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Thought I would place this here as a reminder to exactly what PM Harper has to say on the state of FA and where it is going under his government. I think it was a good speech, but the media, particularly the CBC, took his words about Afghanistan and twisted them around to make it sound like the toll in Afghanistan was a price he was willing to pay for his own leadership, when in fact he clearly stated the toll was about Canada taking on a leadership role in the world. This was the objective of Mr. Martin and Mr. Graham, and it is being sustained and further carried out by PM Harper.
Reproduced under the fair dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/harper_stephen/foreignpolicyspeech.html
Foreign policy speech: 'Reviving Canadian leadership in the world'
CBC News Online | Oct. 6, 2006
by Stephen Harper
On Thursday, Oct. 5, 2006, Prime Minister Stephen Harper was in his hometown of Calgary to receive the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service from the Canadian branch of the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center. This is an excerpt from his speech on "Reviving Canadian leadership in the world."
As someone who has only served Canada as Prime Minister for eight months, I am not sure I've yet merited this recognition. But I am proud of the team I work with — the men and women who created the new Conservative Party of Canada, and what they've been able to accomplish in a fairly short period of time.
In those eight months, I have observed one thing in particular. If you tell people what you are going to, and then do it — Canadians respect that …
So what I want to talk to you about tonight is something I hope to accomplish in the longer term — if Canadians grant us the opportunity.
That objective is to make Canada a leader on the international stage. We want to ensure that we can preserve our identity and our sovereignty, protect our key interests and defend those values we hold most dear on the international scene.
If there is any one thing that has struck me for the short time I have been in this job, it is how critically important foreign affairs has become in everything that we do.
The globe is becoming a village. And virtually every significant challenge we face — economic, environmental, demographic, security, health, energy, you name it — contains an important, if not critical, international dimension.
I said I admire many people who have been presented with the Woodrow Wilson Award. But the person I want to talk about in this regard is Woodrow Wilson himself.
Now I'm going to ignore for a moment that he was a Democrat and the father of the income tax.
Woodrow Wilson was also an extraordinarily accomplished individual — an academic and a state governor who rose to become president of the United States, the only Ph.D ever to do so.
Most famously, he is known for his "Fourteen Points" — "the program for the world's peace," as he called it, and his advocacy of the first world-wide multilateral organization, the League of Nations.
He urged the United States to be a leader on the international stage and the American people to help "make the world safe for democracy." Today, it is easy to forget how radical a departure this represented from the historic U.S. foreign policy position of isolation.
Canada, by contrast, has never had the luxury or the illusion of isolationism.
While not among the ranks of world powers, we have long been a significant part of important and influential world bodies.
Our membership in the Commonwealth preserves the ties of the worldwide British Empire of which we were long a proud part.
Our position in the Francophonie reflects our cultural and historical ties to France, which remains a country of influence with global visibility.
We belong to the world's most important military alliance, NATO, due to our disproportionate role in the struggles against both fascism and communism.
We took the lead in the creation of NAFTA, our massive continental trading block.
And perhaps all of these things explain the seat we hold at the table of the G8, one of the world's most exclusive bodies.
All of these show that Canadians have always wanted a government that plays a role in the world.
But in a shrinking, changing, dangerous world, our government must play a role in the world.
And I believe that Canadians want a significant role — a clear, confident and influential role.
As proud citizens, they don't want a Canada that just goes along; they want a Canada that leads.
They want a Canada that doesn't just criticize, but one that can contribute.
They want a Canada that reflects their values and interests, and that punches above its weight.
Do we, as Canadians, have the desire and the ability to achieve all this?
Just take a look around this room; we're among Canadians who lead corporations that do business in every corner of the planet. And this is only one corner of our great country.
So, during the time in which I am privileged to serve as prime minister, I intend to make this a country that leads.
And if our government succeeds in achieving this goal, then perhaps some day I will be deserving of this prestigious award.
