By Peyton Vaughan Lyon
March 4, 2013
This article is an update of a study of the Canada Israel
Committee (CIC) published in the Journal of Canadian Studies, 1992-3. It
benefited by extensive comments from Professors John Sigler, Joseph Debanné,
David Farr and Diana Ralph, and Rt. Hon Robert Stanfield, Ian Watson, and
Bahija Reghai. I have discussed the Israel Lobby with about 20 foreign affairs
officials, 2 former Prime Ministers, 3 former Secretaries of State for External
Affairs, 8 Members of Parliament, 6 Senators, and 3 officials of the
Canada-Israel Committee.
MARCH 2010
Canada’s relations with the Arab/Muslim world are second in
importance and difficulty only to its relationship with the United States. The
one serious threat to Canadian citizens now stems from the mounting anger of
Arabs and other Muslims, fomented largely by Israel’s long-standing occupation
of Palestine. The Mid-East conflict has for sixty years been the principal
issue on the agenda of the UN General Assembly, a body in which Canadians like
to shine. Trade with the Middle East, while modest, is largely in manufactured
goods, the sort favoured by Canadian exporters.
Canada’s foreign policy, however, fails to reflect these
concerns. Its votes in the UN General Assembly and other international bodies
are closer in support of Israel than those of any other nation apart from the
United States and its five Pacific satellites. Prime Minister Harper’s personal
statements are more biased towards Israel than those of any other leader (1)
This imbalance does not accord with the advice of the men
and women employed by Canada to determine and implement its interests in the
Middle East. It is also opposed by an increasing number of churches, unions,
and other bodies concerned with peace and justice in Palestine.
Who makes Canada’s Mid-East policy? A ranking of influence
by a panel of foreign affairs officials placed the Canadian Jewish Community
first at
compared to 5.40 for each of the Prime Minister and the Department of External Affairs. The Canadian/Arab Community at 1.80 was ranked sixteenth out of the eighteen estimated influence inputs. (2)
Although the Arab Community has become better organized in
recent years, interviews with senior officials and case studies suggest that
there has been little change in this ranking.
There is of course nothing illegal or immoral about lobbies,
even those operating in the interest of foreign entities. A significant number
of ethnic groups do in fact lobby for their countries of origin. (3)
Canada’s Israel lobby is simply by far the most powerful and
effective. It has become customary to refer to it as “the Lobby”, and I shall
follow that practice. The Lobby claims to act on all Canada-Israel matters on
behalf of an estimated two- thirds of the three hundred and fifteen thousand
Canadians of Jewish origin. (4)
For obvious reasons, the American-Israel lobby is far
larger, more powerful, and better known than its Canadian counterpart. (5)
There are further significant differences and I shall begin
with them. American Jews number about three percent of the population whereas
the Canadian equivalent is a more modest one percent. American Jews, having
arrived earlier in North America, are more integrated into the general
population and less united in support of their government’s Mid-East policy.
Canadian Jews, in the words of Professors Taras and Weinfeld, “are more
Jewish.” Other authorities have said they are more conservative. (6)
“Is there,” asked Gerald Caplan, another prominent Jew, “any act of Israel that will shame the leaders of Canadian Jewry into saying enough is enough?” (7)
The biggest difference in the tactics followed by the two
lobbies lies in their degrees of openness and use of threats. Because the role
of Congress in making foreign policy is much greater than that of Parliament,
and party discipline is weaker, the American lobby focuses on individual
members of Congress, none of whom can take refuge behind a party line. Because
cabinet solidarity matters more in Ottawa, the Canadian Lobby makes a greater
effort to focus on every minister.
Lobbying, moreover, is more acceptable in the American political culture and can be more open and hard hitting. A reputation for wealth, ruthlessness and success is in fact an asset whereas in Canada lobbies operate more discreetly and soft- pedal their influence.
American elections are more frequent than in Canada; this
makes raising funds more difficult, thus increasing the vulnerability of
candidates to lobby pressure. Lobbying in the United States, however, is
subject to greater legal restriction than in Canada. One authority goes so far
as to say that, because of tighter organization, it is more effective in
Canada. (6)
.
.
All in all, lobbying in each country is probably about equal
in effectiveness. Elections afford each Lobby the greatest opportunity to
exercise influence. Although most Jewish Americans have voted Democratic, and
Canadian Jews Liberal, neither are formally aligned and votes can be swung if a
party adopts what might appear to many Jews to be an anti-Israel approach.
ED Noor: Although my first instinct upon reading
the above is to roll my eyes and say “Duh!”
I will sit on it and instead remind you, Dear Reader, that our dear
friends have no allegiance to anything that does not serve their interest and
even then, once it is devoured the husk is cast aside.
Jimmy Carter, in making an exceptional effort to bring peace
to the Middle East, angered Israel and its American Lobby. As a result, Carter
lost almost half his Jewish vote between 1976 and 1980, a loss which
contributed to his defeat in the 1980 election.
Sydney Spivak, chairman of the Canadian Lobby’s 1998 policy conference, threatened a similar outcome when Joe Clark, then Secretary of State for External Affairs, criticized Israel’s suppression of Palestinian rights.
