04) WIKILEAKS AND CANADA
(The following
article is from the August 1-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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People's Voice
Editorial
The reaction from the ruling class
and its bootlickers to the latest WikiLeak revelations of the military
occupation of Afghanistan are predictably self-serving.
Foreign
Affairs Minister
Lawrence Cannon warned that such leaks "endanger the lives of our men
and women in Afghanistan." Without a hint of irony, the Minister went
on to assure Canadians that "we are extremely transparent" and that
adequate information about the Afghan mission is passed on to the
public.
Earth to Mr.
Cannon: over 150
Canadians have already died in Afghanistan, not to mention many
thousands of Afghan civilians. The only way to save lives is simple:
bring the troops home. As for "transparency," perhaps the Minister was
subconsciously referring to the fact that most Canadians see right
through the feeble justifications for this brutal war.
Then there's
Christie
Blatchford, chief flagwaver for the Armed Forces at the Globe and Mail.
"There's no doubt," wrote Blatchford, "this is a dirty, costly,
horrible war being waged in a country inured to death and corruption
and hopelessness.... The truth is, no one who paid the slightest
attention to the war in Afghanistan could be surprised by the latest
WikiLeak." Of course, Blatchford remains stubbornly confident that this
is an honourable war, despite the nasty realities.
In fact,
many Canadians, like
citizens of other NATO countries, have been paying close attention to
the war, and we are not surprised. Despite frantic efforts to promote
the Armed Forces by the mass media and politicians (even the NDP's Jack
Layton, sadly enough), some 60% of Canadians want to exit Afghanistan
and end this shameful chapter of our history. The WikiLeak files are a
valuable tool for the anti-war movement, which has heroically struggled
for nearly a decade to achieve this goal.