Politically Incorrect

Tories can’t hit $2.5 B savings target

Posted on Mon, November 27, 2006 by Registered CommenterColin Nelson | Comments1 Comment | References1 Reference

Tories can’t hit $2.5 B savings target, Ottawa Citizen,Mon Nov 27, by Kathryn May

Follow this link to the citizen story:

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=1977c92a-9650-4906-a5ca-64867f1b6bef

No surprise here. I was on the Parliamentary Task Force on Government wide Procurement review that originally, under immense pressure from Public Works DM Marshall, produced these numbers. My role was to represent the views of DND on procurement matters and so I saw first hand exactly how this “target” was set.

In the fall of 2004, then PWGSC Min Scott Brison took what were in reality preliminary WAGS (bureaucratese for wild ass guesses) developed by the Task Force on the possible savings that might accrue from changes to the procurement system and high jacked them for political and personal purposes. He then trumpeted these savings as real to a meeting of the Canadian Club in Toronto. Mr. Brison was trying to ingratiate himself with his new masters and please his boss PM Martin.

The most willing partner in this fraud was I Davis Marshall, DM at PWGSC.

It is therefore most revealing and laughable that in his memo Marshall blames the government for changing tack on the procurement overhaul. Nice try at obfuscation DM!

Here are the facts: with Mr. Brison’s effective elimination of the independent nature of the Parliamentary review, the most important step in the entire renewal process was also terminated. That step was the planned consultation phase with all other government departments. However, there was extensive consultation with the private sector and the uniform worry was that small businesses would lose out to the standing offer model. How right they were.

In place of the needed government wide discussion, I David Marshall instead met very privately with a few select DMs. Recall at the time the Liberal government was desperate to find savings and the heat was on the PS to come up with the goods. So, armed with backing from the Privy Council office, Mr. Marshall’s plan to consolidate all common procurement under PWGSC control was a real trap for other DMs. They could capitulate and hand over the procurement role exclusively to PWGSC, or, they could fight back and try to find their own savings. So, they caved in virtually without a whimper and budgets were cut before the savings appeared. Neat trick but, hey, that’s leadership in Ottawa.

My DND boss at the time, Procurement ADM Alan Williams, is quoted in the article by Kathryn May as assessing the memo from Mr. Marshall this way: “It’s no surprise. We’ve known this would happen from the get-go. And I don’t think they will get what they are promising now if they don’t build a solid foundation, bringing in industry and getting the endorsement of departments and then make them accountable for results.”

The current PWGSC Minister, M Fortier in his appearance before a parliamentary committee suggested the $2.5B was pulled out of “thin air” and that the target setting process was backwards. Yes, it was, but it was backward because of the political machinations of Min Brison and his malleable henchman Mr. Marshall. I guess political diplomacy prevented him from telling us why it was done backward.

As if this failed adventure was not enough, Mr. Marshall also masterminded the contract with the gurus from AT Kearney LTD in an attempt install a ‘reverse auction’ for procurement. Several Citizen articles enlightened readers about this little gem. This contract farce saw an uncompetitive contract balloon in renewals from around a million to $24 million over the next few years. When these two $350,000 per year men missed key meetings in England, Marshall had no choice but to cut them loose. I often wonder just how much Canadian taxpayers had to fork out to end the contract.

Yet in spite of this litany of arrogant mismanagement, we are told that Min Fortier has confidence in his deputy!

Here’s my call: I David Marshall will be allowed to retire within six months. He should be terminated immediately.

Shut up Gar Pardy

Posted on Thu, November 16, 2006 by Registered CommenterColin Nelson in | Comments1 Comment | References86 References

Re: “When to Say Enough”, by Gar Pardy, Ottawa Citizen, Nov 16.

This offensive article is not yet available to link from the Thursday issue of the Citizen. When it is on line, I will provide the link - stand by!

Upon reading this fatuous piece of nonsense today I decided it is time to say "enough is enough".

Our soldiers in Afghanistan deserve a strong rebuttal to the defeatist, leftist pap and I know that they are constrained from participating openly in the public dialogue. As a civilian retiree from National Defence and a member of Course 41 at the National Defence College, Fort Frontenac, Kingston, Ontario, as well as being the first civilian Director at the College, I feel it my duty and privilege to speak up against this ill informed mumble.

So, here we go. This article has as well been submitted to the Ottawa Citizen for consideration as an op ed piece.

