Friday, December 20, 2019

U.S. Documents Spark National Debate on Canada’s War in Afghanistan

By Preston Lim
Tuesday, December 17, 2019,


On Dec. 9, the Washington Post published a trove of U.S. government documents on the war in Afghanistan. Starting in 2014, an American agency, the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), interviewed more than 600 people in an attempt to “diagnose policy failures in Afghanistan.” SIGAR published some of their findings, but, according to the Post, left out the “harshest and most frank criticisms from the interviews.” The Post filed two Freedom of Information Act lawsuits and eventually gained access to interview transcripts. The documents show that “U.S. officials acknowledged that their warfighting strategies were fatally flawed and that Washington wasted enormous sums of money trying to remake Afghanistan into a modern nation.”

As one reporter notes, the Post documents contained “several references to Canada,” which is unsurprising given the size and duration of Canada’s contribution to the war in Afghanistan. Between 2001 and 2014, more than 40,000 Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) members served in the Afghan theater of operations. In the opening months of the war, Canadian troops served in Kandahar, before redeploying to Kabul in summer 2003. Canadian troops would return to Kandahar in 2005, with the number of Canadian troops swelling to 2,300. In 2008, then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper pledged to withdraw all Canadian troops from Afghanistan in 2011, save for a few advisers. Accordingly, Canada ended its combat role in Afghanistan in 2011, though a small contingent of CAF personnel was stationed in Kabul to train Afghan security services. The last Canadian troops left Afghanistan in 2014.

The Post investigation has sparked a heated discussion about Canada’s contribution to the conflict. Scott Gilmore, who worked in Afghanistan as a “diplomat, consultant and NGO worker,” wrote that “few failures have been as large as Canada’s misadventures in Afghanistan.” Gilmore wrote that “everyone knew we were losing.” He concluded that, in light of the Post reporting, “it would still be worth it for us to start talking about Afghanistan again.” Others cast the Canadian contribution in a more positive light. Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan, for example, who completed three tours in Afghanistan “as an intelligence liaison and later as an adviser to American commanders,” noted that “our understanding of our situation was extremely high” and argued that the “work that has been done on the ground has had a significant impact.”

Several commentators have called for a review of Canada’s military activity in Afghanistan. David Mulroney, a former deputy minister who was responsible for the government's interdepartmental Afghanistan Task Force, has called for a review that would explain “why Canada went where it did and how it performed.” One writer has suggested that the Canadian Senate ought to conduct a study of Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan.

Recent reviews of Canada’s role in the Afghan conflict have already demonstrated that the government mishandled aspects of the war in Afghanistan, though the government has not yet conducted a holistic review of Canada’s war effort. According to a recent military ombudsman report, the government failed to take adequate care of Canada’s language and culture advisers—Canadian citizens who had recently immigrated from Afghanistan and who deployed to Afghanistan alongside Canadian troops. As the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation noted, these advisers carried out some of the “most dirty and dangerous assignments” during the war, but upon their return, they were not properly “cared for by the government that sent them to war.”

In Other News
The Federal Court, a national court below the Supreme Court, recently approved a $900 million class-action settlement for employees of the Department of National Defense (DND) and CAF who have experienced sexual harassment, sexual assault or discrimination in connection with their employment with DND and CAF. The majority of the funds are set aside for the CAF class, with $100 million set aside for DND employees. The settlement provides for “payments of between $5,000 and $55,000 for victims of sexual misconduct,” though victims who experienced exceptional harm “and have been denied Veterans Affairs benefits could be eligible for up to $155,000.”




Preston Lim is a first-year student at Yale Law School. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Near Eastern Studies from Princeton and a Master’s in Global Affairs from Tsinghua University, where he studied as a Schwarzman Scholar.
Canada’s Attorney General Blocks Disclosure of Evidence in National Security Case 
" This is the first time the federal government has ever issued a security certificate, a legal mechanism that allows the attorney general to block the disclosure of information if disclosure would harm Canada’s national security interests. 
THE CASE INVOLVES A CANADIAN SELLING SECRETS TO CHINA 
"Federal authorities arrested Huang in late 2013 and charged him with “conspiracy to provide Canadian military secrets” to the Chinese government. Huang previously worked as an engineer for Lloyd’s Register Canada Ltd., a subcontractor to Irving Shipbuilding, which builds vessels for the Royal Canadian Navy."
By Preston Lim
Tuesday, December 17, 2019,

Canadian Attorney General David Lametti (Source: Flickr/Sebastiaan ter Burg)

Last month, Canadian Attorney General David Lametti issued a security certificate in the ongoing case of R. v. Qing (Quentin) Huang. This is the first time the federal government has ever issued a security certificate, a legal mechanism that allows the attorney general to block the disclosure of information if disclosure would harm Canada’s national security interests. Federal authorities arrested Huang in late 2013 and charged him with “conspiracy to provide Canadian military secrets” to the Chinese government. Huang previously worked as an engineer for Lloyd’s Register Canada Ltd., a subcontractor to Irving Shipbuilding, which builds vessels for the Royal Canadian Navy.