A particular triumph for the American lobby was the defeat
in 1984 of Charles Percy, chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. As Tom Dine, executive director of AIPAC (the American Israel Public
Affairs committee) ~ the predominant US-Israel lobby ~ boasted to a Toronto
audience,
“All the Jews in America gathered to defeat Percy. And the American politicians got the message.” (8)
A comparable Canadian case was that of Dr. Frank Epp, an outstanding scholar and President of Waterloo University. In 1979, Epp ran as a Liberal in what was considered the safe Liberal seat in Waterloo. However, his desire for a more balanced approach to the Israel-Palestine conflict was falsely depicted by the Lobby as “anti-Semitic” ~ a charge the Lobby frequently uses to discredit critics of Israeli government policies.
In Epp’s case, the attack culminated in a full-page advertisement on election eve. In a constituency containing several thousand Jews, Epp was defeated by a mere 155 votes.
In the Toronto riding of Saint-Paul’s, with about 20,000
Jewish voters, the 1979 election featured a Conservative promise to move the
Canadian embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The Conservative candidate, Ron
Atkey, won. In the election the following year ~ after Prime Minister Clark had
abandoned his promise to move the embassy ~ the seat swung back to John Roberts
of the Liberals.
In 1984 a Manitoba court ruled that unfair lobbying could
have caused the defeat of Conservative candidate Luba Fedorkiw in Winnipeg
North. Fedorkiw accused the Jewish advocacy group, B’nai Brith, of having
defeated her by suggesting she was anti-Semitic and leveling the false charge
of “Jew-baiting” against her. She was awarded $400,000 in damages.
The Lobby concentrates on the ten constituencies where most
of the Jewish and Arab/Muslim populations are located. Proportionally more
Jews, however, go to the polls and are more likely to make a difference. It
should also be noted that a substantial minority of the Arabs are Maronite
Christians who are indifferent to the fate of the majority of Arabs.
A trickle of Jews had begun to enter Canada early in the
18th century but was still insignificant in 1897 when the founding of the
Zionist Movement augmented the political significance of the Jews in both
Europe and North America. A few influential Jews made individual approaches
to government leaders to gain permission for more Jews to enter Canada. They
achieved little success.
In the 1930s, Prime Minister Mackenzie King’s government
began shutting the door to Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany. King’s deputy
minister for immigration even opined that “None is too many” and on the eve of
the Second World War, a boatload of the refugees was denied permission to land.
(9)
.
.
This outrageously racist attitude appears to have been
widely shared by the public as well as the prime minister.
The war, however, and the revelation of the slaughter of six
million Jews [sic], transformed the situation. Sympathy for the Jews became
nearly universal. Any criticism of the newly-created state of Israel came to be
branded “anti- Semitic”, one of the ugliest terms in our political vocabulary.
Canada’s prominent role in the creation of Israel was accepted with little room
for protest (10)
The Israel Lobby took formal shape in 1967 when the three
major Canadian Jewish organizations, the Canadian Jewish Congress, the Canadian
Zionist Organization and B’nai Brith, established the Canada- Israel Committee
(CIC) to act on behalf of Israel.
This is an umbrella organization with no individual members.
It was intended to monopolize public statements on Canada-Israel matters but
officials of B’nai Brith, notably Frank Dimant, frequently disregard this rule.
CIC policy is determined by a 35-person council representing the founding
organizations and several smaller bodies based in the large cities. It meets
about once a year, its executive much more often.
The CIC reported in 2000 that it had a seven-person office
in Ottawa to deal with the federal government and another seven persons in
Toronto to conduct media relations and research; one person was stationed in Montreal
to handle regional lobbying; and a further two in Jerusalem. The CIC did not
reveal its budget but it was estimated to be at least $11,000,000.
The Lobby certainly commands far greater wealth than opposing entities, and far easier access through its extensive business connections to members of the cabinet and other senior decision-makers.
Representatives of Arab/Muslim groups are rarely
able to secure senior- level appointments in government while these are more
attainable for the Lobby. Changes in Canada’s Middle East policy go to Cabinet,
while other foreign policy changes do not necessarily need to meet this
requirement, one that clearly favours the Lobby.
The Lobby adopted a more effective if heavy-handed approach
in 2002 when a group of exceptionally wealthy Canadian Jews reached the
conclusion that the CIC was failing to give Israel adequate support.
Led by Israel (Izzy) Asper, Gerald Schwartz, Heather
Reisman, and Brent Belzberg, the group established the Canadian Council for
Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA). This council raises substantially greater
funds than other Jewish lobby groups and employs professional lobbyists.
Although professing to collaborate with the CIC, B’nai Brith and the Canadian
Jewish Congress, the new body was not welcomed by them. One senior CIC official
complained that the CIJA is “a group of self- appointed persons who have very
little linkage with the Jewish (grass roots), and who have their own private
agendas.” (11) When the councils differ over
policy, it is the CIJA ~ the one with the “big bucks” ~ that generally
prevails.
In its first year, the CIJA sponsored several conferences
and more than doubled the number of sponsored “study” visits to Israel. They
included, among others, 23 federal politicians with spouses and seven
university presidents. The CIJA claimed to have won the ear of those who make
decisions, and thus gets credit for a sharp shift towards Israel in Canada’s
international posture.