After his disastrous handling of both the William Sampson case and the Maher Arar affair while head of Canadian consular matters, Mr. Pardy is in no position to tell anybody anything. His failure of responsibility and judgment and that of his colleague Mr. Franco Pillarella (in the M. Arar case) are now well known and condemned by Justice O'Connor. Both Mr. Sampson and Mr. Arar suffered enormously in Saudi Arabian and Syrian prisons because of this incompetent bureaucrat.

Here is a rather telling excerpt from the testimony of Mr. Sampson to the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Nov 6, 2003 :

“Certainly the handling by the Department of Foreign Affairs officials here in Canada of my family during this rather difficult situation for us was again less than adequate.

To give an example of this, it would appear that the Department of Foreign Affairs operated from the earliest stages as if I were guilty, long before I even had a trial, a trial that turned out to be nothing more than a farce, a trial at which I was brought before three judges without representation, without witnesses to the event other than those provided by the Saudi Arabian government. Even before that, I had received indications from the embassy officials that they considered me to be guilty, and my father in March 2000 had an embassy official in Riyadh actually state to him that they considered my situation to be very similar to that of the Hell's Angels in Montreal who themselves had been involved in turf wars.

To have members of the Canadian embassy making statements like that at those times was contrary to my best interests and contrary, certainly, to the best interests of my family. Subsequent to those statements my father asked for clarification on these points and received the most cursory and off-hand comments that one could imagine from Department of Foreign Affairs officials such as Gar Pardy.”

In just one of the many egregious statements in his flawed Citizen article, he says this about the US policy in Asia at the time of the Vietnamese War: “The cost of withdrawal for Vietnam and Asia – except for the people of South Vietnam (my italics) – was short lived, and today it is difficult to understand why millions of people had to die.“

Hum, those who were "short lived" were the poor South Vietnamese but no matter for Mr. Pardy. It is this warm attitude that allowed Mr. Sampson to rot in a Saudi Arabian prison for two years.

To further demonstrate his complete confusion and lack of understanding he claims, “Unlike Korea, the geography of Indochina allowed the North to initiate and sustain a war in the South…” This absurdity comes after he first tells us that the North Vietnamese had the will (my italics) to achieve their objective of a united Vietnam . I wonder if he is even aware of the critical role played by China in the Korean conflict. And by the way, last I looked, the North Koreans  have about a million soldiers massed  at or near the North/South demarcation line established in 1953.

His biggest whopper is to cite none other than William Jefferson Clinton to support his whine that we get out of Afghanistan .

Here is the reference in full. “Although Iraq is not Vietnam and 2006 is not 1968, the public policy issue is the same. As Bill Clinton recently reminded us, when you are in a hole stop digging”

Coming from a disgraced President whose best defence against his accusers was to ask, “that depends on what your definition of is is”, Mr. Pardy’s choice of references to bolster his viewpoint is priceless and pathetic.

However, there is some truth in his view that determined national liberation movements cannot be defeated by a foreign state at a price the foreign state is prepared to pay. This is particularly true when the foreign state is a democracy, but the ‘price to pay’ argument also applied to the USSR in its Afghan campaign.

Of course to complete the picture fairly, Mr. Pardy should have noted that the motivation of the USSR was the control and subjugation of the Afghan state; conversely our Canadian objective in Afghanistan is to create conditions in which the Afghan people can freely determine what government will lead them. Those opposing our Canadian and NATO objective there are warlords protecting their lucrative poppy trade and the misogynist, religious fanatics of the Taliban. Not what you would normally call ‘national liberators’.

Unfortunately as well for Mr. Pardy’s thesis, those currently causing the horrific situation in Iraq are as far from ‘national liberators’ as you can get. They are rather a mix of Islamic jihadists, sectarian extremists and those hoping to return to the power they held under the murderous reign of Mr. Saddam Hussein.

I am sure that Mr. Pardy believes the Islamic cry that it is all about chasing the US ‘occupiers’ away. Yea, right. Then tell me how come Iraqi’s ‘national liberators’ are killing each other in huge numbers rather than focusing on the occupiers?

In another unsupported take on world history as he sees it, he posits this: “In Iraq there are at least three such ‘national’ liberation movements trying to emerge from the callous decisions made in Paris in 1919”. No, wrong. Any fair reading of the recent Iraqi elections and constitutional agreement would conclude that it is the voters who are the true national liberators trying to rid themselves of the religious zealots and back to power seeking Baathists.

