There will be no stilling of Canadian guns in Afghanistan, even as Canada urges all nations in the world to observe an Olympic truce while the 2010 Winter Olympic Games go on.
Canada's awkward plea for Olympic peace was the cornerstone of its resolution introduced yesterday at the United Nations General Assembly. The motion was passed unanimously by delegates, many representing countries with long histories of military conflict.
Afterwards, VANOC head John Furlong said he saw no contradiction in Canada's position, despite continuing hostilities in Afghanistan.
"I have always felt that Canada is fighting for peace, and doing what it can for peace, wherever it can, and this is an extension of that spirit," Mr. Furlong said in an interview from New York.
"This is about something bigger in many ways than one thing," he said, noting, for instance, the "heartbreaking" fact that Afghanistan has never had a women's athletic facility. "Hopefully, we can change the course of events for that country."
Since the early 1990s, an Olympic truce resolution has been passed every two years by the UN on behalf of each Summer and Winter Games.
Canada's motion called on all UN member states "to observe the Olympic truce, individually and collectively, during the 2010 Winter Olympic Games and the Paralympic Winter Games."
But few, if any, countries pay attention to the idea of an actual military ceasefire for the Olympics, forcing proponents to stress, instead, the concept of building a better, more peaceful world through sport.
"We appeal to UN member states ... to use sport as a tool to promote peace, dialogue and reconciliation in areas of conflict during and beyond the Olympic Games period," said Mr. Furlong, who spoke passionately - albeit nervously - in favour of the resolution from the General Assembly's famous podium.
In the interview, he said he is under no illusions about the power of the Olympic truce to stop wars.
"We know what the truce can do and not do, but this is really about letting sport be what it can be and influence behaviour in different parts of the world. Doing some good is better than not trying at all," Mr. Furlong said.
During a mostly mind-numbing series of speeches backing the motion, however, two countries referred to incidents that illustrated the world of sport is far from perfect, no matter how many Olympic truces are approved.
The representative from Cuba complained that too many sports are based solely on money. In a clear reference to Cuban ballplayers being lured to the United States for huge major league contracts, he condemned the fact that "talented athletes are being stolen from developing countries."
Israel's representative, meanwhile, accused too many countries of paying mere lip service to the ideals of sport.
He singled out Dubai's refusal earlier this year to grant a visa to Israeli tennis player Shahar Peer, and recalled the "hatred" that led to the deadly terrorist attack on Israeli athletes and coaches at the Munich Olympics in 1972.
"Reverberations from Munich are still being felt today. They reflect a dangerous trend to the politicization of sport."
Still, this is a big week for Vancouver's Olympic Games on the world stage.
First, they take Manhattan, then they take the flame.
Later today, Mr. Furlong, along with B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell, will board a plane for Greece, where the Olympic torch will be lit Thursday at a simple but elegant ceremony in Olympia, ancestral home of the Games.
"This is an enormously positive and reflective time for us," he said, following the passage of the UN resolution
"I'm glad we're there [on the international stage]. After looking down the road for so long, thinking events are so far away, that they'll never take place ...
"Now, they're here. Our moment is now. When the flame comes home from Greece, the Games are on."
For his big UN moment, however, Mr. Furlong confessed to a slight case of the nerves.
Approaching the same podium that has featured so many of the world's great leaders and statesmen, the Olympic chief was surprised to find himself with a little tremble.
"I went over there today, thinking this would be fairly straightforward exercise, but I was shaking. It's quite a compelling room. There's a lot of drama. It was very special."