Mr. Speaker, I welcome the opportunity today to speak in this debate on Canada's participation in the NATO forces as part of the Dayton peace plan.
As you know, Mr. Speaker, on November 21 the three main belligerents agreed to end a conflict that has been raging for more than three years in the former Yugoslavia. The agreement which, for the time being, exists only on paper, was signed in Dayton, Ohio under the auspices of the Americans.
As part of this peace plan, a peace implementation force is to be deployed in the former Yugoslavia, mainly in Bosnia. The implementation force will consist of nearly 60,000 soldiers. This military force will be under NATO command. Most members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, with the exception of Canada, Denmark and Iceland which has no armed forces, have agreed to send troops for the military operation that is included in the Dayton agreements. In fact, Canada has yet formally to advise its allies whether it intends to participate in these operations and if so, what its contribution will be.
That is why we are having a debate today in this House. The Liberal government claims it wishes to consult Parliament before making a decision on Canada's participation in this operation.
In the past few weeks it has been clear the Liberal government does not play by the rules. In fact, we have a distinct impression of déjà vu.
The government has already made up its mind. This was obvious from a report in The Citizen on Friday, December 1, quoting National Defence spokesman Stéphane Corbin that no decision had been made on the Canadian contribution. However, Canada's commitment is clear.
The Prime Minister already made it perfectly clear that Canada would send troops. On November 23, the Prime Minister stated that certain number of soldiers would be involved, but the extent of our contribution would depend on what we could do and what we would be asked to do. In this statement the leader of the government showed how little respect he has for this House, whose prerogatives he should be the first to defend, but he seems quite incapable of doing so.
This becomes even more obvious when we realize that the Prime Minister already agreed with UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali on the duration of Canada's participation in this NATO mission. According to their understanding any country that would take part in the implementation force would be committed until
peace had been restored in the former Yugoslavia, whether it took six months or three years.
Making such a commitment without consulting Parliament, despite the changeable situation and the possible consequences, is very alarming for the future and shows a flagrant lack of consideration for the role of Parliament.
Despite condemning this kind of behaviour, the official opposition has a duty to fulfil its role in this House and to act in line with its principles and ideals. Not only because of our responsibility to our fellow citizens, but also because of our responsibility to the international community.
For these reasons and despite the partisan politics that can divide us in this House, the Bloc Quebecois supports the government's commitment to send troops to the former Yugoslavia so that the Dayton peace agreement can be implemented.
Despite its flaws, this agreement may be our last chance to end the conflict that has been raging for years in that region of the Balkans. Even if Canada's participation appears to lack public support and involves risks for our soldiers, we must not remain insensitive to what is occurring outside our borders.
For several years now, Bosnia-Hercegovina has been ravaged by a war to which we too often remain indifferent, because television too often shows us only nameless faces that resemble millions of others. Yet, each of the people living in the region torn apart by this deadly conflict enjoyed an apparently normal life before all this started. Men, women and children have seen their lives turned upside down by this protracted, seemingly endless conflict. We have a moral obligation to them, because our responsibility is not restricted to the national territory of Quebec and Canada.
For most of their histories, Quebec and Canada have been spared from violent conflicts. Although we have long enjoyed a very enviable standard of living, we should not forget that others outside our borders are suffering and need our help. Given its status as an affluent nation, Canada has a responsibility to help those who are the innocent victims of war.
In response to our Reform colleagues, I must point out that we should stop looking at outside conflicts or problems as having nothing to do with our domestic problems. In this world of increasing globalization and integration, it must be understood that international problems are also our domestic problems, and that our domestic problems are also international problems.
International developments have a direct impact on Canada and Quebec. When dealing, for example, with population movements, missed business opportunities, etc., it must be understood that developments abroad have an impact on our domestic policies.
Our goal is not to interfere in another country's internal affairs. We will not be deciding for them what is good or bad.
Our responsibility is limited to preventing those who did not ask for this conflict in the first place from suffering and being killed. So far, this responsibility has been carried out through the UNPROFOR, as part of a peacekeeping operation. However, measures taken to date were unsuccessful in putting an end to the conflict and its disastrous consequences.
Two weeks ago, the three main belligerents unexpectedly agreed to stop fighting. But for the peace plan to work, they need our help. The help they need from us does, however, involve risks much higher than those faced by Canadian troops who took part in UNPROFOR peacekeeping operations in the past three and a half years, no matter what our defence minister says; he who would have us believe that the type of military intervention contemplated is no riskier than the peacekeeping mission started in 1991.