The Lobby’s tactics are not unlike those of other lobbies.
It supports Canadians who support Israel and criticizes those who don’t. It
caters to decision-makers who seem open to persuasion. It addresses
articles and letters to the media. It supplies information to journalists,
provides speakers, and sponsors seminars and conferences as well as subsidizing
tours of Israel. The Lobby’s primary attention, of course, is paid to the
officials and politicians who make or influence the decisions of interest to
Israel. They are entertained and briefed frequently. As one deputy minister put
it, they are “all over us, from minister to desk officer.” The Arab- Canadians,
he explained, do much the same, but the Lobby “does it better”. (12)
He could have added that Jewish-Canadians have easier access
to high places. The Lobby does not employ explicit threats but knows that MPs
and others can count, and the fate of Frank Epp has intimidated many others.
Libby Davies, the NDP member for Vancouver-East, says MP’s live in what she calls “a climate of fear” on issues dealing with Israel-Palestine. (13)
The Lobby also seeks to shape the future by extensive
activity in the universities. Officials are placed in all the major
institutions to foster Hillel clubs that promote communal sentiment among Jews
and beyond by means of talks and debates. A separate body, ”StandWithUs”,
provides students with financial assistance to gain training in how to fight
what the Lobby considers “anti-Israel” actions. Its activity has contributed to
serious strife and extensive publicity in two universities.
In 2002, at Concordia, the administration blocked Arab and
Muslim students from attending a planned speech by Benjamin Netanyahu, the
right-wing Israeli leader. This resulted in anger over perceived
discrimination that led to a riot of 2,000 protesters. The speech was subsequently
cancelled. At York university, in February 2009, the administration itself
fostered turbulence by excessive measures to halt peaceful pro-Palestinian
demonstrations. (14)
In other universities, notably Toronto, McMaster, Ottawa,
and Carleton, the Lobby has backed the administrations in their attempts to ban
pro-Palestine activities such as the annual Israeli Apartheid Week.
Professors are prominent among the Canadians treated in
whole or in part to “study” visits to Israel. About a dozen such visits have
been partially sponsored each year by the “Canadian Professors for Peace in the
Middle East” (CPPME), an organization professing to be neutral and sponsored in
large part by the Social Science Research Council, a body financed from the
federal government treasury. The Israel portion of the CPPME “study” visits,
however, is sponsored by the World Zionist Organization, and members are likely
to be expelled if they fail to accept the party line. (15)
The Lobby professes independence but has solicited and
obtained advice from Israeli officials. Former Israeli Ambassador Alan Baker,
who finished his four-year posting in 2008, was exceptionally bold in his
public statements of Israeli policy. (16)
That is in line with an ordinary ambassadorial function. However,
Baker went a step further and told Jewish Canadians how they should manage
their affairs. For example, he urged the Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC) in
public to pass a by-law that would make its relationship to Israel advocacy
“professional, serious and practical” and, implicitly, less democratic.
The overall success of the Lobby is best illustrated by
Canada’s votes in the annual UN General Assembly’s assessment of the 60-year
long Mid- East crisis. The Canadian delegates have often been embarrassed when
the lights on the score panel reveal their country to be one of a minority of
eight, along with Israel, the United States and its five Pacific satellites,
voting against any resolutions deemed critical of Israel and its policies.
Even Britain displays stronger criticism of Israel’s illegal
occupation of Palestinian territories despite the fact that the U.K. generally
tries to stay in line with American policy.
After his retirement, William Barton, Canadian ambassador to
the United Nations from 1976 to 1979, expressed the dismay characteristic of
Canadian representatives:
“We were generally identified along with the United States as the most pro-Israel delegation in the UN … most of our delegates felt that this was not in the best Canadian interest.” (17)
Barton elaborated that Canada had voted not on the merits of
the case but for political considerations determined in Ottawa. (18) Under Prime Minister Harper, Canada has
further hardened its opposition to the majority of UN members’ criticism of
Israel’s occupation of Palestine.
Canada has also stood out in the two UN conferences on
racism held in Durban. At the first, it denounced and then cast a solitary
negative vote against the majority resolution in the Durban conference. At the
second, its opposition was made even more emphatic by refusing to attend.
Canada’s bias is further demonstrated by its solitary
negative position in the Human Rights Council, and by refusing to accept the
International Court of Justice’s ruling by a 14-1 vote that the wall being
constructed by Israel, partly on Palestinian land, is illegal. The wall
effectively cuts off one part of the West Bank from the other, dividing
families, villages and farms.
Earlier, Canada had been the first to suspend aid to
Palestine after its democratic election resulted in victory for Hamas, the
radical party most critical of Israel. Canada’s tilt towards Israel is also
evident in conferences of La Francophonie where it has been the single
participant to vote against a resolution favouring Palestine’s right to declare
independence without waiting for negotiations with Israel.
Canada was even slower than the US to recognize the right of
the PLO to speak for the Palestinians. When it did, it did so with a minimum of
cordiality. Canada continued to show marked favouritism towards Israel. The
president of Israel, for example, was accorded the rare honour of an invitation
to address a joint session of both Houses of Parliament, whereas it was only
after a struggle that a PLO official was invited to speak to a Senate
committee.