To accomplish such a goal will require more than membership in the various multilateral bodies I have just talked about. Previous governments have had all those club memberships, but they haven't always been leaders.
We must have more. We must also have guiding values and interests as a country on which we are prepared to act. And we must have the capabilities to act according to those priorities.
We must be committed and capable of protecting our vital interests, projecting our values of freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law, and preserving balance and fairness in the international forums to which we belong.
That is the direction in which our government is moving. Let me briefly take stock.
First, the NAFTA summit at Cancun gave us an opportunity to start talking frankly to and getting things done with our most important ally, customer and neighbour, the United States of America.
That paid off with an historic softwood lumber agreement and a better U.S. appreciation of Canada's growing contribution to continental energy security.
It paid off with some very gracious and grateful words for Canada from Secretary of State Rice on the fifth anniversary of 9/11, and, just recently, a reprieve from Congress on their passport plan.
Then, the G8 summit in Russia gave us an opportunity to tell the rest of the world about Canada's phenomenal potential as a producer of energy and natural resources.
On the way there, I stopped in London to tell British investors about energy, especially about the oil sands, and to let them know what you all have known for a long time: That Canada is the world's only growing producer of this strategic commodity with a secure, stable government.
Canada is, as I have said, an emerging energy superpower.
It is one reason why Canada will increasingly be a leader and why Alberta is a leader within it.
But here in Alberta, where that energy power can almost be felt, something else must be equally appreciated. That with power comes responsibility.
Given the environmental challenges that energy production presents, Alberta must also become a world leader in environmentally-responsible energy production.
On the way home from the UK, I stopped in Cyprus to make a symbolic contribution to the biggest overseas evacuation of Canadians in our history. Canada was ultimately able to evacuate as many of its citizens and as quickly as the great powers that have immensely more military reach.
That was a testament to the coordination and results of which the public service of Canada is truly capable — capabilities that were also on display when it broke up the alleged terrorist plot in Toronto earlier this year.
I also took a few days this summer to tour the North. The trip had a twofold purpose.
I wanted to encourage northerners to embrace the jobs and prosperity that will come with private sector energy resource development.
But, by visiting Alert and observing Operation Lancaster, I also wanted to underline our government's commitment to rebuilding our military and to asserting Canadian sovereignty — to asserting sovereignty over all of our territory, including the islands and waterways of our Arctic.
Asserting sovereignty means a presence. And let me assure you, we intend to be there.
At the Francophonie, we were able to stress our support for the UN Convention on Cultural Diversity, a document that reflects the unique history and eclectic identity of this country.
We were also able, in once again addressing the situation in the Middle East, to show that our international positions are not based on tailoring our views to the crowd we are in front of, but on sticking to principle and working to forge consensus.
And let me just briefly mention how our Fisheries Minister, the Honourable Loyola Hearn, did just that recently at the meetings of the North Atlantic Fisheries Organization, where, by standing firm and making clear we are prepared to act, he managed to get real progress on our goal of ending international over-fishing off the Grand Banks.
But one thing stands out above the rest. That was my visit to the United Nations.
In that forum, I addressed our role in the mission where our security interests, our values and our capabilities come squarely together.
Afghanistan.
Five years ago, that long-suffering country was ruled by the Taliban — brutal tyrants bent on rolling back any vestige of civilization.
Men lived in oppression; women in bondage; and children in ignorance.
Some might say that's not Canada's problem.
Well, it is. And September 11th, 2001, shattered any illusion that it isn't — the day when the Taliban were revealed as accomplices in the horrific attacks against innocent civilians on this continent, including on citizens of this country.
Canada and our allies joined the United Nations mission to meet the Taliban challenge at its source and eliminate it once and for all.
The mission is being conducted on several fronts. We are providing security to the Afghan people. We are helping them in reconstruction and development. We are working with them in building the foundations of a sustainable democracy. And we are delivering on all fronts.
A democracy has been put in place. Presidential, parliamentary and provincial elections have been held — and women now hold a quarter of the seats in the Afghan legislature.
