Times Colonist

Trump disregards Canada, former ambassador says

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to order the killing of a top Iranian general has elevated his disregard of Canada and other American allies to a new level, according to Barack Obama’s former envoy to Ottawa.

Former ambassador Bruce Heyman said the killing of Iranian Maj.-Gen. Qassem Soleimani by a U.S. drone near Baghdad’s airport last week is part of a pattern of disruptive internatio­nal decisions that have left Washington’s allies “in really tough spots.”

Past examples include the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris climate-change agreement, the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p trade deal and the Iran nuclear deal, which included the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council and Germany, he said.

Those decisions caused serious headaches for American allies, including Canada, while last Friday’s killing has imperilled the NATO training mission in Iraq that Canada currently leads, said Heyman.

Iraq is ordering all internatio­nal troops out of the country because it views the American attack on its soil as a violation of Iraqi sovereignt­y.

“I think this is at a different level,” Heyman said in an interview.

“What concerns me, at least as publicly reported, is that the U.S. did not consult with our allies prior to this action. And if that is the case, it put Canada and others in a fairly difficult and complex situation on the ground.”

Heyman, a Democrat, has been a fierce critic of Trump, and has emerged as a vocal booster of Canada-U.S. relations during the Republican president’s rocky term in office.

He was also the American diplomat who helped broker Canada’s entry into Iraq in 2014 as an American ally in its fight against the spread of the

Islamic State in that country and neighbouri­ng Syria.

Robert Malley, the president of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, said Trump’s decision to order the drone strike was in part motivated by his desire to project a stance on Iran that was “anti-Obama at all costs,” while projecting that the U.S. is not fearful of any consequenc­es.

“They are sending the message: don’t mess with us; we are not afraid of anything you can do to us,” said Malley, who previously served on former president Obama’s National Security Council.

The Associated Press has reported that Obama and his Republican predecesso­r George W. Bush decided against ordering a targeted killing of Soleimani because it could spark severe repercussi­ons.

Malley said two key considerat­ions would have been at the top of any president’s checklist before ordering such a drastic decision — taking measures to protect U.S. forces from retaliator­y attacks and the “management” of allies.

“Certainly, they [the Trump administra­tion] didn’t alert some of the countries that deserve being alerted, given they have a stake in what happens in Iraq as well — all of the countries that are present in the counter-Islamic State coalition clearly are affected by what happened,” Malley said

Now American allies, including Canada, have a role to play in filling the diplomatic void opened by Trump, Heyman said.

“I’m hopeful that the U.S. allies are talking amongst each other and trying to figure out how best they can calm the waters,” said Heyman.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne have spent the past two days doing just that, with a series of phone calls with various internatio­nal and Middle Eastern counterpar­ts.

Their conversati­ons emphasized the need to find ways to dial down tensions in the region.

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