Justin Trudeau: Liberal party says no to Stephen Harper’s motion to go to war in Iraq

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      Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau delivered the following speech in the House of Commons today (October 3):

      With this motion, the Prime Minister has finally said in Canada what he said in New York City more than a week ago. He is intent on taking Canada to war in Iraq.

      ISIL is a threat both to the region and to global security.

      ISIL murders ethnic and religious minorities across Iraq and Syria.

      They murder innocent civilians, humanitarian workers, and journalists.

      These awful acts have been fully documented – often by the perpetrators themselves.

      This is why the Liberal Party supported a 30-day, non-combat role on good faith and on which we were briefed.

      This time, instead of briefings, there has only been overheated rhetoric.

      Liberals will take the following core principles into the debate next week.

      One: That Canada does have a role to play to confront humanitarian crises and security threats in the world.

      Two: That when a government considers deploying our men and women in uniform, there must be a clear mission overall and a clear role for Canada within that mission.

      Three: That the case for deploying our Forces must be made openly and transparently, based on clear and reliable, dispassionately presented facts.

      And four: That Canada’s role must reflect the broad scope of Canadian capabilities. And how best we can help.

      Unlike the Prime Minister, Liberals believe Canada can make a more helpful contribution to the international effort to combat ISIL than aging war planes.

      I think Canadians have a lot more to offer than that. We can be resourceful, and there are significant, substantial, non-combat roles that Canada can play.

      And some we can play better than many – or perhaps any — of our allies.

      Whether they are strategic airlift, training, or medical support.

      We have the capabilities to meaningfully assist – in a non-combat role – a well-defined international mission.

      The fact remains: the Prime Minister has not been upfront with Canadians about his plans.

      The Prime Minister and the government have given us no reason to believe that once in combat they will be able to limit our role.

      Their overheated and moralistic rhetoric is being used to justify more than just air strikes.

      It is an attempt to justify a war.

      For Canadians it’s all too familiar, particularly from this Prime Minister.

      The 2003 Iraq war was waged on false pretenses and flawed intelligence.

      It was a mission that destabilized the region, sowed further conflict, cost our allies three trillion dollars, and cost thousands of people their lives.

      The world is still dealing with the consequences of that mistake.

      Let us never forget how that mission was sold to the public.

      Back in 2003, this Prime Minister called President Bush’s Iraq war a matter of “freedom, democracy and civilization itself.”

      We know the Iraq fiasco haunts the choices we have to make today. But we cannot make the wrong decision now because the wrong decision was made then.

      Canada has asked a lot of our men and women in uniform over the last decade. And too often they have returned home only to be let down.

      If we are to ask more of them now, our deliberations in this house should be honest and forthright to show ourselves worthy of the valour and strength we know our Forces always show in the field.

      We owe them that.

      We think there is a role for Canada to be involved in the fight against ISIL.

      But there is a clear line between non-combat and combat.

      It is much easier to cross that line than to cross back.

      It always is easier to get into a war than to get out of one.

      The Prime Minister has a sacred responsibility to be honest and truthful with people, especially about matters of life and death. At the end of every decision to enter combat is a brave Canadian in harm’s way. We owe them clarity. We owe them a plan.

      Most of all, we owe them the truth.

      The Prime Minister has offered none of those.

      The Liberal Party of Canada cannot and will not support this Prime Minister’s motion to go to war in Iraq. 

      Comments

      17 Comments

      Boris Moris

      Oct 3, 2014 at 4:46pm

      Finally. The sanity and common sense I was expecting from the opposition in the HoC. I'm hoping Mulcair and Trudeau have quiet meetings in regard to strategic measures required to rid Canada of it's warmongering psychopath PM next year.

      Rick Monsigneur

      Oct 3, 2014 at 9:20pm

      Trudeau had made up his mind and his speech long before today. All for political posturing in the up and coming election. No thought towards what Canadians will or will not stand for regarding human suffering. No thought on what our military heritage has stood up long before he was even born. No outlook on the current outlook NATO and other countries have on us as Canadians in pulling our weight when we are called to the helpless in need of survival from pure evil. All for political posturing.

      Hypie\

      Oct 3, 2014 at 9:22pm

      Harper is a first rate traitor to this country who has willfully compromised the safety of the Canadian people through his combination of a blatant pro-Israel foreign policy, while at the same time throwing open the borders for hoards of Muslims to come here. That can only be a recipe for a perfect home-grown disaster.

      Seriously, at what stage can policy makers simply be tried with murder?
      At what stage can they be held accountable, legally, in that way, for causing the deaths of people in the public (by knowingly producing the policies that have endangered people)?

      H\

      Amanda K

      Oct 3, 2014 at 11:26pm

      I can tell you right now, the vast majority of Canadians will not support going to war.

      There is in no way, shape, or form, any country can go to war without an end game. Basically, if country going to war does not have the ability to single handedly defeat the enemy alone and completely take over, they have no place going to war.

      Why is that? Because any and all casualties during the way would have been for nothing.

      John A

      Oct 3, 2014 at 11:53pm

      I do believe that the men beheaded by ISIL were each there in non-combat roles. A fanatic, of any religious belief is a dangerous person and as much as we'd like to think they are half a world away and no treat to us, 9 11 shows us we are just around the corner.
      I don't want a war, neither Im sure does Stephen Harper, but to sit by and pretend that its okay to kill other humans because they don't believe in the same god you do? Well when they come for you I hope theirs someone left who cares enough about you to stand up and fight for you.

      wideawakeinsask

      Oct 4, 2014 at 4:40am

      liberals and ndp have dissapointed me for they have no balls to lead. unfortunatly as much of an asshole harper is, i have to vote for the one who isnt afraid to fight evil.

      Jbv

      Oct 4, 2014 at 7:04am

      I strongly suggst that Trudeau back his words and take a trip to Iraq and speak directly with Isis and get them on his side. The world will be a better place when all countries are peace loving. If anyone can do it, Justin can.

      herefortheview

      Oct 4, 2014 at 8:37am

      Actually. Amanda K, 64% of canadians (vast majority) support air strikes. Ooops

      RUK

      Oct 4, 2014 at 8:45am

      The actions of terrorists are outrageous. So we should not do something that makes them more numerous, e.g. invading their countries and bombing the shit out of their people. Although that is exciting to the armchair generals and the munitions industries and the flag wavers.

      We either believe that our way is right or we don't. I say the evidence is on the side of the west that our secularize, transparent and individually focused rights based lifestyle results in superior economic and political outcomes. Part of that is not going to the gun as option one.

      Part of that is believing that turnabout is fair play.

      It's sick what's going on in Syria but from the point of view of a religious zealot, it's terrible that Canadians aren't committing their souls to the invisible sky bully of preference and they should bomb us until we amend our wrong ways.

      It has never worked. If you break it, you own it, and the Coalition of the Winning breaking Iraq proves it.

      Excellent

      Oct 4, 2014 at 11:28am

      Justin Trudeau stands for real democracy. And his world views, language and ability to stand up and take no shit should be commended. Bless you, Justin. Thank you.