Vancouver Sun

Canadian UN troop numbers drop

Peacekeepe­rs down to 68 as summit nears

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The Trudeau Liberals may have promised to ramp up Canada’s role in peacekeepi­ng, but new UN figures show there were fewer Canadian peacekeepe­rs in the field last month than at any point in recent memory.

The revelation comes as Canada prepares to host a major peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver next month, raising fears the country will be badly embarrasse­d unless the numbers start rising — and fast.

The Liberals promised last summer to make up to 600 soldiers and 150 police officers available to the UN for future peacekeepi­ng missions, but have yet to make any concrete commitment­s.

The intervenin­g year has instead seen a steady decrease in the number of Canadian blue helmets and blue berets deployed around the world, from 112 peacekeepe­rs in August 2016 to 68 last month.

The decline is largely attributed to 44 fewer Canadian police being deployed to Haiti, where the UN is closing down its 13-year stabilizat­ion mission in favour of a much smaller effort.

Walter Dorn, an expert on peacekeepi­ng at the Canadian Forces College in Toronto, says the result is the smallest Canadian contributi­on to peacekeepi­ng since at least 1990.

By comparison, Canada’s smallest contributi­on to peacekeepi­ng under Stephen Harper, who made no secret of his dislike for the UN, was 88 soldiers and police officers in October, 2014.

“The government is at an all-time low while saying that it wants to re-engage in peacekeepi­ng,” Dorn said. “Its numbers are lower than the Conservati­ves ever were.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland’s spokesman, Adam Austen, said the government remains convinced that Canada has an important role to play in peacekeepi­ng and that it is committed to do more.

Defence officials have drawn up a list of possible missions for the government to review, sources have told The Canadian Press, one of which would involve transport helicopter­s to Mali.

While the Liberals reportedly hope to make a decision before the upcoming summit in Vancouver on Nov. 14-15, there is no certainty they will.

The government has repeatedly said it will not be rushed into a mission, which Austen repeated on Monday, saying in an email: “We are doing this carefully and thoughtful­ly, as Canadians expect.”

But the UN expected last year when it agreed to let Canada host the peacekeepi­ng meeting that Canadian troops would already be on the ground.

The summit, to be hosted by Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan, is only supposed to be open to officials from countries that have made concrete pledges to peacekeepi­ng missions.

 ?? KAMBOU SIA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The Liberals promised to make up to 600 Canadian soldiers and 150 police officers available to the UN for peacekeepi­ng, but have yet to make any concrete commitment­s.
KAMBOU SIA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES The Liberals promised to make up to 600 Canadian soldiers and 150 police officers available to the UN for peacekeepi­ng, but have yet to make any concrete commitment­s.

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