By Matthew Behrens
When
the RCMP announced an Ottawa anti-terrorism arrest last week, the timing could
not have been better for a federal government that appears to thrive on
national security hysteria. After all, Prime Minister Harper, positioning
himself as a wartime leader protecting Canadians from terrorists, had just
introduced legislation (C-51) that would vastly increase the powers of Canada’s
state security agencies, a bill that’s met with equal alarm from civil rights
groups and the Globe and Mail’s
editorial board.
Facebook
feeds were immediately full of Conservative-sponsored “Protecting Canadians
From Terrorist Threats” clickbait, leading to a personal message from Public
Safety Minister Steven Blaney proclaiming, “Jihadists have declared war on us
all.”
There’s
a critical question about the political timing of last week’s arrest and the
issuance of arrest warrants for two overseas Canadian fighters. Why was it so
important, in the midst of a debate over controversial new policing powers, to
now detain 25-year-old Awso Peshdary – who appears to have been under
surveillance for a good five years – for the alleged crimes of raising money to
send two Canadians to fight in Syria in 2012 and 2014? There was no imminent
threat, beyond the apparently existential concern that Peshdary was corrupting
young minds. In addition, why were the Mounties suddenly issuing warrants (one
for a man reportedly killed last December) that named individuals whose
activities have long been public knowledge?
The
federal government’s apparent ability to create a mirage of cascading terror
threats was no doubt further enhanced by introducing C-51 the Friday before two
long-scheduled terrorism proceedings were set to begin. Those trials – the Toronto
Via Rail plot and the B.C. Canada Day pressure cooker plan – began with suspiciously
timed arrests as well.
Indeed,
during the spring of 2013, the Harper government had been experiencing troubles
reviving recently lapsed anti-terror legislation originally passed in 2001.
Then, an opportunity arose following the Boston bombings. The Harper government
suddenly cleared the Parliamentary schedule for a two-day discussion and vote
on Bill S-7 (The Combating Terrorism Act),
which revived preventative detention and investigative hearings.
On the first
of those days, April 22, the RCMP’s actions once
again coloured a Parliamentary debate, this time with the arrest of two
individuals who had allegedly been talking about derailing a train. “While the RCMP believed
that these individuals had the capacity and intent to carry out these criminal
acts, there was no imminent threat to the general public, rail employees, train
passengers or infrastructure,” they reassured the public at an afternoon press
conference.
Across town
the next day, defence lawyer John Norris told media crowded on the Old City Hall
courthouse steps that “the timing of the arrest is a bit
of a mystery… The [RCMP have] been very clear there was no risk to public
safety, and it’s surprising to say the least, that this arrest would be made
now close on the heels of the events in Boston and timed perfectly with what
was happening in the House of Commons yesterday.”
In
Ottawa, NDP public safety critic Randall
Garrison shared with House colleagues his fear that the Tories were using Boston
and the VIA arrests “to create a climate that will cause people to
not ask the questions they need to ask about this legislation.” The bill passed
on April 24 and received Royal Assent the following day in the Senate.
Just two months later, mere weeks before The Combating Terrorism Act came into full force, the RCMP again took to the
airwaves in a patriotic flourish to announce they had foiled a Canada Day plot to
set off a pressure cooker bomb at the BC legislature.
Questions immediately arose after RCMP Assistant Commissioner Wayne Rideout told reporters, "We employed
a variety of complex investigative and covert techniques to control any
opportunity the suspects had to commit harm. These devices were completely
under our control, they were inert, and at no time represented a threat to
public safety." As the Vancouver Province noted in an editorial,
"On April 2, police had enough evidence leading to charges of facilitating
a terrorist activity and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence, but the
couple was not arrested. On June 25, there was enough evidence for [one of the
arrestees] to be charged with making or possessing an explosive substance, but
again there were no arrests." Did the RCMP stage-manage things so that the
connection to Canada Day would provide them with a blast of feel-good coverage,
especially following a month in which Edward Snowden’s startling revelations
about global surveillance had sullied the reputation of state security
agencies?
Canada’s national police force has never been
above playing politics. Indeed, the RCMP Complaints Commission released a 2008
report finding that an unprecedented
decision to announce a politically sensitive investigation of then
Liberal finance minister Ralph Goodale – in the middle of the 2006 election
campaign – likely influenced the outcome that brought law-and-order Stephen
Harper to power.
Subsequently,
in the June, 2006 case of the Toronto 18 – an informant-driven and -controlled plot
– arrests occurred ten days before the Supreme Court was set to hear two days
of historic argument on secret hearing security certificates. Needless to say, questions
from the bench were clearly influenced by the recent headlines.
Other
agents of government supposedly above partisanship are not immune from suspect
activity either. The Ottawa Citizen
recently reported that as shocked Canadians watched the parliamentary shooting saga
last October, Canadian Lieutenant-General John Vance wrote an email that very
afternoon about the need for the military to appear at an RCMP press conference
to capitalize on the day’s events. Viewing the tragedy as further rationale for
the controversial decision to dispatch CF-18s to bomb Iraq, Vance noted that
Canada’s Chief of Defence Staff, General Tom Lawson, had “indicated we should
seek a strategic opportunity [to promote the mission] and this may be it.”
The Iraq
bombing campaign and national security will no doubt be hot-button issues as a
tight national election race heats up. What remains to be seen is how many more
well-timed strategic announcements and arrests will pop up to reinforce Harper’s
fearful wartime narrative.
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