In fact, the risks associated with the military operation arising from the Dayton agreements are higher because the nature of the operation to be carried out by NATO is completely different from the one carried out by the UNPROFOR. The operations lead by the UN in the former Yugoslavia since 1991 were conducted under Chapter VI of the UN Charter, which allows only for the pacific settlement of disputes between parties concerned.
Article 33 is quite clear on this matter. It reads as follows: "1. The parties to any dispute, the continuance of which is likely to endanger the maintenance of international peace and security, shall, first of all, seek a solution by negotiation, enquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, resort to regional agencies or arrangements, or other peaceful means of their own choice".
Then: "2. The Security Council shall, when it deems necessary, call upon the parties to settle their dispute by such means". This is what articles 33.1 and 33.2 say.
But what we are debating today is not a simple peacekeeping operation, in which acts of aggression, while always possible, are unlikely. We are talking about a major military operation designed to force peace on belligerents. To implement the Dayton agreements, our troops will be mobilized in accordance with Chapter VII of the UN Charter.
Under the provisions of this chapter, armed forces under UN command, or the delegated command of NATO in this case, are allowed to use all necessary means to restore peace and fulfil their mission. This kind of mission exposes our troops to much higher risks, as they are more likely to see fire. Of course, they will be able to retaliate, but they would definitely be exposed to much more brutal attacks.
It is the first time that such an operation is led by NATO since the Korean war, more than 40 years ago. Therefore, we must ensure that our participation is not tainted by an aggression that could jeopardize Canada's credibility regarding peacekeeping operations. The government must inform Quebecers and Canadians of the possible consequences of such a mission. We have the right to know what dangers may lie ahead for our troops.
For that reason, the Canadian government must immediately tell us what its policy will be in the months to come regarding that issue. Unlike what occurred when our troops were sent to the former Yugoslavia as part of UNPROFOR, the Bloc Quebecois feels that, this time, Ottawa must takes its place and stop being meek. As you know, throughout our participation in UNPROFOR, the number of Canadian troops remained around 2,000, one of the largest contingents after those of France and the United Kingdom.
Yet, the federal government was not able to ensure Canada's active involvement in the political decision making process to manage the conflict. In spite of its strong participation in UNPROFOR, our country was not included in the international contact group set up in April 1994 to find a solution to the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. That group included the United States, France, the United Kingdom and Germany. Given its implication, Canada fully deserved to be a member of that group.
Considering the large number of Canadian troops in the former Yugoslavia, we expected the federal government to take initiatives and propose solutions as to how to solve the conflict and end it. However, as we know, no such initiatives were taken.
Once it was decided to send humanitarian assistance and troops to maintain peace in the former Yugoslavia, Canadian diplomacy was content to let things happen. For these reasons, although we support Canada's participation to help implement the Dayton peace plan, we must be careful and avoid repeating past mistakes.
Therefore, we must immediately take a close look at all the issues relating to Canada's participation in the peace process in the former Yugoslavia. First, it is obvious to the Bloc Quebecois that Canada's participation in this NATO mission ought not to exceed the size of its UNPROFOR contingent, about 2,000 at its highest point.
Canada must make its intention of continuing to be actively involved in the peace process clear to the various stakeholders. I would like to take this opportunity to point out the regretfully low contribution of our European allies, with the exception of France, Great Britain and Germany, to this military force to be set up as part of the Dayton agreements. As for our own participation, it ought to be substantial enough to enable our diplomacy to play an active role in coming months.
The Bloc, however, has difficulty seeing how Canada could send any more soldiers to Bosnia-Hercegovina. Over the past three years, Canada has spent $517 million on its UNPROFOR participation and on humanitarian aid for the former Yugoslavia, that comes out to nearly $172 million a year. According to the Minister of Defence, the annual cost of sending between 50 and 3,500 Canadian soldiers to Bosnia-Hercegovina, however, would range between $2 million and $75 million.
In the same breath, the Minister of Defence admits that the cost of taking part in a NATO mission is twice as high as for an equivalent UN mission. The Bloc's extreme scepticism about the Minister of Defence's figures is therefore understandable. That is why I am demanding, on behalf of Quebec's and Canada's taxpayers, that the federal government provide a clear figure for the expenses that would be incurred in sending troops to Bosnia-Hercegovina, and do so even before they leave this country.
Moreover, Ottawa must also provide Canadians and Quebecers with answers on the composition of the Canadian intervention. The public wants to know, not only how many troops will be going, but whether these will be only combat troops or troops involved in logistics and support.