Canada’s official rhetoric fails to recognize that the
Palestinians and Jews are equal in humanity. Its formal statements of
objectives in the Arab-Israel dispute regularly lead off with “the security,
well-being and rights” of Israel, but not of the Arab countries. Israeli
casualties are presented in more tragic terms than those of Arabs. Palestinian
suicide bombings are characterized as cowardly and despicable while Israeli war
crimes, such as the massacre of over one hundred Lebanese civilians in Qana in
1996 and the killing of many hundreds of civilians during Israel’s invasion of
Gaza in 2008-2009, are passed over lightly or ignored. Prime Minister Harper
and other ministers habitually refer to Israel as an “ally” which it is not
formally, and which implies that another is an “enemy”.
Arab-Muslim governments and the PLO do heed Canada’s UN
voting pattern and official statements. Even before Canada recognized the PLO
at the ambassadorial level, lesser officials had engaged in informal chats with
PLO observers, helping them understand US statements and how best to respond to
them.
In the view of Palestinians, however, such behaviour did not
excuse Canada’s habitual pro-Israel posture, as its then foreign minister,
Peter Mackay, discovered during his first ministerial-level conversations in
Palestine in 2007. Arab extremists, moreover, increased their threats against
Canadian lives, and Canada was specifically cited as a prime target in Al-Qaeda
communiqués. Although Canada has not suffered the loss of life to terrorism
inflicted on the US, Britain and Spain, the RCMP have laid charges against four
young Arab Canadians believed to have been plotting attacks on Canadian
buildings.
The clearest success of Canada’s Israel lobby was the cancellation
in 1970 of Canada’s invitation to the UN to hold in Toronto a major conference
on combating crime. All three levels of government had favoured the invitation
until it was realized that, according to UN rules, the PLO would be entitled to
attend as an observer. The Ontario and Toronto governments then reversed their
acceptance and the issue became heated in Ottawa.
Jewish-Canadians were not alone in thinking that it would be
abhorrent to receive “terrorists” at a conference on the prevention of crime.
Threats of violence against PLO observers, even one of assassination, were
heard in Lobby circles and the police worried about the measures required to
guarantee conference security. The Department of External Affairs (DEA)
continued its battle in order to honour Canada’s commitment to the
international community but lost. The conference was held in Geneva with little
ado. At one stage the cabinet had decided to proceed with the conference but it
then reversed its position.
One of Trudeau’s senior cabinet ministers at the time has speculated that this resulted from a call from “Montreal” threatening to cut the substantial Jewish contribution to the Liberal’s national fund. The minister added that he had never seen Trudeau so agitated. (19)
A similar reversal came under a Conservative government in
1988 when Joe Clark was Secretary of State for External Affairs. In an address
to a Canada-Israel Committee banquet, Clark joined most other governments in
condemning Israel’s breaches of international law in its suppression of the
first Intifada in the West Bank and Gaza. Especially provocative was his
complaint that Israel had manipulated food supplies to exert pressure, and his
tribute to the peaceful disposition of the three Arab countries he had just visited.
This was taken to imply that they were more interested in peace than Israel. The conference was outraged and responded with booing, a partial walkout and the singing of the Israeli national anthem. Loud applause greeted the suggestion from the chair that revenge would come at the next elections.
Prime Minister Mulroney, who had not read the text in
advance, hastened to inform Jewish leaders that Clark had spoken only for
himself. Clark hurried to address a Jewish-Canadian audience to assure the
“community” that Canadian policy had not changed and that Canada would
“protect, defend, and endorse the State of Israel forever.” Such an
extraordinary assurance, combined with a lack of progress towards a more
even-handed treatment of the Palestinians, did little to appease the Lobby in
its attitude towards the Department of External Affairs and its minister. Even
though the public response to Clark’s address was favourable, his successors
were cautious when they recalled the anger that had swept through much of
Canadian Jewry.
A questionable Lobby victory came in the general election of
2008. The Liberal leader, Stéphane Dion, ordered a duly nominated candidate in
Winnipeg, Lesley Hughes, to step down, claiming that she had expressed
anti-Semitic views in an article written a decade earlier. Dion explained,
along with a spokesman for the Canadian Jewish Congress, that he was acting
under pressure from B’nai Brith. Hughes, however, had no difficulty
demonstrating that the article in question was in no sense anti-Semitic and
that her record over the years had shown consistent support for valid Jewish
interests. The public overwhelmingly endorsed Hughes. (20)
Another revealing incident occurred in 1991 when Norman
Spector was appointed Ambassador to Israel to replace Michael Bell, an
experienced diplomat who had barely completed half his term. The reason for
Spector’s posting, offered by both Prime Minister Mulroney and Spector, was
that there had been a policy against posting Jews as ambassador to Israel. The
appointment was said to be “affirmative action” to remedy this discrimination.
In fact, there had never been any such policy (21)
but the appointment certainly pleased the Lobby. In Tel Aviv, Spector explained
to a delegation from the Canadian Jewish Congress that his function was to
repair the damage created by his minister, Joe Clark, because of the latter’s
criticism of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
Spector pushed through a free trade agreement with Israel
that had been strongly opposed by DEA and the Department of Trade and Commerce.