Court documents have since provided a fuller picture of Huang’s activities and the government’s pursuit of Huang. In March 2013, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)—Canada’s national intelligence service—obtained authorization from the Federal Court—Canada’s national trial court—to intercept “telephone calls to and from a CSIS target at the PRC [Chinese] Embassy in Ottawa.” CSIS operators were not targeting Huang at the time but “incidentally intercepted” a conversation between Huang and the Chinese Embassy in May 2013. CSIS then provided the transcripts and recordings of the intercepted conversation to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)—Canada’s federal police service—which arrested Huang in December 2013, charging him under the Security of Information Act.

Parliament created the Security of Information Act “as a set of amendments to the Official Secrets Act in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.” Huang isn’t the first person to be charged under the act. Jeffrey Delisle, a sub-lieutenant in the Royal Canadian Navy, was convicted under the act in 2013 for communicating and attempting to communicate safeguarded information to the Russian military. This past September, the RCMP arrested Cameron Ortis, formerly director-general of the service’s National Intelligence Coordination Center, and charged him under the Security of Information Act for offering to sell classified RCMP information to Vincent Ramos. Ramos was the CEO of Phantom Secure, a company that sold encrypted phones to criminal organizations.

Federal authorities charged Huang under sections 16(1) and 22(1) of the act. Section 16(1) establishes communication to a “foreign entity or to a terrorist group [of] information that the Government of Canada or of a province is taking measures to safeguard” as a criminal offence. The accused must believe or be “reckless as to whether … the information is information that the Government of Canada or of a province is taking measures to safeguard.” The accused must also intend “to increase the capacity of a foreign entity or a terrorist group to harm Canadian interests” or be “reckless as to whether … communication of the information” would increase the capacity of a foreign entity or terrorist group to “harm Canadian interests.” Section 22(1) covers preparatory acts, that is, “anything that is specifically directed towards or specifically done in preparation of the commission of the offence.” In other words, even if Huang did not provide intelligence to the Chinese, his alleged preparations to hand over information could still land him in jail.

Since CSIS found out about Huang’s activities, many of the court proceedings since 2013 have focused on the appropriate scope of disclosure of CSIS documents. Several weeks ago, a judge on the Federal Court ordered the disclosure to Huang of a CSIS affidavit. The attorney general deemed disclosure of that information to be “sensitive or potentially injurious.” Under Section 38.13 of the Canada Evidence Act, the attorney general may “personally issue a certificate that prohibits the disclosure of information in connection with a proceeding for the purpose of protecting information obtained in confidence from, or in relation to, a foreign entity … or for the purpose of protecting national defence or national security.” On Nov. 14, the attorney general did just that, allowing the release of most of the CSIS affidavit, but blocking the disclosure of six paragraphs he deemed to be too sensitive to national security for release. How Lametti’s actions will affect Huang’s trial remains to be seen, though one legal commentator has noted that “it may be hard for the trial judge … to conclude that Mr. Huang’s fair-trial rights can be adequately protected without the disclosure of the withheld information.” Huang’s case is clearly an historic one. Since this is the first time the Canadian government has issued a security certificate, all eyes will be on the court as it sets precedent on key national security questions.




Preston Lim is a first-year student at Yale Law School. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Near Eastern Studies from Princeton and a Master’s in Global Affairs from Tsinghua University, where he studied as a Schwarzman Scholar.


SNC-Lavalin wooed Gadhafi's son with luxury jet and a second, bigger yacht to secure deals
From left, sons of Libyan President Moammar Gadhafi, Mutassim and Saadi, are accompanied by Italian movie producer Marina Cicogna during the 62nd ...


Fixing the bad policy at the root of the Trudeau government’s SNC-Lavalin scandal
Reforming the Integrity Regime by ending the automatic debarment policy could have avoided this
whole mess.

After year of political turmoil, SNC-Lavalin gets most of what it wanted in plea deal
After a year in which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's failed efforts to see SNC-Lavalin avoid prosecution led to him losing two key ministers, his edge in the polls ...

SNC-Lavalin pleads guilty to fraud, to pay $280M fine

Toronto Star
SNC-Lavalin settlement raises several questions
SNC-Lavalin must be delighted that the penalty is so low.


The Globe and Mail
Dec. 20: ‘Jody Wilson-Raybould could have cut this deal more than a year ago.’ Readers react as SNC-Lavalin pleads guilty to fraud, plus other letters to the editor
Ms. Wilson-Raybould could have cut this deal more than a year ago with a deferred prosecution agreement, and all of the uncertainty for thousands of workers and the future of a century-old company could have been avoided.



