Missile Defense: Not Just About Shooting Stuff
Rachel Marsden
Ever since Prime Minister Paul Martin announced Canada’s pullout from Ballistic
Missile Defense program, Canadians have been on the lookout for a significant
reaction from south of the border. It’s as if President Bush is expected to
respond like a Spiderman cartoon villain whose plans for world domination have
just been foiled, shaking his fist in the air and screaming, “I’ll get you
Paulie Canuckistan!”
Don’t expect this kind of low budget cheese from the USA. Instead, get ready for
the Mother of All Snubs: a case of passive-aggression well beyond the help of
even Dr. Phil. A blockbuster snub so incredibly huge that if it were to star in
“Snub: The Movie”, it would have J.Lo’s makeup and hair people, Paris Hilton’s
deluxe Airstream trailer, and Steven Spielberg as its director.
US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, initially “rescheduled” her Canadian
visit next month to sometime around the 12th of never. Translation, Paulie: She
just ain't that into you.
Condi has just handily taken one of those butt-kicking, knee-high leather boots
of hers, sunk it into lil’ Paulie Canuckistan’s back bacon, and drop-kicked him
into a state of irrelevancy. By adopting his position against the missile
defense program, the Prime Minister has essentially guaranteed that Canadian
business will be his cell mate in
passive-aggressive hell.
The Americans aren’t going to put up anything that resembles an overt tariff
barrier in retaliation against Canada’s position. There are rules against that,
and eventual prices to be paid for violating those rules, as we’ve seen recently
with the softwood lumber issue.
But as Dr. Jack Granatstein, a Director of the Canadian Defense and Foreign
Affairs Institute (CDFAI) says, “I have no doubt that because of Iraq, and I
suspect because of [ballistic missile defense] as well, people who have
oversight over contracts will be looking a little more closely at ways to punish
Canadian companies. I mean, that’s the price you pay. I don’t think you need a
‘Buy American’ Act, or a deliberate, ‘let’s punish them’. It happens on its own
hook.”
A spokesman for Senator John Warner (R-VA) – Chairman of the US Senate Armed
Services Committee and a huge proponent of missile defense technology – points
out: “[Warner] does not support any trade retaliation on Canada. However, I
can’t predict what ultimately would be an outcome.”
Well, let’s take a shot at predicting an outcome, based on a little recent
history, shall we? In the Fall of 2003, after the Canadian government decided
not to participate in US efforts to remove murderous dictator Saddam Hussein
from Iraq, a Montreal-based company called Canadian Aviation Electronics Ltd.
(CAE) lost a $1 billion US Army contract.
At the time, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer quoted then-CEO, Derek Burney (now
himself a fellow with the CDFAI), as saying that “Canadian firms may now have to
overcome two handicaps when competing in key American markets--the long-standing
handicap that they are not American and the new handicap in the post-Iraq
environment that they are Canadian.”
The benefits gained by Canadian research and development through participation
in the missile defense program would be at least equally significant as the end
result. To argue otherwise is like saying that NASA has only ever been about
putting guys on the moon, giving Michael Jackson video-dance fans a hip name for
walking backwards, and keeping conspiracy theorists busy.
NASA research has produced more than 1,300 spin-offs used in civilian life,
including Velcro, Tang fruit drink, the computer microchip, CAT Scan and
Magnetic Resonance Imaging technology, ‘invisible’ braces to fix crooked teeth,
heart-pumps, and pacemakers.
Similarly, missile defense isn’t just about shooting at stuff in space. The
technological spin-offs resulting specifically from American missile defense
program research efforts include the corrective eye surgery laser, the pizza
warming trays used by Pizza Hut delivery guys, the laser used to target and
obliterate cancer cells while leaving healthy ones intact, the AuraGen VIPER
mobile power generator that can be mounted under the hood of a car and is
currently being used by the miltary in Iraq and Afghanistan, advanced water
purification systems, land mine neutralization technology, medical imaging
devices that detect small changes in blood flow associated with disease,
cutting-edge mountain rescue equipment, and the Avanza spam email eliminator.
Canada’s economy could have used its partnership in the journey towards a
successful missile defense venture to stimulate similar innovations. As
Granatstein points out, “We have some capabilities in some areas, but we’re not
big players. There isn’t that much research and development in Canada.”
Paul Martin just delivered another smack across the face to Quebec and,
specifically, to the province’s aerospace industry, when he reneged on his
missile defense commitment in order to pander to the anti-missile defense crowd
in the province. Quebec is home to both CAE and Bombardier--the third largest
civil aviation company in the world. The province is also the home of Marc
Garneau--Canada’s first astronaut and a source of great pride for both his
province and his country.
It is arrogant and degrading for the Prime Minister to assume that the people of
a leading aerospace province do not understand or value the importance of
research and development in this field. It is arrogant and degrading to assume
that missile defense opponents in this same province would not alter their
current position on the issue if it was explained to them how important a role
the missile defense program could play with respect to these key aspects of
their economy. It is about as arrogant and degrading as this same Liberal
government figuring that Quebeckers’ votes need to be bought with millions of
dollars of their own money, filtered through Liberal-friendly ad firms.
It doesn’t matter if a Canadian hails from Quebec City, Winnipeg, Toronto, or
Vancouver--everyone wants to be on a winning team. So much so, that we’ll
proudly own up to pretty much anything out there on the world stage that
self-identifies as Canadian: Pamela Anderson baring all in Playboy, Tom Green
showing his cancerous testicles on TV, any movie at all that uses a Canadian
city as a backdrop, Celine Dion singing at the Grammys, and even that Canadian
guy who won an Academy Award this week and basically had it tossed to him in the
audience as he thanked Seneca College (while everyone back home was saying, “Oh
my God! He said 'Seneca College' in front of Clint Eastwood!”). And when a
Canadian sees a shot of that robotic Canadarm hanging off some rig in
outer-space, he usually ends up reminding everyone within earshot that Canada
made it. Canadians have gotten more mileage out of that damn space arm than Yoko
Ono did out of “Yesterday”.
But Canada has been coasting way too long on the Canadarm, much like it has with
its post-WWII reputation. The time is long overdue to start pitching in again.
Focusing solely on the end result of the missile defense program is
short-sighted ignorance that will cost Canada opportunities and, ultimately,
priceless national pride.
Imagine how much more advanced Canada’s aerospace industry would be today if the
Diefenbaker government wouldn’t have cancelled the Avro Arrow project in the
1950s, putting some of the top aerospace talent in the world out of work and
euthanizing the most modern supersonic jet interceptor the world had ever seen.
Canadian Prime Minister John Diefenbaker’s lack of foresight at the time
ultimately became his legacy of embarrassment. Lest Paul Martin forget.