moved that Bill C-295, an act to provide for the control of Canadian peacekeeping activities by Parliament and to amend the National Defence Act in consequence thereof, be read the second time and referred to a committee.
Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased today to have the opportunity to speak to Bill C-295, which I will refer to as the peacekeeping bill. It offers a golden opportunity for all members to rationalize and focus Canada's peacekeeping efforts. I am especially pleased that the House leader for the government affirmed his intention on April 6 to treat all private members' bills as free votes. This means that all members will be able to make up their minds purely on the merits of this legislative suggestion.
This is a breath of fresh air in the House. I sincerely hope members speaking to the bill today and those voting on it later will have taken the time to study it thoroughly. Free votes may mean a little extra work for individual members of Parliament but as an exercise in democracy free votes help to establish the credibility of the House.
Bill C-295 is a good idea, worthy of all party support because it would not cut off or even reduce Canada's peacekeeping role in the world. Rather, it would affirm and institutionalize the role of peacekeeping in Canada's foreign policy and strengthen Canada's place as a leader among the United Nations.
Neither would it reduce the power of the government to make decisions about the deployment of Canadian troops. The bill deals strictly with peacekeeping and allows cabinet full authority to act on a temporary basis. However, it also places the responsibility for our long term commitments squarely where it belongs, in the capable hands of the Canadian people through their members in the House of Commons.
At the moment there is no legislation governing Canada's peacekeeping effort. Legally peacekeeping is still regarded as sort of a side show, an informal duty that Canada undertakes almost as an afterthought. However, in reality peacekeeping has become one of the most visible aspects of the Canadian forces. Certainly Canada's international reputation hinges to a large and increasing degree on its peacekeepers.
However, the only legislation that acknowledges this reality is the National Defence Act which allows cabinet to place Canadian soldiers on active service and pay our soldiers as if they were at war. This is purely an administrative necessity and it does not even address the modern questions about peacekeeping that demand attention.
I quote from the defence policy review tabled last fall:
Defence policy cannot be made in private and the results simply announced-Canadians will not accept that, nor should they. Nor should the government commit our forces to service abroad without a full parliamentary debate and accounting for that decision. It is our expectation that, except in extraordinary circumstances, such a debate would always take place prior to any such deployment.
I agree wholeheartedly with this recommendation which was made by an all party committee of the House. I assume it should become parliamentary policy and I note the government allotted three hours on March 29 to debate the renewal of Canada's commitment in the former Yugoslavia. The government has thereby acknowledged that Parliament does have a role to play in making these important decisions.
Unfortunately the effectiveness of that role is questionable because the matter was not put to a vote on March 29. Although 20 members of the is House spoke to the issue that day, the input from those MPs was not as effective as it could have been because it was just a take note debate. The motion put before the House was non-votable. We have no idea of the consensus of the Canadian people. The debate was not brought to its logical conclusion. Some people have speculated the decision was finalized before the debate had begun.
Would it not have been better if at the end of that debate, where the pros and cons of the peacekeeping proposal had been discussed in this most public of forums, we had considered this issue important enough to stand up and be counted? Canadians deserve to know our position on this important subject. We are ready to move past the old ways of doing things where this House rubber stamps decisions which have been made in the bureaucracy. Canadians want and need assurance that it is their members of Parliament who actually make the decisions in Ottawa.
Failure to bring a debate to its proper conclusion on such an important topic as this results in a patchwork policy which does not seem to make sense. Bosnia is an example. The UN has 44,300 people on the ground from 38 nations. It is the largest UN mission ever. The operation began over three years ago and has continued at great expense and high risk to Canadians in a situation where neither side seems to appreciate the value of Canadian peacekeepers.
Last July I attended the funeral of Corporal Mark Isfeld, one of the Canadian soldiers killed by a land mine while performing his peacekeeping duties in the former Yugoslavia. His family and friends and all Canadians knew peacekeeping frequently means lives are put at risk. Mark was one of nine people who
have made the ultimate sacrifice in service to their country in that war torn zone.
Our peacekeepers are honoured to represent Canada on missions overseas and I am honoured to be represented by them. However, it needs to be said that the mission in Bosnia has no foreseeable end and it seems to have a diminishing hope of success.
I refer now to a different situation. A few weeks ago a Canadian, former Major General Lewis MacKenzie, investigated Canada's oldest peacekeeping effort. Canada has been in Cyprus for 30 years, since 1965. The original UN mandate was just three months. Three full decades later the UN is finally thinking of withdrawing, only because other nations are starting to mutiny. Canada, of course, soldiers on.