Amazingly, Mr. Pardy tries to rewrite a near universal concept about war and policy. In the minds of most experts, war is simply the last stop in a linear expression of vital and strategic national interests. In other words, war is the next step after “jaw, jaw” fails. For Mr. Pardy however, war is not part of the policy continuum – “it is a world unto itself”. He says that its support is not to be measured in the same way as other policies on say, clean air or taxes. That’s fine, it should not be considered in the same way but it must nevertheless be considered. That consideration is generally expressed by reference to our highest sense of national consciousness. Simply put, at the end of the day, what is it that we stand for?

He is simply wrong to postulate that war is isolated and separated from all other decisions made by governments. But just how he imagines it does work in this isolated bubble he fails to say. The position is logically indefensible.

War decisions are at the top of the hierarchy because they embody a determination of the vital national and strategic interests of the country. He may disagree with the decision - that is his right in our democratic system - but to argue as he does that the Afghan war is as a result of “the hubris of some politicians” exposes why the best thing Mr. Pardy has done recently is to retire from the Foreign Service. At least his ability to cause harm is now limited.

cn 

Layton defines shallow

Posted on Fri, September 15, 2006 by Registered CommenterColin Nelson in | Comments2 Comments | References49 References

In today’s National Post you can see the A. Radwanski article on the shallowness of Jack Layton that inspired me today.

Here is the link http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/columnists/story.html?id=b240d93d-2216-496d-a100-7a13234ade04

The following is the email I sent to Mr. Radwanski that does not likely require further explanation.

Hello Mr. Radwanski.

Thanks for your article that shows the beginning of your reality check on our friend Mr. Layton. However, you let him off the hook so easily that I fear you are likely a bit of an NDP partisan.

Way back, I was a lifeguard at our yacht club pool in Hudson and Jack was an energetic 11/12 year old swimming like a fish and constantly on the move. I liked him and all the kids enjoying summer! So, I knew him well.

That said, as a reporter you should do a little more work on your subject before expressing your opinions. For example, you note that 'for whatever reason', the leader is 'obsessed' with breaking through in Quebec .

You should read what he says about his grandfather in rebuttal to charges he is a typical no-war NDPer - a charge laid when the first Afghan debate was about to get underway, to get a sense of what is behind this passion.

Second, he is Quebecer like me and he fancies himself as understanding what Quebecers want and need. Third, his dad Robert was a conservative cabinet member, elected in Quebec and there are many other family members who distinguished themselves provincially and nationally. I think you get the point as to why he is obsessed.

You dismiss his outrageous suggestion that we begin negotiations with the Taliban and oh, yes, "cut and run" by February as simply a "complete betrayal of his party's usual commitment to human rights and women's rights in particular".

It is well beyond a mere change in party policy. It is a betrayal of our men and women in the CF, a betrayal of our commitment to NATO and a betrayal of Canada 's history.

You have to be living in a very thick, opaque bubble to even imagine that this position is acceptable to anyone beyond the extreme fringe of the NDP party. Sorry I should qualify this as the over 90% endorsement of the 'pull out' resolution shows, however it also proves my point. The entire party is fringe on foreign policy issues

Further, his declaration (as if his statement of something makes it true) that we are a nation of peacekeepers is so utterly at odds with Canada's proud military history and a misreading of that bedrock liberal and NDP delusion about "peacekeeping" itself. Again read any reputable assessment of the peacekeeping missions undertaken since Mr. Pearson's initial foray and you will be hard pressed to find kind words from anyone about the value, effectiveness or utility of any of these missions.

I worked at DND (civilian) for years and on many occasions debated this issue with the most senior military and civilian cadre possible. To bring the peacekeeping issue and missions up to current times (vice say Cyprus ) and you will find nothing but failure - see General Delaire, see Bosnia , see anything that General Mackenzie has to say - again you probably get the point.

Other that that, your article was, shallow at best.

Sincerely

Colin Nelson
Ottawa

When will we awake?

Posted on Mon, September 11, 2006 by Registered CommenterColin Nelson | Comments2 Comments | References1 Reference

Well. Five years. It has gone so fast. Yet, as we look at the countless critical events and crisis moments since this morning in 2001, it has been like a slow motion horror.

