GayandRight

My name is Fred and I am a gay conservative living in Ottawa. This blog supports limited government, the right of the State of Israel to live in peace and security, and tries to expose the threat to us all from cultural relativism, post-modernism, and radical Islam. I am also the founder of the Free Thinking Film Society in Ottawa (www.freethinkingfilms.com)

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

I Love Christy Blatchford...

Christy Blatchford is one of my favorite columnists. She used to write for the National Post but moved to the Toronot Glove & Mail a few years ago. It worth buying the Globe just to read Christy. Here's a bit of her column from Monday's post about Jack Layton's call for our military to quit Afghanistan.
Mr. Layton, as he briefly reminded Newsworld viewers yesterday, doesn't think this is the mission for Canada; there isn't the "proper balance" between nation-building and combat; the soldiers ought to be brought home next February.

This is all part of the party's effort to position itself as being supportive of the troops while also being opposed to the mission. Of course it is possible to do both things. Anyone with a shred of intelligence knows that Canadian soldiers go only where their government tells them to go, do only what their government asks them to do: The soldiers should always be supported, because they only do the bidding of their political masters. If the political masters get it wrong, soldiers ought not to carry the can.

But Mr. Layton and the NDP take this one step further. He and they want to be seen as soldier-loving.

This is a fraud, as even a cursory parsing of Mr. Layton's statement last week illustrates. It's pretty clear what New Democrats don't like: They don't like the "aggressive" nature of the mission; they don't like that it's a counterinsurgency; they don't like the "combat" thrust of it.

But combat is what all soldiers are trained to do, and was even where there were actually places in the world for peacekeepers. Aggression is part of who soldiers are, as integral as boots and weapons, and was even when Canadians were posted in Cyprus. Aggression is not a bad thing or a character flaw; it is a prerequisite of those who wear what soldiers call the "green suit," the uniform.

Now, it happens that Canadian soldiers are also good at the softer skills of their trade.

They can sit down with village elders, build a bridge physically or metaphorically and make friends with school children as well as and probably better than any other soldiers in the world. They are gentle when circumstances allow, and hard when they don't, and they can switch gears in a New York minute.

But they are also terrific, courageous and dogged soldiers, and to be perfectly frank, for many of them, combat is considered the only real test of professionalism.

In the early days of the mission in Kandahar province, when the Canadians were just beginning to get the lay of the land and the Taliban was still getting the measure of them, our soldiers were holding two and three shuras a day and giving out toys to lovely Afghan children at every turn. Then, starting in February, their vehicles began to get blown up by roadside bombs and suiciders, and then the Taliban ambushes began, and then the rocket and mortar attacks on their patrol bases.

The time for peacemaking was over, and the war was on: The Canadians are there to provide security such that Afghanistan can rebuild. The former necessarily comes first. Reconstruction efforts and capacity-building for the new Afghan government haven't ended, but for months now, they have taken a back seat to fighting.

One of the last interviews I had this July in Afghanistan was with a young captain who had just returned from weeks of combat. He described entering the smouldering ruin of an elementary school the Taliban had occupied and gutted, burning everything -- children's desks, little pictures of the students, drawings on the wall. As much as anything else, he was shaken by the raw evidence of nihilism.

That's what the Taliban do -- burn schools, threaten teachers, behead and target those who would build up, as opposed to reduce to ashes. Oh yes, they kill too.

They are wonderfully egalitarian about it, to be fair. The NDP would have to admire that spirit. The Taliban kill Canadians, Americans, Romanians and the British, too, and try to kill soldiers from the other countries (there are seven key ones, but a total of 26 NATO members contributing to the mission) that make up the coalition in Afghanistan, although mostly who they kill are Afghans, especially civilians who either get in the way of their roadside bombs and suicide bombers or don't get out of the way (usually because the Taliban are occupying their homes and hiding behind them) when they decide it's time to fight.

As Mr. Layton said in that speech now posted on the party website, New Democrats may "grieve with each family that loses a loved one in this and all conflicts, or sees a loved one injured in the line of duty," but their grief is dishonest. You can't position yourself as a soldier-lover when you loathe soldiering.

That statement ends with a pitch for donations and a call for signatures on a petition. "Support our troops," it says. In a pig's ear.

5 Comments:

Blogger OreamnosAmericanus said...

I remember Jack from years of living in Toronto. He was probably the best-looking politician in the country, quite the hunk. Beyond that...

10:42 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

http://hallsofmacadamia.blogspot.com
/2006/09/eureka-ive-found-them.html

everything you need to know about commie jack

10:49 AM  
Blogger Babbling Brooks said...

You can't position yourself as a soldier-lover when you loathe soldiering.

Farkin' brilliant. Blatchford is a gem.

3:43 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Blatchford is entitled to her opions, as are those who support Canada's ill-defined mission in Afghanistan.

But, what about the growing number of Canadians who oppose the Canadian Forces in Afghanistan? What about those Canadians who are opposed to the Canadian Forces being assigned to any type of military role?

Ken Dryden has called for an honest and effective debate on Canada's mission in Afghanistan, and (in general) to end the massive divisions that the Harper government has caused.....I, for one, am fully with him.

4:17 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Excellent writing by Christy! As Mr. Harper said in the past, you should have discussed before you sent the troops out.
To comment on current discussion in Commons:
"After Sept. 11, 2001, Canadian Forces were deployed to help oust the Taliban, build an Afghan infrastructure and bring about a democracy, but now those goals are not being addressed."
Isn't that what we are doing there? Just that the Taliban refused to leave when we told them to...

9:38 AM  

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