National Post

Afghan war memorial stuck in limbo

Shift from Conservati­ves’ militarism

- Lee Berthiaume Ottawa Citizen lberthiaum­e@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/ leeberthia­ume

• The Trudeau government is considerin­g whether to shelve plans for a national Afghanista­n war memorial, as it rolls back the previous Conservati­ve government’s attempts to imbue Canada’s national identity with a healthy dose of militarism.

Then- veterans affairs minister Julian Fantino announced the National Memorial to Canada’s Mission in Afghanista­n in May 2014. The project, pegged at about $5 million, was intended to honour the 40,000 Canadians who had served in Afghanista­n between 2001 and 2014, including 158 who died.

Fantino’s successor, Erin O’Toole, re- announced the project — along with a separate memorial for Canadians who had won the Victoria Cross, the British Commonweal­th’s highest military honour — last year. A site for the two memorials was chosen halfway between the Parliament Buildings and the Canadian War Museum — Richmond Landing on the Ottawa River.

The memorials were part of a concerted effort by the Conservati­ves over the previous decade to highlight Canada’s military heritage, traditions and prowess.

The focus on Canada’s martial spirit coincided with military missions in Afghanista­n, Libya and Iraq. But some also saw it as an attempt to redefine Canada’s national identity after previous government­s, particular­ly the Liberals, had long described Canada as a country of peacekeepe­rs.

But now the two memorials are in limbo, while a Conservati­ve- era program that helped communitie­s build their own memorials or cenotaphs is being cancelled.

In November, department­al officials told new Vet- erans Affairs Minister Kent Hehr that the two memorials and the Community War Memorial Program were among a number of “key issues” that needed to be addressed by the new Liberal government.

Specifical­ly, the minister was advised to “Seek confirmati­on whether the following projects ( the Afghan and Victoria Cross memorials) are to be continued.” Officials also noted that funding for the community program was set to expire at the end of March unless the Liberals intervened.

Officials also told Hehr the department would need more money to commemorat­e the 100th anniversar­y of the First World War battles of the Somme and Beaumont- Hamel this year, and Vimy Ridge next year.

The Ottawa Citizen obtained the briefing notes through the access to informatio­n law.

Four months later, Hehr’s office says the new government still has not decided whether to proceed with the memorials. “These are important initiative­s and details are still being discussed internally,” spokesman Christian Duval said in an email.

But Hehr’s office did confirm the government is pulling the plug on the $ 5- million Community War Memorial Program, even though internal Veterans Affairs Canada evaluators gave it glowing reviews last year and said there was a “continued need” for it.

Hehr’s office said the Liberals remain committed to marking Canada’s military history.

But the decision to cancel the Community War Memorial Program is the latest indication the Liberals are shifting away from the heavy emphasis on Canadian military history and tradition championed by the Tories.

Immigratio­n Minister John McCallum recently said some references to Canada’s military history added by the Tories will be removed from the new citizenshi­p guide. The Trudeau government has also scrapped a controvers­ial monument in Nova Scotia designed to honour Canada’s war dead in Europe.

Afghanista­n Veterans Associatio­n f ounder Michael Blois has previously complained about the site the Conservati­ves chose for the Afghan memorial. “But something has to be done,” he said. “The length of the commitment and the level of sacrifice that went on, there needs to be something done on a national level.”

O’Toole, who is now the Conservati­ve public safety critic, said veterans have also approached him to ask about the Afghan memorial. He said the monument is especially important now, as many Afghan vets continue to struggle in their post-military lives.

“That monument should be beyond politics. That was the ( military’s) longest mission,” he said. “And I know veterans are looking for it, and there are still a number of young guys trying to find their purpose post- deployment. And they have to know that the country appreciate­d what they did.”

O’Toole also decried the government’s decision not to renew the community memorial program.

At least one Ontario community will have to find other funding to pay for a memorial now that the program is cancelled.

Paul Thorne, co- chairman of the Huron County Afghanista­n Community Memorial Committee, said the planned monument, consisting of a demobilize­d light- armoured vehicle of the type used by Canadian soldiers in Afghanista­n, will cost around $ 50,000. That doesn’t include the longterm costs of maintenanc­e.

“We thought it was important because we do have Afghan veterans in our community, and some of them are suffering from PTSD,” he said.

Thorne said the community had hoped to tap into the community war memorial program. It will still press ahead with the project by increasing its fundraisin­g efforts, but having some support from the federal government “would have been nice and would have been easier.”

THAT MONUMENT SHOULD BE BEYOND POLITICS.

 ?? CHRIS MIKULA / THE OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? The view from Richmond Landing, the announced site for the National Memorial
to Canada’s Mission in Afghanista­n and the National Victoria Cross Memorial.
CHRIS MIKULA / THE OTTAWA CITIZEN The view from Richmond Landing, the announced site for the National Memorial to Canada’s Mission in Afghanista­n and the National Victoria Cross Memorial.

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