The economy is growing. GDP has doubled in the last five years.
Education is spreading. In 2001 only 700,000 children were in school, and all of them were boys. Today 7 million kids are in school, and a third of them are girls.
Reconstruction is happening. With Canada's help, over 13,000 communities have started or completed new schools, medical facilities, and water, sewer and electrical systems.
But we all know it hasn't been easy. And it isn't going to be. Canadian Forces have the lead in Kandahar province, the stronghold of the Taliban, the toughest in the entire country.
The Canadian men and women who serve there are the best we have to offer. They have gone willing, knowing that not all of them will return. And when I went to Afghanistan and visited our troops, I saw — as anyone can see firsthand, there on the ground — just how dedicated, professional, skilled and courageous they are.
We have seen just how proud Canadians are of our soldiers and their families. And we have also seen how difficult it is to bear the sorrow of their losses. But, ladies and gentlemen, that is the price of leadership.
It is also the price of moving our world forward. I recently met with the leaders of Latvia and Romania. In my lifetime, these nations were stuck in what we all believed were hopeless futures of oppression and stagnation.
But we never gave up our opposition to the Soviet empire, and they never gave up hope, and today those countries are growing democracies, serving alongside us in Afghanistan.
When I look ahead a decade or so from now, I still have great hopes for that country and its place in the world. But it's not going to happen unless countries like Canada step up, make sacrifices and provide leadership.
That is not new for this country. That is how this country was built. We were not built by the services we use, but by the sacrifices we made. Or more accurately by the sacrifices, big and small, of our forbears.
This summer Laureen and I visited Vimy Ridge in northwest France, the scene of some of the most terrible fighting in the First World War. It's the last resting place for her great uncle, James Teskey, and literally thousands of young men like him.
Most died in a few short days, in a battle where Canadians, considered backwater colonials, led the successful final assault.
But the monument at Vimy Ridge is much more than a remembrance of a victory or a memorial to the carnage of war.
Instead, placed as it is in a modern, democratic, prosperous, peace-loving nation, it constitutes a reminder of the abiding values on which our country is based, of the aspirations we share for other peoples, and of the actions we are prepared to undertake to make this a better world.
Reproduced under the fair dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/harper_stephen/foreignpolicyspeech.html
Foreign policy speech: 'Reviving Canadian leadership in the world'
CBC News Online | Oct. 6, 2006
by Stephen Harper
On Thursday, Oct. 5, 2006, Prime Minister Stephen Harper was in his hometown of Calgary to receive the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service from the Canadian branch of the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center. This is an excerpt from his speech on "Reviving Canadian leadership in the world."
As someone who has only served Canada as Prime Minister for eight months, I am not sure I've yet merited this recognition. But I am proud of the team I work with — the men and women who created the new Conservative Party of Canada, and what they've been able to accomplish in a fairly short period of time.
In those eight months, I have observed one thing in particular. If you tell people what you are going to, and then do it — Canadians respect that …
So what I want to talk to you about tonight is something I hope to accomplish in the longer term — if Canadians grant us the opportunity.
That objective is to make Canada a leader on the international stage. We want to ensure that we can preserve our identity and our sovereignty, protect our key interests and defend those values we hold most dear on the international scene.
If there is any one thing that has struck me for the short time I have been in this job, it is how critically important foreign affairs has become in everything that we do.
The globe is becoming a village. And virtually every significant challenge we face — economic, environmental, demographic, security, health, energy, you name it — contains an important, if not critical, international dimension.
I said I admire many people who have been presented with the Woodrow Wilson Award. But the person I want to talk about in this regard is Woodrow Wilson himself.
Now I'm going to ignore for a moment that he was a Democrat and the father of the income tax.
Woodrow Wilson was also an extraordinarily accomplished individual — an academic and a state governor who rose to become president of the United States, the only Ph.D ever to do so.