Since it was the only such agreement in the area at the time, and had only
modest trade implications, it was regarded by Israel’s Arab neighbours as a
strictly political measure and was resented by them. Back in Ottawa, Spector
falsely accused his DEA colleagues of having lied in order to frustrate the
negotiation of the agreement.
Another trade issue had a different outcome. In 1978,
Ontario had passed legislation to block the Arab-Muslim boycott of firms
trading with Israel, and all three federal parties promised to introduce
similar legislation. Trade and Commerce Minister Herb Gray was an enthusiastic
supporter of the Lobby. However, he yielded to business pressure to ignore the
demand for the anti-boycott legislation. Firms wanted to continue to trade not
only with Israel but with all other countries in the region, even though some
individual firms, both Jewish and non- Jewish, contribute substantially to the
Lobby.
Although it has no formal links with the Lobby, the
Evangelical branch of the Christian church ~ about three million strong in
Canada ~ lends great strength to the Lobby by its interpretation of the Bible.
In its view the second coming of Christ will take place in a Jewish Palestine
where, according to many Evangelicals, Jews must at that time control all of
the “Holy Land.” As a result, Evangelicals tend to zealously support Israel and
its occupation of the West Bank. They are exceptionally strong in Alberta,
where they may have influenced Prime Minister Harper, who himself is an
Evangelical.
Several bodies oppose the Lobby. One of the most obvious is
the National Council on Canada-Arab Relations (NCCAR) that speaks for most of
the Arab-Canadian population. Although now approximately as strong numerically
as the Jewish Canadian community, Arab/Muslim-Canadians are generally far less
wealthy and much less cohesive. NCCAR maintains two representatives in Montreal
and several volunteers in Ottawa. It works to promote Canada-Middle East
relations, and lobbies for peace with justice in the region.
Other significant groups are the Canadian Arab Federation
(CAF, which represents over forty organizations), and the Canadian Islamic
Congress (CIC). Both command articulate leadership and are gaining in influence
as Arab/Muslim-Canadians advance in numbers, political sophistication and
resolve. A newer group, Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle
East (CJPME), comprises Canadians of all backgrounds. However, all these
organizations remain far less influential than the Israel lobby.
The most serious challenge to the Lobby comes from within
the Jewish- Canadian community itself. A rapidly increasing number ~ perhaps
one- third of the community ~ is now critical of Israel’s occupation of the
Palestinian territories. For understandable reasons it is not easy for Jews to
criticize Israel, which many see as their biblical home and their promised
refuge. Survivors of the Holocaust cannot be expected to take communal bonds lightly.
The charge “anti-Semite”, or “self-hating Jew”, is especially hard to face. The
Jews who do speak out against Israel’s occupation include some of the most
talented members of the Jewish community. They are now led by an umbrella
organization named Independent Jewish Voices, which is seen as a growing threat
by the Lobby.
Less influential but still significant are voluntary
organizations in Ottawa, Toronto, Montreal and elsewhere that are dedicated to
challenging Israel’s military occupation. One is the Ottawa-based Middle East
Discussion Group (MEDG). Despite its disarming name, it was established thirty
years ago by a group led by the Rt. Hon. Robert Stanfield, Professor John
Sigler and others, with the purpose of correcting the pro-Israel bias in Canada’s
Middle East policy. Its membership now includes several dozen of Canada’s most
distinguished academics, journalists and a number of ex- Ambassadors who have
served in the region or in the UN. The MEDG keeps abreast of events in the
Middle East and has presented briefs to the government.
A growing number of other groups are now voicing opposition
to Canada’s policy and have considered sanctions against Israel. These include
churches (notably United, Unitarian, Anglican and Roman Catholic) and unions of
which the largest and most vocal is the Ontario branch of the Canadian Union of
Public Employees (CUPE ).
At least one authority contends that Canada lacks sufficient
influence to render the ME peace process a significant element in its foreign policy
(22).
This overlooks the fact that Canada
has substantial influence in Washington, and Washington is the one capital that
could impose a Mid- East settlement. Acting alone Canada might well accomplish
little, but in concert with like-minded nations such as the Scandinavians and
American supporters of a just ME peace, it could make a difference. However,
there is little evidence that Canada has tried to influence Israeli or American
policy (23). Norway, with but a sixth of
Canada’s population, initiated the negotiation of the Oslo Pact, the most
serious attempt thus far to resolve the long-standing ME crisis.
Canada’s influence was demonstrated at the very beginning of
Israeli nationhood when Supreme Court Justice Ivan Rand dominated the UN
commission that recommended the partition of Palestine, leading to the legal
creation of Israel. Lester Pearson, then the most influential diplomat in
the UN, was instrumental in steering the relevant UN resolution through the
General Assembly without adequate provision for the displaced Palestinians.
Samuel Bronfman, at the time president of the Canadian Jewish Congress, stated that “Canada has played the most important role in partitioning Palestine.” (24)
David Horowitz, the representative of the Jewish Agency in
the UN negotiations, concurred that ”Canada more than any other country played
a decisive part in all stages of the discussion of Palestine.” (25) Leading Canadian historians agreed, and prominent Zionists called Pearson the
“Balfour of Canada.” Pearson attained even greater recognition in 1967 when
he earned the Nobel Prize for initiating UNEF, the peacekeeping force that
helped to end the Suez Crisis. Canada also led in establishing UNRWA, the
relief and works agency that helps refugees in the Middle East, and subsequently
took over the chair of the relevant multi-national working group.