Both of these situations tax the very idea of reasonability. They also tax our resources and denigrate the reputation of the United Nations. At the same time we look at a nation like Rwanda where genocide was attempted last year, or Burundi where unrest is threatening to boil over again into mass slaughter, perhaps another attempt at genocide. However, the UN sits on its hands and Canada's hands are also bound in part because so many of its resources are committed in so many other places in the world.
The obvious disparities between these operations show that Canada's approach to our peacekeeping function is not rational. We lack an orderly process by which we can sit down together and weigh the increasing numbers of peacekeeping requests we are receiving. We need a way of ordering our priorities to make sound decisions about where to become involved, what to do when we get there, how much to spend and, most important, when to call it quits.
Major General MacKenzie made a good suggestion:
Perhaps what is required is a deadline. What if the UN were to say we will give you a set period of time, say three years. You sort your problem out during that period or we are out of here.
This is a celebrated peacekeeper saying we need a new mechanism for dealing with Canada's peacekeeping decisions. It certainly would have helped in the case of Cyprus. We need guidelines and mechanisms so that all Canadians whether they are taxpayers, men and women of the armed forces or members of Parliament will know what we are committing ourselves to when we go overseas.
The peacekeeping bill provides the mechanism we need. Let me describe the basic elements. It is a very simple bill, worthy of the support of all members of the House.
In summary it says that when Canada is approached by the United Nations to participate in a multinational effort the government should develop a peacekeeping plan and present it to the House by way of a motion.
The elements of that plan are very simple: estimate the cost of the mission, its location, its duration and its role. That is it. The House would debate it for less than five hours. It would pass the resolution and the mission would be in full force.
If the government had to act immediately it could do so by joining the mission without any debate and sending as large a contingent of troops and materiel as it needed to. A peacekeeping mission is carefully defined in this bill as more than 100 soldiers sent under a UN mandate for more than one month.
This means soldiers deployed with a UN mandate would not require legislation approval. The cabinet needs that authority and ability. It means that fewer than 100 Canadian forces personnel acting for more than a year would not constitute a mission. They as well could be sent by the cabinet.
A thousand soldiers on a mission lasting less than a month, something that we had to do quickly, would not require parliamentary approval.
When we get into major commitments for long periods of time Bill C-295 would come into play. Once Parliament has approved a peacekeeping plan that plan would become the mission's mandate. If the mandate expired the mission would automatically be over and the troops withdrawn. If a situation called for the mission to be extended that process is also contained in the bill. The government would simply come back to the House with amendments to the plan and pass a new resolution.
This simple process in many ways mirrors a letter I received last May from the Minister of National Defence which detailed the criteria for Canada's peacekeeping commitments. He said there must be an achievable mandate. The principal antagonists must agree to UN involvement. Are the lines of authority clear? Is the mission adequately funded? What is the risk for peacekeepers and the rules of engagement?
Laws are simply a codification of what is necessary and reasonable. The things the minister mentioned are both reasonable and necessary considerations. Now it is time we codified these requirements into a law that allows Parliament to have significant and effective input.
I can think of important benefits to this idea. The first is participation. Through the political process Canadians would decide Canada's priorities, where Canada should be involved around the world. There would be a special benefit for the government of the day in that it could lay before Parliament a peacekeeping plan from which it could gauge support for a mission before we actually made the commitment in the international arena.
Also, the debate would allow all political parties to endorse a proposal in an official way through a vote. Having endorsed a mission a party would be reluctant later to criticize a plan it had helped finalize.
The second benefit is preparedness and co-ordination. The government as well as our international partners would know beforehand exactly what Canada is prepared to do in each situation and other nations could prepare accordingly. Our national defence people could better prepare for a mission if they knew its parameters in advance.
The third benefit is budgetary. By putting a cost ceiling on all our missions we would know how much the country will allot for peacekeeping and in these days of tightening budgets the ability to fix our costs as much as possible ahead of time is vital.
If governments had to return to the House for more money the political hurdle this would pose in some cases would cause the government to be more careful about the money it spent and committed to in the first place.
Governments need to be held accountable for the money they spend and certainly the current government needs to recognize that the budget for peacekeeping is like other departmental spending plans for which they present estimates to the House. We simply must be able to keep to the budget allocated by Parliament.
Some people will argue political situations change so rapidly that Canada cannot make firm commitments ahead of time. I would answer that firm commitments ahead of time could in themselves positively affect the political and military decisions others will make.