There is no doubt in the minds of the Bloc members that, judging from our past experience in peacekeeping operations, Canada ought to assume tasks more closely related to surveillance and communications, both being areas in which we have recognized expertise. In other words, only a small proportion of our troops should consist of combat troops.
The public also has the right to know how long our troops will be in Bosnia-Hercegovina. According to the Department of National Defence, allied chiefs of staff have agreed on rules for troop deployment for a period of 12 months. What if the government wants to extend the mandate of our troops? Will Parliament be asked to do so two days before their mandate expires, as was the case last April, when it was asked to renew the mandate of our peacekeepers with UNPROFOR? And will the Canadian government once again have made up its mind, as it did today, before the matter is tabled in Parliament? Will it show the same lack of consideration for the people of Quebec and Canada?
Will Canada have a political say in how our soldiers are used? This matter is an important one for the Bloc Quebecois. We realize that Canada has a moral obligation to participate in the implementation of the Dayton agreements. However, this obligation should not obscure the fact that we also have a responsibility to the public and to the soldiers who will be deployed over there. The Bloc Quebecois feels that the Canadian government should at all
times have the right to withdraw its troops from this mission. Ottawa should provide assurances to that end as well as a plan for emergency withdrawal.
According to the latest news, France, Belgium and Canada wanted a say in operations in case of incidents on the ground, but the United States objected.
It seems the matter has been resolved, but no one knows what transpired. The Canadian government must answer these questions before sending a single soldier to Bosnia.
Today, the public does not know how many of our soldiers will be sent over there, what role they will play or to which international division they will belong. Although these questions are important and deserve clear answers, the public is even more concerned about the risks to which our soldiers will be exposed.
There are also a number of other aspects involved in the implementation of the Dayton peace agreements, and I am referring to the judgment of war criminals. As far as the Bloc Quebecois is concerned, the war crimes tribunal set up by the United Nations must pursue its mission fully and independently. According to my party, we cannot condone amnesty for those who are accused of war crimes, including Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic.
The Dayton agreements indicate that these two individuals are to be excluded from political life, and rumour has it that these "warlords" may benefit from some kind of amnesty. Can the Government of Canada tell us whether it intends to insist that our allies and the international community respect the mandate of the international criminal court? We consider it would be unacceptable otherwise.
If the Dayton accords can be implemented without too much problem, we will be morally obliged to help the people of the former Yugoslavia rebuild their country. We will have to see what we can do, from an economic point of view. So the federal government should take a clear stand immediately on the role it intends to play at the meeting of the World Bank in Brussels to come up with funds for Bosnia-Hercegovina. Similarly, we might ask ourselves whether Canada will help in the expunging of Bosnia-Hercegovina's foreign debt, given the lamentable state of its own public finances. These are the questions that warrant our attention, and the position of the Canadian government should be clarified as quickly as possible.
In closing, you will permit me to once again express my regret at the fact that the federal government had decided, even before holding this debate, that it would send Canadian troops to former Yugoslavia. In so doing, as it did with the renewal of Canada's participation in UNPROFOR in May, the government is demonstrating a lack of respect for Canadians.
We would like the government to again consult this House within a year on whether we should pursue our involvement, and we would hope that it would not do so within a couple of hours of renewing the mandate.
Finally, I would like to point out that, in view of the change in our soldiers' mandate in Bosnia-Hercegovina, it would appear vital the government keep open the option of withdrawing our troops at any time. If the NATO mission passes without incident, so much the better. However, should the situation worsen, the government should keep all its options open including that of bringing our troops home.
This last eventuality should not be taken lightly, because again last Saturday, General Ratko Mladic, the leader of the Bosnian Serbs, said that the Dayton accords on Sarajevo should be renegotiated and that the Serbs would never agree to being governed by what they call the "butchers". A short while ago, the American general, John Shalikashvili, said the following on the NATO mission in Bosnia-Hercegovina as well:
"The mission will be tough, there is no doubt about it, and we have to be prepared for casualties".
The federal government will soon be sending our troops to Bosnia-Hercegovina as part of a mission to impose peace, which will be neither fun nor entertaining. The federal government must therefore be fully aware and act accordingly, because the lives of our soldiers are at stake. Ottawa must also get busy about other aspects of this mission, including proceedings against those guilty of war crimes.
The government may rest assured that the Bloc will be watching carefully and will follow the situation closely to ensure that the interests of our soldiers and, of course, of the people of Bosnia are looked after.