Canada’s extraordinarily strong support of Israel is
partially explained by the editorial bias of its media, which face intense
pressure to conform. Almost half of Canadian newspapers and the popular
television network, Global, were owned by the Asper family. The late Israel
(Izzy) Asper, billionaire founder of the CanWest media empire, was a prominent
leader of the Lobby. Although not a practicing Jew, he travelled frequently to
Israel, became a friend of its leaders and supported its policies.
Israel, Asper once told a Toronto audience, “was an isolated island of democracy… in a sea of terrorism, corruption, dictatorship and human enslavement. Palestinian leaders … in their deadly campaign to destroy Israel … are aiming their bombs at innocent civilians or blowing up planes over Lockerbie…” (26)
Given such views, it is not surprising that the Asper
employed his media to urge Canadians to treat Arab leaders as “gangster
terrorists”, and disciplined the editors and journalists of his papers who
strayed far from his beliefs. (26)
Leonard Asper, who took command of CanWest on Izzy’s death
in 2003, shares his father’s beliefs but expresses them more moderately. In a
prepared text he attributed what he sees as the pro-Muslim bias of most
journalists to left-wing views, anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism, and failure to
recognize Israel as a bulwark to protect Jews. He complains that most reporters
writing about the Middle East are ignorant, lazy and prone to accept “Arab
coddling.” (27)
The Asper bias shows not only in CanWest reports and
editorials, but also in the near-exclusion of columns and letters critical of
Israel. In 2002, Montreal Gazette reporter Bill Marsden stated:
“We do not run in our newspaper op-ed pieces that express criticism of Israel and what it is doing in the Middle East.” (28)
In 2004, the Reuters news agency complained that CanWest altered its reports on the
Middle East, substituting the word “terrorist” for different words used by the
wire service (29) to describe Arabs.
In another example, a 2006 study concluded that an Israeli
child killed by Arabs was 83.3 times more likely to be reported than a
Palestinian child killed by Israelis in the headlines or lead paragraphs of Canwest’s
National Post. (30)
There appears to have been no systematic survey of media
coverage of the Middle East. The Jerusalem-based correspondents of the Globe
and Mail and Toronto Star, as well as French-language Quebec newspapers
generally offer a more balanced approach to Israel-Palestine issues. The CBC
has usually been objective, much to the dismay of the Lobby. But under
relentless pressure in recent years, CBC television has tended to steer clear
of reporting that might offend the Lobby.
Many Canadians obtain their information from American media,
much of which reflect the pro-Israel slant best characterized by Fox News.
While the Lobby generally can take comfort from the editorial slant of the
Canadian media on Middle East issues, it is often less pleased by the more
objective analysis passed on to the government by Canada’s ten embassies in the
area. Prime Minister Harper and his associates tend to take the same line as
the Lobby, regarding foreign affairs officials as “Arabists” who can largely be
ignored. (31)
.
.
Since prime ministers play a decisive role in determining
Middle East policy, it may be in order to consider some of their quite
different attitudes. Mackenzie King disliked Jews and even expressed some
admiration for Hitler. (32). He was uneasy
about Lester Pearson’s exceptional activity in the new-born United Nations but
did not block his promotion of the partition resolution that gave birth to
Israel. Pearson enjoyed full support from Prime Minister St. Laurent. Pearson
attributed his sympathy for Israel to his Sunday school teaching and also found
most Arab spokesmen brash. In later years he conceded that Canada had been
unfair to the Palestinians (33)
Pierre Trudeau strongly resented the pressure of the Lobby
and of Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin.(35)
Trudeau recounts in his Memoirs how Begin, during a visit to Canada in 1978,
threatened to turn Jewish voters against the Liberals unless Trudeau
supported Conservative Leader Joe Clark’s promise to transfer the
Canadian Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Trudeau refused, noting that
Jerusalem was “defined by the United Nations as one of the occupied
territories.” (36)
Later, in an interview when he was opposition leader in
1979, Trudeau said “Zionist” pressure groups in the U.S. and Canada were
undermining the prospects for Middle East peace. He added that Canadian Jewish
leaders who had pressured the Conservatives to transfer the Canadian embassy to
Jerusalem, and who urged much tougher legislation against an Arab economic
boycott of Israel, had hurt Canada economically. Moreover, he said, “they
have opened the way to a growing anti-semitism.” (37)
In his brief tenure as prime minister, Joe Clark came to
realize the political and legal impropriety of moving the embassy to Jerusalem.
He abandoned the policy, adopting the views of Robert Stanfield, his
predecessor as Tory leader whom he had appointed to study and report on
Canada’s Middle East policy.
