A voice from the counterterror heavens?
Is that the meaning of Prime Minister Harper's recent surprise statement on CBC Television? It certainly is a refreshing acknowledgement of what has been said by many specialists about the escalating terror threat facing Canadians.
Mr. Harper's reported straight talk on CBC television will give hope to Canadians and others increasingly worried about Canada's capacity to deal with the growing counterterror challenge.
With this contribution, Harper has wrenched himself loose from the kind of self-imposed stymying that has characterized the Obama administration's ambiguous language -- and focus -- in Islamist counterterrorism.
This is no small thing. The prime minister knew to a certitude that Canada's Muslim Brotherhood front organizations would react to clear talk with predictably hyperinflated Islamic victimhood narratives.
Despite this, Harper dared to define some of his terms. Sure, he said, there are other foes. Look at the Norway massacre. But for now, the "main enemy," as Soviet intelligencers might once have put it, is what the prime minister calls "Islamicism" and "Islamic terrorism." There is no suggestion that Muslims or Islam are the problem.
At a dangerous time, the White House has, in contrast, blunted some of its counterradicalization and counterterrorism momentum by avoiding, to an almost self-parodyingly pathological degree, a specific definition of its global and internal enemy: Islamic extremism. U.S. officials appear to be under pressure not to use the "I" or "M" words, and to avoid looking even at those scriptural aspects of extremist-Islamic doctrine that terrorists have boasted as their guides in recruiting, planning, targeting and killing. This self-denying approach persists, despite determined protests from moderate American Muslims, such as retired U.S. naval officer Dr M. Zuhdi Jasser, President of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy.
To be sure, there is something contrived about the CBC interview. The Prime Minister's Office presumably wanted a stage for a significant announcement. And the CBC is taking us through a publicity striptease that will end only when the full interview is broadcast on Thursday night. In the meantime, what an announcement.
But whether the prime minister can make good on his remarks -- and its package of promises -- remains to be seen. After all, this government has an uneven record with respect to public safety and national security, including unparalleled immigration from high-risk regions.
Harper undertakes to disinter Anti-Terrorism Act legal provisions that were allowed to "sunset" years ago, under pressure of various activists. Brief periods of preventive detention will be reinstituted in law for certain terror suspects, as will special proceedings enabling judges to force answers from those suspected of having information about pending attacks. With appropriate safeguards, these would be important aids in the terror struggle.
The Islamist lobby will respond forcefully, as will conscientious lawyers with important concerns about the constitutional implications of such criminal law innovations. So, also, the high command of one or two brand-name human rights' organizations that never met a threat assessment they could support.
The clincher, however, will be the judiciary, a group destined to be drawn into the fray. Will Harper's expected new provisions pass constitutional muster? Much depends on the law's drafting and whether judges grasp the extent of the domestic and transnational threat to Canadians. And whether, of course, courts are willing to build a realistic understanding of the threat into the delicate balance between security and civil liberties that the constitution calls upon them to strike.
If the courts take a wrong turn, this prime ministerial positioning could be for naught, at least with regard to the proposed provisions. Either way, however, there remains ample room for the Harper Government to launch other initiatives aimed at securing Canada's national security.
These should include resolution of immigration issues; rejection of excessive religious and other "accommodation" aimed at reinforcing fundamentalism; engaging with high-profile Muslim moderates, such as public intellectuals Dr. Salim Mansur, Mrs. Raheel Raza and Dr. Farzana Hassan; and vigorously contesting the misleading Islamist victimhood narrative from which violence has so often sprung.
Ken Blackwell: President Obama On Terror: An Uncertain Trumpet
Len Levitt: The NYPD: Spies, Spooks and Lies
Joe Sestak: Where's the Plan for Defense Spending? (Updated w/Video)
Mubin Shaikh: Canada's Anti-Terrorism Laws: Better to Have and Not Need
CSIC provides examples of Terrorist in Canada while admitting that while no terrorist attack is specific, one should be aware that one is possible. Foremost among its list of terrorists are environmental and animal-rights groups followed by White-supremacist who are opposed to Canada's immigration policies. That last group might win favour.
Harris failed and always fails to be specific. He implies a lot but like that popular song goes, 'my buckets got a hole in it'. However, it is not Harris' responsibility to identify the terrorist threat but rather to keep it alive in our minds. Otherwise, he would be a jockey without a horse to ride. Harper sounds like he is just getting on his.
Of course a prime minister of Canada who in 1998 promised allegiance to a born-again assembly in Colorado springs will be tough on islamic terrorists who are a really, really big threat to Canada. (yeap.)
When will the Ottawa parliamentary press gallery be allowed to function normally?
For now ministers in Canada are under orders not to speak to the press - that is since Harper first became prime minister in 2005.
What other 'necessary' measures will be brought in to give us the illusion that we will be totally safe from terrorists? More cameras in the streets, police surveillance of people without the need for a warrant, restrictions on our movements or 'safe' zones where only pre-screened people can go? At one time or another, these measures have been discussed in the anti-terror community.
But you say, well this is terrorism! And yet, for other types of threats to civil order, like organized crime, Canada has survived quite well without preventively arresting mobsters. The police hold them in check by investigation, arrest and prosecution on evidence.
Don't go calling me some bleeding heart liberal because I despise the thought of our civil and legal codes being warped by the specter of terrorism. I served in the Canadian Infantry, and I despise terrorists.
But getting Western democracies to warp their societies and curtail their freedoms is EXACTLY the point of terrorism. Eroding our legal systems to ward against nebulous and continual threats of terrorism is a BIG WIN for them.
If Harper brings back these anti-terror laws, don't be surprised if a lot of Canadians fight tooth and nail against them. They are not terrorist lovers, but lovers of the freedom Canada is supposed to guarantee its citizens.