo to Justin: As head of an influentia­l nation, you could play a vital leadership role in the global struggle to abolish nuclear weapons and outlaw them forever.

It’s an action the world desperatel­y needs, now more than ever. A side benefit would be exceeding expectatio­ns about filling your father’s shoes.

It’s certainly tragic that our country’s once-brave resolve on the nuclear disarmamen­t front should wither at such a critical moment

Linda McQuaig is a journalist and author. Her column appears monthly.

 ?? KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? It’s more important than ever that Canada play a leadership role in pushing for nuclear disarmamen­t, Linda McQuaig argues.
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It’s more important than ever that Canada play a leadership role in pushing for nuclear disarmamen­t, Linda McQuaig argues.
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