Stanfield became a strong supporter of Palestinian rights, insisting that “when the Israelis do something wrong, we should be prepared to say so.” (38)
Prime Minister Mulroney was much more pro-Israel and much
more susceptible to Lobby influence. He stirred up a storm of protest in the
Arab world when he praised the Israelis for “showing restraint” after they had
killed twenty Palestinians and wounded dozens of others in the suppression of
the first Intifada. IrvingAbella of the Canadian Jewish
Congress praised him for his “visceral attachment to
Israel.”(39)
However, no previous Canadian prime minister has matched the
near total support for Israel offered by Stephen Harper who has adopted the
“Israel-right-or-wrong” approach of the Israel Lobby and shown minimal concern
for Palestinians. He described Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon as
”measured” despite the fact that over a thousand civilians were killed by
Israeli bombs and shell-fire.
.
.
In his effort to win over Jewish voters, Harper approved the
distribution of political pamphlets suggesting Liberals are anti-Semitic
because of their lack of unconditional support for Israel. He has also moved
aggressively to cut funding for aid and human rights organizations considered
too sympathetic towards Palestinians.
In Israel itself the strength of the Canadian Israel lobby
is widely known and appreciated. Canadians are among the most popular
foreigners in Israel. In part this is due to our pro-Israel votes and
statements in international bodies. Yet it probably owes more to the fact that
Canadians, per capita, have been the most generous towards Israel, notably in building
legal university structures and subsidizing illegal settlement activities.
ED Noor: If you have the time watch this rare Canadian documentary that never made it to the air (progamming changed at the last hour ~ I wonder who would be behind that!) and frequently disappears from the internet. It is an investigative report into Canada Park and its Palestinian origins. An amazing amount of coverups especially in Israel.
ED Noor: If you have the time watch this rare Canadian documentary that never made it to the air (progamming changed at the last hour ~ I wonder who would be behind that!) and frequently disappears from the internet. It is an investigative report into Canada Park and its Palestinian origins. An amazing amount of coverups especially in Israel.
“Canada Park” is the name of a prominent recreation area
situated between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. (Mention is seldom made of the three
Palestinian villages ploughed under to make way for the park after the Six-Day
War).
Trade with Canada has been enhanced by our free trade
agreement. Israelis with knowledge of the history of their country recall
Canada’s role in its creation and also its lead in peacekeeping. Pressure from
Canada for a just (and legal) peace settlement would probably be more
acceptable than from almost any other country apart from the United States.
A clear indication of the price Canada has paid in the
international arena for its pro-Israel stance was its failure in 2007 to be
elected to the UN Security Council. It had previously been elected every ten
years to fill the two-year seat reserved for a western member, and cherished
this influential position. Canada is currently running again for a council seat
but its pro-Israel stance is considered to be jeopardizing its chances. As one
UN official said,
“If Canada is to play a constructive role, it has to re- establish its credentials as a fair and balanced interpreter of the developments that affect both sides.” (40)
A Senate committee report issued on June 19, 2007, warned
that Canada’s uncritical support for Israel in the United Nations Human Rights
Council had led to the isolation of Canada.
Prime Minister Harper vowed that Canada would not be
“bullied” into changing its position “ whatever the diplomatic or political
cost.”
However, the obvious decline in our influence was regretted
by many of the architects of Canada’s foreign policy who believe we should
be pushing harder for Israel’s withdrawal from occupied Palestine
in return for a binding guarantee of Israel’s security.
Canada can hardly be said to lack influence or interest in
the Middle East, but in what matters most to the Palestinians ~ their freedom
and independence ~ we lag far behind every other western country.
Our extremely pro-Israel posture may please the Lobby but it
is contrary to Canada’s interests, those of the United States, those of the
United Nations, those of Palestine, and those of Israel itself.
Dr. Lyon is
Professor Emeritus Political Science, Carleton University. He was a Rhodes
Scholar, and obtained his D.Phil. from Oxford University. He served in the RCAF
from 1940 to 1945.
He held posts as
Foreign Service Officer, Department of External Affairs in Ottawa, Canada and
in Bonn, Germany. He is the author of five books on Canadian foreign policy,
trade and defence.
NOTES
1. It does not appear that any other leader, apart
from Israel’s, described as “measured” Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon in
which over a thousand civilians were killed. Harper’s branding of all criticism
of Israel as “antiSemitic” appears to be unique.
2.
“Ranking of DEA Officials of Weight of
Inputs (influence) in the Making of Canadian Foreign Policy” (scale of 1 to 7)
from a study by John Kirton and Peyton Lyon in the Journal of Canadian Studies,
winter, 1992-3.
3. Other ethnic groups that lobby include Haitian,
Sikh, Armenian, Cambodian, Tamil and Lebanese.
4. The latest census shows a drop in the number of
Canadians claiming to be Jewish from 348,605 in 2001 to 315,120 in 2007. No
explanation was offered for this 10% drop. During this time, the size of the
Jewish community dropped to 25th among ethnic communities in terms of numbers,
down from 17 in 2001.
5. John J. Mearsheimer and Steven M. Walt, “The Israel
Lobby and US Foreign Policy,” Viking, Canada, 2007
6. John Sigler “Canada and the Arab Conflict” in The
Domestic Battleground”. David Taras and David Goldberg, McGill-Queens
University Press, Kingston, 1989. John Sigler “Canada and the Arab Conflict” in
The Domestic Battleground”. David Taras and David Goldberg, McGillQueens
University Press, Kingston, 1989
7. “Mindless Cheerleaders for Israel?”, Toronto Star,
May 13, 1960.
