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Martha Hall Findlay and The Afghan Vote
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| Martha Hall Findlay and The Afghan Vote |
| 10.15.06 (6:29 pm) [edit] |
This is what MHF said on why she would have voted against extending the mission. "We can't just complain that Harper doesn't have a strategy." She was talking to Ignatieff and Rae at the time. This is a very clever answer for so many reasons and one Ignatieff and Kennedy should be very concerned about. Ignatieff is found of saying that the Americans have made “every single mistake in Iraq and then some.” Other so called liberal hawks have said the same and over time a distinct line of criticism of the Iraq war has arisen. Namely, regardless of whether one believed in the Iraq mission in principle, Bush was never one to realize the hopes the pro war faction had for the war. Ignatieff has not yet gone as far as many other prominent liberal hawks in lamenting his support of the mission, but this line of criticism especially, in light of the most recent Lancent study estimating that upwards of 600,000 Iraqis have been killed in post war violence, leaves him with very little left to hold onto. Where this bleeds into Ignatieff’s support of Afghanistan mission is that given Harper ideological closeness to the Neo Cons and his strong support of the Iraq war, Ignatieff, of all people, should have been suspicious of Stephen Harper’s ability to carry out the mission. Instead, despite a mere 6 hours of debate, he blindly threw his support behind Harper’s extension. Ignatieff should have been once bitten twice shy. Instead he backed both and laments how both missions have been prorogated; add to this his foot and mouth disease and it is little wonder why there are concerns about judgment – or lack there of. MHF line is certainly an improvement on Dion’s line, for example. Under the guise that there was minimal debate in the house, Dion has still not offered an opinion on the mission. Dion is right; the reason he gave for voting no was a good reason. In a democracy, process matters. It is no reason, however, for not forming an opinion since. As I said before, Kennedy should also be concerned about MHF line of questioning. Kennedy has raised questions about the mission and in many ways this has become the de facto Liberal position and the one MHF was taking aim at. That said, Kennedy has held out hope that the mission can still be transformed, but is his implicit hope in Harper, among others, justified? MHF says no and I agree.
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posted by: Kristen Applegate (reply)
post date: 02.13.07 (7:51 am)
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