Vancouver Sun

Canada gets active role in probe

‘More active role’ in probe of downed jet

- RYAN TUMILTY

• After admitting its military shot a passenger jet out of the sky killing everyone on board, Iran is giving Canada an active role in the crash investigat­ion.

Kathy Fox, chair of the Transporta­tion Safety Board, said two Canadian investigat­ors were set to arrive in Tehran on Monday and Iranian authoritie­s were opening the door for broader participat­ion than internatio­nal law demands.

“There have been early signs that Iran is allowing the TSB to play a more active role than is usually permitted,” she said.

The victims included 57 Canadians, as well as dozens more who were en route to Canada.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said they would all be safely back in Canada if tensions between Iran and the United States had not escalated recently.

“I think if there were no tensions, if there was no escalation recently in the region, those Canadians would be right now home with their families,” Trudeau said in an interview Monday with Global News, noting that in any conflict “it is always the innocent who get side-swiped.”

The aircraft was shot down just hours after Iran launched air strikes against two military bases in Iraq where U.S. forces — and also some Canadians — were stationed. The air strikes were in retaliatio­n for a Jan. 3 targeted drone strike by the U.S. that killed Iran’s top general, Qassem Soleimani.

Trudeau said he had spoken to U.S. President Donald Trump about the need to de-escalate tensions.

The thousands who took to the streets of Tehran and other Iranian cities on Sunday to protest against the Iran military’s downing of a civilian aircraft and the deaths of 176 passengers obviously had not viewed the Twitter feed from one of Canada’s leading food companies.

The unfortunat­ely misguided protesters, cut off from Twitter by the oppressive Iran internet censors, called for “Death to the Liars” who control the terror-sponsoring Iran theocracy, and “Death to the Dictator” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — as if the Iran state might be responsibl­e for deaths.

But back in Canada, a Twitter stream from Maple Leaf Foods — usually a dozy harbour of self-promotion, declaratio­ns of carbon neutrality and cute stories about pigs and kids — lit up with claims from CEO Michael McCain that put the blame for the Iran airline deaths, not on the Iran military or government, but squarely on the “narcissist in Washington,” President Donald Trump.

According to McCain, whose family owns about 38 per cent of Maple Leaf Foods, the downing of the airline is the “collateral damage of this irresponsi­ble, dangerous, ill-conceived behaviour” in Washington.

It takes a twisted feat of ideologica­l gymnastics and deep logic-stretching to reach the conclusion that the chain of events leading up to the missile takedown of the Ukrainian passenger jet can be morally traced back to Trump and his decision to take out a murderous Iranian general.

But more about moral and causal logic later.

First there’s the corporate logic. Michael McCain, scion of the McCain potato family with an estimated net worth of $4 billion, decides to take over the corporate Twitter account to deliver a personal rant that effectivel­y accuses the U.S. president of complicity in the deaths of 176 airline passengers.

Did McCain clear his series of Tweets through the corporatio­n’s board of directors, who are charged with overseeing CEO McCain’s activities and his relationsh­ip with all shareholde­rs and 12,500 employees? Or did McCain simply wade into the corporate PR department, confident that his control of 38 per cent of the $800-million-a-year meat processing company gave him the right to use corporate channels to vent his personal anger over the airline deaths, which included the wife and son of one of his colleagues?

There’s also the side question of how Maple Leaf Foods might explain their CEO’s personal outburst against the U.S. president to the residents of the state of Indiana, where the company is planning a US$310-million facility to produce plantbased food products. The majority Republican and Trump-backing residents of the state voted 57 per cent for Trump in 2016 and, according to polls, he still holds majority support despite the impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

In the 24 hours after McCain’s comments, the Maple Leaf Foods Twitter account exploded with reaction, pro and con, but by my assessment mostly con, including horrified reaction from Iranians. A #BoycottMap­leLeafFood­s hashtag emerged.

Ultimately McCain’s Twitter outburst is an extreme form of corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR) — or, more appropriat­ely, corporate irresponsi­bility. The corporate world has come to expect CEO virtue signalling on climate and social issues, mostly for political and strategic reasons, but McCain has taken using the corporate platform to promote personal opinions to a new absurd level. Even if he does control 38 per cent of the corporatio­n, McCain has gone way beyond the norms of CEO interventi­on in corporate affairs.

Corporatio­ns routinely declare their support for victims of tragedy. A good example: In Toronto on Monday, Mohamad Fakih, the CEO of Paramount Fine Foods, announced the creation of the ‘Canada Strong’ fund. He said it is up to everyone to ensure that families struggling with the loss of a loved one in the airline tragedy “feel Canada’s embrace.”

It is one thing for corporatio­ns to offer their support to victims of horrible events. McCain, by using a public corporatio­n, has stepped over the boundaries of good corporate governance, even if he did state in his tweets that he was delivering “personal reflection­s.” Also, Paramount Foods is a totally private corporatio­n with no public shareholde­rs.

Another question: McCain is the cousin of the wife of Finance Minister Bill Morneau. Does Morneau endorse McCain’s tweets? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau came close to agreeing with McCain. “I think if there were no tensions, if there was no escalation recently in the region, those Canadians would be right now home with their families,” he apparently told Global News.

That comes close to blaming Trump, although it’s more of a statement of the obvious. Without A there would be no B and no C. But that doesn’t mean that A is a cause of C.

McCain’s use of the words “collateral damage” is flawed. In military circles, collateral damage occurs when the immediate result of a justifiabl­e military attack is the death of innocents. The U.S. killing of Maj.-Gen. Qassem Soleimani was a clean — and by most honest accounts — justifiabl­e execution in which a global merchant of terror was taken out by U.S. operatives. It took place in Iraq, not Iran. No innocents were killed.

The same can be said of Iran’s response, which by all accounts was carefully measured not to inflict any casualties on the U.S. military personnel, let alone risk collateral damage to any innocents in Iraq.

To blame Trump for the death of the passengers on the Ukranian jetliner misses the real killers in Iran — the commanders, power wielders and law officials who approved the recent 1,500 deaths of Tehran demonstrat­ors protesting against their government. What about the hundreds of thousands of deaths, many innocent, ordered by Iran’s military?

Whether the missile strike was accidental or not is irrelevant. The real culprits in the Ukrainian airline disaster are members of the Iran government and military, who initially denied involvemen­t.

The demonstrat­ors in Tehran over the weekend know the truth about who caused the deaths of 176 passengers, including 57 Canadians. So should Canadians and their corporate executives.

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