8.
In a talk to a meeting in Toronto of
the Canadian Professors for Peace in the Middle East.
9. Irving Abella and Harold Troper, “None is too
Many”, Key Porter Books, Toronto, 2000
10. Elizabeth MacCallum, the government’s sole Mid-East
expert at the time, was a strenuous objector. She told Pearson that “We have
created 40 years of chaos.”
11.
Cited by Professor David Noble in “The
New Israel Lobby in Action,” The Dimension, Nov.1, 2005.
12. Letter from Dr. Gordon Smith, University of
Victoria, former deputy minister of foreign affairs, 1994 -1997. Letter dated
Aug. 4, 2008.
13. Libby Davies, MP, “Conference of Hon. Libby Davies,
MP & Hon. Richard Nadeau on their visit to the Gaza Strip and Occupied
Territories,” Parliament Hill, Ottawa, Nov. 5, 2009
14. Daniel Freeman-Moloy, a Jewish-Canadian York
student, was suspended for 3 years by the university’s president, Lorna
Marsden, for having organized a peaceful pro-Palestinian demonstration. The
suspension was soon lifted and a court awarded Freeman-Moloy damages.
15. The author was expelled for having questioned the
propriety of money being spent from the national treasury for an organization
dedicated to a foreign entity.
16. “Israel Ambassadors Comments Unjustified: Critics.”
CTV, May. 8 2008 10:00 PM ET
17. William Barton in testimony to the Senate Foreign
Affairs Committee.
18. Ibid
19. In conversation with Geoffrey Pearson.
20. The CBC received 604 calls in the first hour of the
announcement, almost all of which were in support of Hughes and were angry in
tone.
21.
Spector and Prime Minister Mulroney
each claimed that it had been customary to post as ambassador individuals of
the ethnic origin of the country to which they were posted and, since there had
never been a Jewish-Canadian ambassador in Israel, Spector’s posting was
presented as an act of fairness. But they were wrong. Apart from a
French-Canadian in Paris, ambassadors are almost never posted to a country of
their ethnic origin.
22. Denis Stairs, Professor Emeritus, Political
Science, Dalhousie.
23. Allan Gotlieb’s 656 page memoir of his six years as
Ambassador in Washington contains scarcely a mention of the Middle East.
Washington Diaries 1986-1989. A member of his staff reported on American policy
but did not, it appears, attempt to influence it.
24. See Peyton Lyon, “Canada’s Responsibility for
Palestine”, in Behind the Headlines, autumn, 1998, pp 4-9.
25. Ibid
26. For an indication how the Aspers treat independent
minded editors see Marc Edge, “Asper Nation: Canada’s most dangerous media
company.” New Star Books. Vancouver, 152-169.
27. Leonard Asper, “Media Bias and the Middle East.”
National Post, October 1, 2003
28. Robert Fisk, “Journalists are under fire for
telling the truth.” The Independent, December 18, 2002
29.
Ian Austen, “Reuters Asks a Chain to
Remove Its Bylines,” New York Times, September 20, 2004
31. “Arabist” is properly a scholar of the Arab
language or civilization but has become a term for Arab sympathizer. Students
in the first sense do tend to become Arabists in the second sense. “Lobbyists”
often claim that diplomats who serve in a Mid-East post become Arab
sympathizers and unreliable guides to Canadian policy. There is some slight
truth in this, but a study revealed that officers who served in Israel become
the most critical of Israel.”
32. ”Irving Abella and Harold Troper, “None is too
many,” Key Porter Books, Toronto 2000
33. Pearson in his seminar in the School of
International Affairs, Carleton University.
35. Trudeau’s constituency contained the largest number
of Jewish Canadians in Canada and he deemed it unwise to criticize Israel in public.
He engaged, however, in an angry exchange with Prime Minister Begin of Israel
over its 1992 invasion of Lebanon, and was outspokenly critical in conversation
with friends
36.
Pierre Trudeau, “Memoirs,” McClelland
and Stewart, Toronto 1993. pp 215-216
37. Claude Henault, ““Zionists Block Peace, Trudeau
Says”, the Toronto Star, October 24 ,1979. Page A6
38. Robert Stanfield, Address to the Canadian-Arab
Relations Conference, Calgary 1981
39. John Dirlik, “Mulroney Resignation Saddens
Mainstream Jewish Leaders,” Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, April/May
1993, p.38
40. Richard Falk, quoted in Laura Payton, “Tory’s
Israel Policy Damaging: UN Rapporteur” Embassy Magazine, September 30,
2009. -
PREVIOUS WORK ON THIS
MATTER:
We have to get money out of politics. As much as I abhor the idea, we have to force Israel's representatives in Ottawa and DC to go to federal funding for all elections. I don't even know if it is possible, but we have to try to put an end to this idea that $$$ = Speech. After all, the chosens have literally billions of dollars with which to buy these turncoats we pay to represent our interests.
ReplyDeleteOf course we (I don't know if Canada has the same problem or not, but the US certainly does) also need to end the idea that dual citizens have any place in government - as elected or unelected officials. You want to be a dual citizen, you aren't allowed any position whatsoever in government.
I really hope others are awakening to the jewish menace because in all honesty, it all seems incredibly daunting and unlikely.