BNNBloomberg.ca
Jody Wilson-Raybould is BNN Bloomberg's newsmaker of the year
It was a story that sent shockwaves across Canada, pulling back the curtain on a tangled web of business and political relations. "PMO pressed justice minister ...
Yesterday
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rabble.ca
This year started and ended with SNC-Lavalin
Please chip in to support more articles like this. Support rabble.ca today for as little as $1 per month! Karl Nerenberg. December 20, 2019. analysis · Politics in ...
Yesterday
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paNOW
PM says he might have acted differently if knew how SNC-Lavalin case would end
OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government might have acted differently had it known the ...
Yesterday
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National Observer
Crown asks for 9 year sentence for former SNC-Lavalin exec Bebawi
Former SNC-Lavalin executive Sami Bebawi tarnished Canada's reputation and helped perpetuate the corrupt dictatorial regime of Moammar Gadhafi in Libya, ...
Yesterday
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Canoe
LILLEY: SNC plea deal shouldn't let Trudeau off the hook
Justin Trudeau now says if he knew that the SNC-Lavalin court case would end with a plea deal then he might have acted differently. Ya don't say!“Obviously, as ...
YesterdayOpinion
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OCCRP
SNC-Lavalin Settles Graft Cases for US$213 million
A few days after a former SNC-Lavalin executive was found guilty of paying kickbacks and bribing Libyan officials, the Canadian engineering giant said it will ...
YesterdayInternational
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Sudbury.com
Jody Wilson-Raybould chosen Canada's newsmaker of the year
The former justice minister was the runaway choice of news editors across the country surveyed by The Canadian Press.
2 days ago
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CFJC Today Kamloops
SNC-Lavalin settles Libya charges, pleads guilty to single count of fraud
MONTREAL — SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. on Wednesday settled criminal charges related to business dealings in Libya, with its construction division pleading ...
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Morning Update: SNC wooed Gadhafi's son for deal; Ottawa's e-cigarette ad ban
Also: PM wants to stall U.S.-China trade deal until Canadians are released.
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Financial Post
What SNC-Lavalin admitted: Funding Gadhafi's condo decor, yacht and parties
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CBC News: The National
Was political turmoil over SNC-Lavalin worth it? | At Issue
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THIS IS A SAMPLE OF ARTICLES AVAILABLE AT THIS SITE 


THE ROUTLEDGE COMPANIONTO FASCISM AND THE FAR RIGHT [PDF]
FULL BOOK 441 pages The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right is an engaging and accessible guide to the origins of fascism, the main facets of far-right ideology, and the reality of fascist and far-right government around the world. In a clear and concise manner, this book illustrates the main features of the subject using chronologies, maps, glossaries and biographies of key individuals. As well as the key examples of Hitler’s Germany and Mussolini’s Italy, this book also draws on extreme right-wing movements and regimes in Latin America, Eastern Europe and the Far East. In a series of original essays, the authors explore the following aspects of fascism and the far right: . 
Roots and origins . Ideology . Attitudes to nation and race . Social policy . Economic thinking . Diplomacy and foreign policy . The practice of politics in government and opposition. 

Peter Davies is Senior Lecturer in European History at the University of Huddersfield. His books include The National Front in France (1999), France and the Second World War (2001) and The Extreme Right in France (2002). 

Derek Lynch is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Huddersfield. He is currently working on a book on radio broadcasting and propaganda in the twentieth century

CONTENTS
List of maps vii
Acknowledgements ix
Note x
Introduction 1

Part I Fascism and the far right: The basics 13
Chronology 15
Background 34
Historiography 42
A–Z of historians 58
Maps 72

Part II Fascism and the far right: Themes 87
Roots and origins 89
Evolution of ideology 100
Nation and race 113
Civil society 126
The economy 139
Diplomacy and international relations 151
The practice of politics in government and opposition 167

Part III Fascism and the far right: Sources, names and terms 185
Guide to sources 187
Biography 195
Glossary 248
Guide to secondary reading 360
Notes 386
Bibliography 398

Index 404

SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=ecofascism 

SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=fascism 


Ur-Fascism can come back under the most innocent of disguises. Our duty is to uncover it and to point our finger at any of its new instances—every day, in every part of the world. Umberto Eco, “Ur-Fascism”


Putin's Russia as a fascist political system 
Alexander J. Motyl 
Department of Political Science, Rutgers University, United States

Keywords: Fascism Nationalism Authoritarianism Personality cult Political system 

Abstract
 There is a broad consensus among students of contemporary Russia that the political system constructed by Vladimir Putin is authoritarian and that he plays a dominant role in it. By building and expanding on these two features and by engaging in a deconstruction and reconstruction of the concept of fascism, this article suggests that the Putin system may plausibly be termed fascist. Not being a type of group, disposition, politics, or ideology, fascism may be salvaged from the conceptual confusion that surrounds it by being conceived of as a type of authoritarian political system. Fascism may be defined as a popular fully authoritarian political system with a personalistic dictator and a cult of the leaderda definition that makes sense conceptually as well as empirically, with respect to Putin's Russia and related fascist systems. 