Recalling these terrible moments is for me to relive the feelings of falling into the abyss of fear, of the unknown and the unknowable.

Yet in spite of the facts that we know, it is the distortions and myths that poison the soul of our nation.

Today’s National Post story on a Can-west News poll is chilling: 20% of Canadians believe that the events were orchestrated not by al-Qaeda but by Americans looking for a pretext for war in Iraq . As a measure of how lost our schools and public institutions have become in their anti-Americanism and political correctness, more that 26% of youths aged 18-34 believe in this conspiracy madness. Worse still is that 53% of those polled believe the attacks were “a very specific violent reaction to foreign policies of the US government.

We can thank N. Chomsky and his running dogs for this intellectual inversion. As I have said many times before our Canadian political correctness and ability to see and embrace all views no matter how antithetical they are to our own values and interests will be our downfall. Ultimately, to stand for everyone’s ‘values’ is to stand for none.

For proof of the source and fuel for this kind of uber political correctness and self-loathing look no further than the NDP party as a whole and its leader specifically.

Breathtakingly, he believes we can begin negotiations with the Taliban. Following his twisted mindset, evidently 92% of the 1500 delegates at the Quebec City convention this weekend endorsed what will be one of five platform points for the NDP – pull Canadian Forces out of Afghanistan by February 2007.

One of the tragic outcomes of 9/11/06 that is emerging into view is this: even at the highest levels of political leadership (and we see this globally), reasoned debate using a more or less agreed set of facts, has disappeared in favour of emotion and opinion. It is I think evidence of the searing and personal nature of the events of this date and the aftermath that has brought us to this dark place.

Last night my wife printed out a couple of pages of images from the Twin Towers attack – images that were beautiful, tragic, heroic and inspiring – done as she said to remember that amongst the dead were at least 24 Canadians. She did them for our son (he is ten) to take to school to share with his teacher and classmates.

<a href=http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/sep11/cdncasualties.html”target”=_blank”> This link</a> provides the names of those who perished.

He was reluctant. I suggested he could just give them to the teacher saying that perhaps they could be put up on the class bulletin board. He was still clearly uneasy. When, after a few more tries I asked what was bothering him, he replied,” I don’t think our teacher likes Mr. Bush”.

I could have cried.

cn 

Rules of Engagement (ROE) 1701.

Posted on Sat, August 26, 2006 by Registered CommenterColin Nelson | Comments15 Comments | References10 References


On 11 Aug 2006, with echoes of the unimplemented Security Council (SC) Resolution 1559 still ringing in their ears the diplomats at the UN agreed to the following wording for SC 1701:

Let’s look at the relevant portions of the pap that passes for action at the UN.

Paragraph 8 of the resolution, “Calls for Israel and Lebanon to support a permanent ceasefire and a long-term solution based on the following principles and elements:

-- security arrangements to prevent the resumption of hostilities, including the establishment between the Blue Line and the Litani river of an area free of any armed personnel, assets and weapons other than those of the Government of Lebanon and of UNIFIL as authorized in paragraph 11,” and further,

-- full implementation of the relevant provisions of the Taif Accords, and of resolutions 1559 (2004) and 1680 (2006), that require the disarmament of all armed groups in Lebanon, so that, pursuant to the Lebanese cabinet decision of 27 July 2006, there will be no weapons or authority in Lebanon other than that of the Lebanese State;

Why am I not convinced that a single AK 47 or rocket launcher will ever be taken from the Hezbollah terrorists?

Here’s why.

First the French who brokered the ceasefire with the USA made a big to-do about the 7,000 troops it would commit to the UN effort alongside the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF). But wait, next Chirac through his Foreign Minister postures that without “minimum guarantees” (Chirac – Times article) they will only muster up an additional 200 troops to augment the French UNIFIL contingent.

Could the memories of the murder of the 58 French paratroopers at the hands of Hezbollah while in their barracks in Beruit have been on Jacques mind? That’s right this attack was done at the same time as Hezbollah hit the US Marine barracks killing some 250 US soldiers.

Nevertheless, and no matter how valid the concern of repetition, scorn, derision and other kinds of abuse from all sides was heaped on the heads of the French.

Yet, even then I maintained some hope that the real intent was as stated – that this was a French attempt to get tough ROE for the force, up to and including agreement to add the ‘robust’ Chapter 7 – meaning UNIFIL is authorized to apply deadly force to implement the resolution.