Firm decisions will allow us to direct our circumstances and set our own course rather than have external events lead us around by the nose. As General MacKenzie implied, by giving generous but firm guidelines ahead of time, we may even influence warring factions to resolve their differences in a timely fashion.
In any case, the bill is flexible. It allows for the government to make corrections in midstream, to extend, for example, a peacekeeping mandate. Having said that, all of us elected to this House know our first duty is not to satisfy the wishes of other nations. The government's first duty is to satisfy the Canadian people that our foreign involvements are necessary and fiscally prudent before running around the world putting out other people's fires. For Canada's peacekeeping function to continue to be legitimate in the eyes of Canadians, it must pass the test of continuing public approval.
We also need a bill that touches on other areas of Canada's peacekeeping function. This bill does that. It refers to the command structure of Canadian forces and requires that our troops be placed under the command of other Canadians. As we know, a major complaint about the UN is the notoriously low quality of its commanders. We feel that Canadians, especially Canadian soldiers, will feel more secure with Canadian commanders.
Even here we have constructed this bill to allow some flexibility. Clause 6 states that cabinet may delegate that command structure if it wishes to another body for periods of six months at a time. At least cabinet would have to make a conscious decision to place our troops under someone else's care.
We also talk about the neutrality of our armed forces. Neutrality is a precious commodity in this world. Once we give our reputation away for neutrality it is very difficult to restore. Canada is known and welcomed around the world for its fairness, impartiality and even-handedness. We should not be seen to be installing and deposing governments, even non-democratic governments, at the behest of the UN. It is not our role to take political sides in political disputes.
Our peacekeeping task, our role, our function is to enforce ceasefire agreements and to deliver humanitarian aid, thereby earning the respect over the long term of all sides in the dispute rather than breaking the bounds of neutrality in a short-sighted way and turn half of a population against us. This is a delicate task. It can only be accomplished if our armed forces continue our traditional neutrality in peacekeeping roles.
There has been some question about the use of deadly force in peacekeeping situations, situations in which our peacekeepers have felt ashamed of themselves and deeply frustrated by their inability to protect themselves and others. My bill helps to resolve this problem by allowing our peacekeepers to use deadly force in self-defence, in defence of innocent civilians or to stop serious abuses of human rights where deadly force seems to be the only way to do it.
What is an army for? An army exists to pit force against force. That is its only purpose. Even peacekeepers are an army that moves physically into a dangerous area to provide a physical check on another armed force. But we fight a different battle than either of the antagonists. We are warriors stepping between other warriors in a battle for peace, risking everything in our striving to end war and deliver hope where little exists.
We cannot ask our soldiers to go into these types of situations completely unprotected. Although we must minimize our own use of deadly force, I feel it is justified in the situations I have just outlined where it will clearly forestall an immediate situation that is obviously worse. However, I acknowledge this is a difficult area.
Let me sum up by talking about Canada's identity. Canada is a young country. As such, its personality, if we want to call it that, is still developing. Different nations seem to be known for different things. When we think of Switzerland we naturally
think of neutrality. Germany is an industrial giant and Sweden is perhaps a classic welfare state.
What do people think of when they think of Canada? I would say that other nations long ago recognized Canada's peaceable nature, her natural co-operativeness and her concern for stability in the world. We offered a novel idea, that there is a third option between defeat and victory.
The UN requested our assistance as peacekeepers. Canada did well and the public supported it. We have continued to respond proudly and generously for 40 years. In doing so, we have defined our own nature, shaped our identity and become comfortable with our role in the international community.
We are peacekeepers. It is a role that receives applause around the world. A peacekeeping bill would formalize this positive definition of Canada. It would cement it in the minds and hearts of Canadians. I can think of no more noble role than being a peacekeeper, no higher legislative aim than to entrench this function as a formal element of Canada's identity.
It is said that we reap what we sow. If that is true, and I think it is, what kind of harvest do we reap, what kind of fruit grows when peace is sown? Peaceable people co-operate more. The food of peace is better health, prosperity, long life, happy relations, improved working conditions. To strive for peace is to strive for all that is necessary for humanity to thrive on this planet.
Finally, in addition to those tangible benefits of peace, the fruit of peace is also hope. That precious seed of hope is sown in peace by those who make peace. I trust that all members of the House would see fit to formalize Canada's peacekeeping identity by voting to submit the peacekeeping bill to committee for consideration.