Most famously, he is known for his "Fourteen Points" — "the program for the world's peace," as he called it, and his advocacy of the first world-wide multilateral organization, the League of Nations.
He urged the United States to be a leader on the international stage and the American people to help "make the world safe for democracy." Today, it is easy to forget how radical a departure this represented from the historic U.S. foreign policy position of isolation.
Canada, by contrast, has never had the luxury or the illusion of isolationism.
While not among the ranks of world powers, we have long been a significant part of important and influential world bodies.
Our membership in the Commonwealth preserves the ties of the worldwide British Empire of which we were long a proud part.
Our position in the Francophonie reflects our cultural and historical ties to France, which remains a country of influence with global visibility.
We belong to the world's most important military alliance, NATO, due to our disproportionate role in the struggles against both fascism and communism.
We took the lead in the creation of NAFTA, our massive continental trading block.
And perhaps all of these things explain the seat we hold at the table of the G8, one of the world's most exclusive bodies.
All of these show that Canadians have always wanted a government that plays a role in the world.
But in a shrinking, changing, dangerous world, our government must play a role in the world.
And I believe that Canadians want a significant role — a clear, confident and influential role.
As proud citizens, they don't want a Canada that just goes along; they want a Canada that leads.
They want a Canada that doesn't just criticize, but one that can contribute.
They want a Canada that reflects their values and interests, and that punches above its weight.
Do we, as Canadians, have the desire and the ability to achieve all this?
Just take a look around this room; we're among Canadians who lead corporations that do business in every corner of the planet. And this is only one corner of our great country.
So, during the time in which I am privileged to serve as prime minister, I intend to make this a country that leads.
And if our government succeeds in achieving this goal, then perhaps some day I will be deserving of this prestigious award.
To accomplish such a goal will require more than membership in the various multilateral bodies I have just talked about. Previous governments have had all those club memberships, but they haven't always been leaders.
We must have more. We must also have guiding values and interests as a country on which we are prepared to act. And we must have the capabilities to act according to those priorities.
We must be committed and capable of protecting our vital interests, projecting our values of freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law, and preserving balance and fairness in the international forums to which we belong.
That is the direction in which our government is moving. Let me briefly take stock.
First, the NAFTA summit at Cancun gave us an opportunity to start talking frankly to and getting things done with our most important ally, customer and neighbour, the United States of America.
That paid off with an historic softwood lumber agreement and a better U.S. appreciation of Canada's growing contribution to continental energy security.
It paid off with some very gracious and grateful words for Canada from Secretary of State Rice on the fifth anniversary of 9/11, and, just recently, a reprieve from Congress on their passport plan.
Then, the G8 summit in Russia gave us an opportunity to tell the rest of the world about Canada's phenomenal potential as a producer of energy and natural resources.
On the way there, I stopped in London to tell British investors about energy, especially about the oil sands, and to let them know what you all have known for a long time: That Canada is the world's only growing producer of this strategic commodity with a secure, stable government.
Canada is, as I have said, an emerging energy superpower.
It is one reason why Canada will increasingly be a leader and why Alberta is a leader within it.
But here in Alberta, where that energy power can almost be felt, something else must be equally appreciated. That with power comes responsibility.
Given the environmental challenges that energy production presents, Alberta must also become a world leader in environmentally-responsible energy production.
On the way home from the UK, I stopped in Cyprus to make a symbolic contribution to the biggest overseas evacuation of Canadians in our history. Canada was ultimately able to evacuate as many of its citizens and as quickly as the great powers that have immensely more military reach.
That was a testament to the coordination and results of which the public service of Canada is truly capable — capabilities that were also on display when it broke up the alleged terrorist plot in Toronto earlier this year.
I also took a few days this summer to tour the North. The trip had a twofold purpose.
I wanted to encourage northerners to embrace the jobs and prosperity that will come with private sector energy resource development.
But, by visiting Alert and observing Operation Lancaster, I also wanted to underline our government's commitment to rebuilding our military and to asserting Canadian sovereignty — to asserting sovereignty over all of our territory, including the islands and waterways of our Arctic.
