This article is more than
6 year oldWith nearly two years to go until the vote for the 2021 UN Security Council, it may seem strange that Canada is lobbying other nations that are gathering on the east side of Manhattan for the 73rd UN General Assembly.
That is indeed the focus of the behind-the-scenes diplomacy at this weeklong event, attended by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and several members of his cabinet.
Government sources say Canada refrained from campaigning too openly before June 8, when the 2020 Security Council vote was held, out of a sense of decorum. With that out of the way, Canadian diplomats have been encouraged to raise Canada's bid with any foreign counterpart who will listen.
All are aware that there will never be a more concentrated opportunity to recruit support than this week.
It's particularly important because next year's general assembly coincides with the height of another campaign even more important for the Trudeau government: the Canadian federal election.
The Security Council has 15 members. Five permanent members — China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — and 10 non-permanent members that are chosen in rotating elections.
"The entire world is watching very closely," Canada's permanent representative at the UN, Marc-André Blanchard, told CBC News. "All of these elections for the Western groups attract a lot of attention. They're always, always highly competitive, and this one will be no exception. There are two seats open and three candidates: Ireland, Norway and Canada."
The government of Canada likes to talk about "punching above its weight" diplomatically. But Ireland and Norway, with a combined population significantly smaller than that of Ontario, might fit that description better.
Norway gave the UN its first secretary general, Trygve Lie, and has been instrumental in achieving peace agreements in some of the world's most intractable conflicts, starting with the Oslo Accords, 1990s agreements between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
The Oslo deal led to two more countries experiencing brutal civil conflicts, Sri Lanka and Colombia, to appeal for Norwegian help. And at least one of the peace deals Norway helped broker — Colombia's — is still holding.
Norway is also the world's most generous foreign-aid donor, giving over one per cent of its gross domestic product to help developing countries. (Canada gives about 0.26 per cent.)
Norway knows its generosity is a selling point.
For its part, Ireland excels in an area where Canada used to shine, but lately had been content to rest on its laurels: UN peacekeeping.
Canada has now returned to the field, deploying 260 servicemen and women to Mali. But Ireland also has peacekeepers in Mali, as well as Syria, Western Sahara, Congo-Kinshasa and Kosovo. Over 600 blue helmets are deployed around the world from a nation with the population of British Columbia.
Ireland can point to an unbroken record of peacekeeping on some of the UN's toughest missions going back to 1958.
Diplomats agree: Ireland and Norway are both model UN members and that makes them tough opponents.
"At this point Canada doesn't have the 128 votes it needs to win a seat outright," said Jocelyn Coulon, head of the Université de Montréal's Network on Peace Operations and the author of several books on peacekeeping.
"And right now, I think the conversation that's taking place within the Prime Minister's Office is about whether Canada would be ready to talk about sharing a seat with Ireland."
Coulon said that could be a way to avoid a long series of votes and ultimately a defeat. However, there's no guarantee Ireland would agree to such an arrangement, he said.
"It still depends on whether Ireland has the confidence to say, 'We believe we can win on the first round, and don't need to share the seat.'
"It could happen that both countries find themselves on the floor on the day of the vote in June 2020, facing an impasse, and decide then and there to share the Security Council seat. That's what happened between Italy and the Netherlands."
Those two countries reached a deal after both countries deadlocked through five rounds of voting. Italy took the seat for the first half of the two-year term (in 2017), and Netherlands took it over the second year.
But some other council members didn't like the arrangement, and it's not clear it can be repeated.
Until 2000, Canada had obtained a seat on the Security Council in each decade of the UN's existence.
hey also had never lost a bid, but that changed when Stephen Harper's government attempted the feat in 2010.
Then, as now, Canada and two European countries (Germany and Portugal) were competing for two spots.
Germany won the necessary two-thirds majority in the first round. During the second round, Portugal was so far ahead of Canada that the Harper government instructed its diplomats to withdraw to avoid a humiliating loss.
Harper government ministers would later describe their defeat as the price Canada paid for a "principled foreign policy".
The votes Canada cast in support of Israel, sometimes in a minority made up of the U.S., Canada, the Jewish state itself, and a few tiny Polynesian and Melanesian islands that generally allow the U.S. to dictate their UN votes, alienated a larger bloc of nations.
The Trudeau government has continued that voting pattern.
In December 2017, Canada abstained on a vote condemning a unilateral decision by the U.S. to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
'It's very hard to say if we're doing better or worse.' - Gilles Rivard , former Canadian ambassador to the UN
Ireland and Norway both supported the motion, along with 126 other countries.
Although Canada's campaign is ramping up, it is still much less of an effort than the last successful bid in 1998, which cost about $10 million.
So far, the government has spent only about half a million.
"There's a team that's in place, a new ambassador in New York who's very competent. Relationships are being developed, there's a lot of networking."
Read More (...)
Newer articles