© 2016 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Regents of the University of California.


SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=fascism 

Ur-Fascism can come back under the most innocent of disguises. Our duty is to uncover it and to point our finger at any of its new instances—every day, in every part of the world. Umberto Eco, “Ur-Fascism”











Citizens in ex-Soviet Uzbekistan head to the first parliamentary polls since a new leader ushered in optimistic reforms, but choice at the ballot box remains scant AFP
https://www.facebook.com/AFPnewsenglish/videos/2552060485036187/?t=30



The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
Traverso's version of Marxism never rises above the level of caricature and academic kitsch. Neither Marx, Lenin, Engels, or Trotsky ever promoted the idea of linearity or inevitability in history in general or in the contemporary class struggle. They were conscious polemical opponents of such ideas; at their best, so were Kautsky, Labriola, and Plekhanov, not to mention Mandel and George Novack. Traverso, for a "man of the left," seems to be satisfied with a knowledge of Marxism obtained second-hand, not from the works of the movement's founders and leaders. To tackle subjec... more »

Reading notes on Conclusion of The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso Translated by Bernard Gibbons Brill, [2018] The below are my underlinings/highlightings of Traverso. My own thoughts appear, if at all, as [N.B.]. Jay Conclusion ....Classical Marxism was incapable of comprehending the nature of anti-Semitism, or of recognising the Jewish aspiration to a distinct separate identity. Actually, it shared this misconception with all intellectual and political currents that belonged to the tradition of Enlightenment, from democratic liberalism to Zionism. ....The movement founded... more »

Reading notes on Chapter 10 of The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso Translated by Bernard Gibbons Brill, [2018] The below are my underlinings/highlightings of Traverso. My own thoughts appear, if at all, as [N.B.]. Jay Chapter 10: Post-war Marxism and the Holocaust ....lack of a Marxist debate on the causes, forms and consequences of the destruction of the European Jews ....During the 1940s and 1950s Marxism became an essential component of anti-fascist culture, in which the Jewish tragedy was reduced to a marginal aspect of the gigantic conflict that had ravaged Eur... more »

Reading notes on Chapter 9 of The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso Translated by Bernard Gibbons Brill, [2018] The below are my underlinings/highlightings of Traverso. My own thoughts appear, if at all, as [N.B.]. Jay [N.B. There is no better place to understand Abram Leon's book The Jewish Question than the book itself, available in many places on the web, and for purchase here. Traverso in his chapter on Leon tries to have his cake and eat it, too on nearly every page: Leon is too dogmatic in his Marxism/he breaks from previous Kautsky dogmatism; Leon counterposes assi... more »

Reading notes on Chapter 8 of The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso Translated by Bernard Gibbons Brill, [2018] The below are my underlinings/highlightings of Traverso. My own thoughts appear, if at all, as [N.B.]. Jay Chapter 8: The Messianic Materialism of Walter Benjamin 3 Critique of Progress ....his acceptance of Marxism was critical and, so to speak, selective. What interested him about Marxism was its subversive and revolutionary dimension, of which there no longer remained any trace in social democracy. Educated by Bernstein and Kautsky, the latter conceived ... more »

Reading notes on Chapter 7 of The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso Translated by Bernard Gibbons Brill, [2018] The below are my underlinings/highlightings of Traverso. My own thoughts appear, if at all, as [N.B.]. Jay Chapter 7: From Weimar to Auschwitz: Anti-Semitism and the German Left ....Just as the German left in the nineteenth century had ignored the anti-Semitic propaganda of Richard Wagner, Heinrich von Treitschke and Hous-ton Stewart Chamberlain, under the Weimar Republic it did not pay attention to Mein Kampf. ....Nazi anti-Semitism, on the contrary, was charge... more »

Reading notes on Chapter 6 of The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso

Jay Rothermel at Marxist update - 1 week ago
The Jewish Question: History of a Marxist Debate By Enzo Traverso Translated by Bernard Gibbons Brill, [2018] The below are my underlinings/highlightings of Traverso. My own thoughts appear, if at all, as [N.B.]. Jay Chapter 6: Gramsci and the Jewish Question [Gramsci has zero to do with the continuity of revolutionary Marxism. He, like Benjamin and the Frankfurters, have been embraced by petty bourgeois radicals and academics who traded curiosity or support for independent working class political action for the companionable teat of bourgeois public opinion every time the wo... more »
SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=fascism 

SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=marxism

SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=jewish+question