Although the evident need for such capability must have been in the minds of the French leadership, the possibility that it would come into force was dashed from the first days following the resolution: first the Lebanese Defence Minister Mur said he would never even dream of disarming Hezbollah and Nazrallah flatly proclaimed it would never be considered as long as the IDF was still in South Lebanon.

Spin forward to when the Italians step up to the plate and pledge 3000 troops to the force as well as offering to take the leadership of the force should the UN so wish. At the time of the Italian pledge there was no word one way or another as to the detail of the ROE.

Feeling the international heat over its decision the French scrambled. In a brief comment that could not have passed unnoticed by President Chirac, President Bush in effect quite simply said - that’s the French for you. 

As befitted their self-image as the keepers of “La Gloire” and in the name of France, Chirac, in a display of Grand Arrogance then called on the other Europeans to belly up to the bar. A meeting was held in Brussels with Kofi Anan and the Foreign Ministers to arm twist for more troops.

Fast forward again to the article in The Times Online, 26 Aug and these current developments:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2329025,00.html

“We can now begin to put together a credible force,” Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary-General, said after a meeting with European Union foreign ministers in Brussels.

However, he ruled out demands for the UN force to disarm Hezbollah, which sparked the 34-day conflict with Israel when it seized two Israeli soldiers last month. “It is generally accepted that the disarmament of Hezbollah cannot be done by force,” he said. “The troops are not going there to disarm Hezbollah, let’s be clear on that.”

 

Oh, OK, but Dear Mr. Sec-Gen, what about the resolution just passed? If the troops are not going to do the job, pray tell, who will? Or, have I missed it again and what Sec State Rice said is really true – Hezbollah will do it voluntarily? Wonder what the IDF thinks of that…

Still there is some good news too out of Brussels:

“The French President was rebuffed in his attempt to maintain his country’s leadership of the UN operation. General Alain Pellegrini, the French commander, will see out his term in charge of the existing Unifil, a force seen as toothless, but Mr. Annan asked Italy to take control of the expanded mission in February after Rome pledged up to 3,000 troops.”

“European ministers said that they had agreed to send troops only after winning a guarantee from Mr. Annan on clear rules of engagement to avoid the indecision that hampered UN peacekeeping in the Balkans. But Hezbollah’s disarmament appeared to remain unresolved, with European military planners suggesting that their role was to help the Lebanese Army to undertake the task, even though it may be ill-equipped and unwilling to do so.”

As incredible as it seems from this Times story, we learn that “European ministers said that they had agreed to send troops only after winning a guarantee (emphasis added) from Mr. Annan on clear rules of engagement…”

Well, well, well. A kiss and a promise from Kofi on the ROE issue and “voila”, the French are convinced enough to commit two battalions (up to 2,000) to the force!

One begins to wonder just when the propitious moment will come when Kofi will actually honour this guarantee and finally commit to the force ROE. For an objective observer, wasn’t the Brussels meeting the obvious moment to at a minimum put in place the required authority as seen from the European perspective? Evidently not.

Once again, the yawning gap between diplomatic realities and facts on the ground leads me to these conclusions:

- the UN never intended to implement the disarmament portion of SC 1559;

- the UN never intended to implement the disarmament portion of SC 1701.

Worse, the Blue Line (the IDF pulled back south of this line when it unilaterally withdrew from the buffer area of Southern Lebanon that it had occupied ever since chasing the PLO out of Beruit in 1982) a UN agreed and sanctioned demarcation line for the Lebanese/Israeli border is again open for ‘consideration’.

Specifically, the Shaaba Farms area at the intersection of the Syrian/Lebanese/Israeli border is to be looked at as per the ludicrous demand from Lebanese PM Siniora (the seven point plan).

Even by the dismal UN standards this is a low point and it again begs the question, when will the UN be put out of business?

Perhaps widespread knowledge of the next part of this obscene ballet will do the trick.

At this link, http://www.theweeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/012/622bqwjn.asp

If true - it is all taken from public records and so is likely accurate – not only is the UN stale dated, but the very entity trusted by the world community to be scrupulously impartial and fair, the same UNIFIL that is currently bulking-up to perhaps 15,000 is aiding and abetting Hezbollah against Israel by the provision of intelligence information about IDF movements, equipment and strength.

In war time those who provide such help to the enemy are called traitors and the penalty for those caught is death.

It makes me sick.

 

cn 

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