Asserting sovereignty means a presence. And let me assure you, we intend to be there.
At the Francophonie, we were able to stress our support for the UN Convention on Cultural Diversity, a document that reflects the unique history and eclectic identity of this country.
We were also able, in once again addressing the situation in the Middle East, to show that our international positions are not based on tailoring our views to the crowd we are in front of, but on sticking to principle and working to forge consensus.
And let me just briefly mention how our Fisheries Minister, the Honourable Loyola Hearn, did just that recently at the meetings of the North Atlantic Fisheries Organization, where, by standing firm and making clear we are prepared to act, he managed to get real progress on our goal of ending international over-fishing off the Grand Banks.
But one thing stands out above the rest. That was my visit to the United Nations.
In that forum, I addressed our role in the mission where our security interests, our values and our capabilities come squarely together.
Afghanistan.
Five years ago, that long-suffering country was ruled by the Taliban — brutal tyrants bent on rolling back any vestige of civilization.
Men lived in oppression; women in bondage; and children in ignorance.
Some might say that's not Canada's problem.
Well, it is. And September 11th, 2001, shattered any illusion that it isn't — the day when the Taliban were revealed as accomplices in the horrific attacks against innocent civilians on this continent, including on citizens of this country.
Canada and our allies joined the United Nations mission to meet the Taliban challenge at its source and eliminate it once and for all.
The mission is being conducted on several fronts. We are providing security to the Afghan people. We are helping them in reconstruction and development. We are working with them in building the foundations of a sustainable democracy. And we are delivering on all fronts.
A democracy has been put in place. Presidential, parliamentary and provincial elections have been held — and women now hold a quarter of the seats in the Afghan legislature.
The economy is growing. GDP has doubled in the last five years.
Education is spreading. In 2001 only 700,000 children were in school, and all of them were boys. Today 7 million kids are in school, and a third of them are girls.
Reconstruction is happening. With Canada's help, over 13,000 communities have started or completed new schools, medical facilities, and water, sewer and electrical systems.
But we all know it hasn't been easy. And it isn't going to be. Canadian Forces have the lead in Kandahar province, the stronghold of the Taliban, the toughest in the entire country.
The Canadian men and women who serve there are the best we have to offer. They have gone willing, knowing that not all of them will return. And when I went to Afghanistan and visited our troops, I saw — as anyone can see firsthand, there on the ground — just how dedicated, professional, skilled and courageous they are.
We have seen just how proud Canadians are of our soldiers and their families. And we have also seen how difficult it is to bear the sorrow of their losses. But, ladies and gentlemen, that is the price of leadership.
It is also the price of moving our world forward. I recently met with the leaders of Latvia and Romania. In my lifetime, these nations were stuck in what we all believed were hopeless futures of oppression and stagnation.
But we never gave up our opposition to the Soviet empire, and they never gave up hope, and today those countries are growing democracies, serving alongside us in Afghanistan.
When I look ahead a decade or so from now, I still have great hopes for that country and its place in the world. But it's not going to happen unless countries like Canada step up, make sacrifices and provide leadership.
That is not new for this country. That is how this country was built. We were not built by the services we use, but by the sacrifices we made. Or more accurately by the sacrifices, big and small, of our forbears.
This summer Laureen and I visited Vimy Ridge in northwest France, the scene of some of the most terrible fighting in the First World War. It's the last resting place for her great uncle, James Teskey, and literally thousands of young men like him.
Most died in a few short days, in a battle where Canadians, considered backwater colonials, led the successful final assault.
But the monument at Vimy Ridge is much more than a remembrance of a victory or a memorial to the carnage of war.
Instead, placed as it is in a modern, democratic, prosperous, peace-loving nation, it constitutes a reminder of the abiding values on which our country is based, of the aspirations we share for other peoples, and of the actions we are prepared to undertake to make this a better world.