Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05OTTAWA2677
2005-09-07 18:30:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Ottawa
Cable title:  

TFUS01 - CANADA: AMBASSADOR JOINS PRIME MINISTER

Tags:  PREL ECON AEMR ASEC CASC MARR AMGT US CA 
pdf how-to read a cable
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

071830Z Sep 05
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 OTTAWA 002677 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/CAN; WHA/EPSC; R

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/06/2015
TAGS: PREL ECON AEMR ASEC CASC MARR AMGT US CA
SUBJECT: TFUS01 - CANADA: AMBASSADOR JOINS PRIME MINISTER
IN SEEING OFF FOUR CANADIAN SHIPS

REF: A. STATE 163279


B. STATE 164132

C. OTTAWA 2669

Classified By: Ambassador David Wilkins for reasons l.b. and c.

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 OTTAWA 002677

SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/CAN; WHA/EPSC; R

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/06/2015
TAGS: PREL ECON AEMR ASEC CASC MARR AMGT US CA
SUBJECT: TFUS01 - CANADA: AMBASSADOR JOINS PRIME MINISTER
IN SEEING OFF FOUR CANADIAN SHIPS

REF: A. STATE 163279


B. STATE 164132

C. OTTAWA 2669

Classified By: Ambassador David Wilkins for reasons l.b. and c.


1. (U) Ambassador Wilkins thanked Prime Minister Martin
privately and Canadians publicly for their support to victims
of Katrina at a ceremony in Halifax seeing off the four
Canadian ships deploying for the Gulf of Mexico with relief
supplies. Along with CG Halifax, US Naval Attache and DCM,
they visited briefly each ship, spoke with crew members
before making comments in front of national media on the
final ship, the flag ship for this operation. Martin,s
comments reinforced Canadian,s view of themselves as "a
country built on neighbor helping neighbor." Ambassador
Wilkins, comments about Canada helping "early and eagerly...
giving us your best when we need it the most" were carried
live across Canada and much appreciated by Martin and his
accompanying staff. Ambassador,s open letter to Canada,
thanking them, played in newspapers across Canada on the day
after this visit.


2. (U) This operation, more than anything, was about speed.
Last Thursday Chief of Defence Staff Hillier told Ambassador
that Canada had decided to deploy ships to the Gulf. Working
throughout the weekend to load water bottles, construction
supplies, diapers, and other donated equipment, the crew was
still loading on one ship during the tour, preparing to
depart just one hour later. (This was not an easy feat as
Nova Scotia remains the only province in the country where
stores are closed on Sundays, so they had to get special
dispensation to open up a few key stores for these supplies.)
Volunteers came forward so that on one ship with 239 bunks,
there were 239 sailors, many from other ships eager to join
this Mission who spoke about the support given to them in
Halifax from the U.S. two years ago after Hurricane Juan hit
them. This was Canada,s first opportunity to deploy
following their much-criticized delays last January to
support tsunami relief; we happen to be the beneficiaries of
their lessons learned and not repeated at all this time.


3. (C) The Canadians are deploying over 1000 men from all
their services on three navy and one Coast Guard vessels.
According to our Embassy Naval attach present on this visit,
this is a major commitment, stretching this small navy to
their limits. They cannot afford to have another incident
which would require another deployment. Canadian forces also
have deployed their Fleet Diving Units and Army Combat Diving
Unit, consisting of a total of 32 divers who are embedded
with U.S. Navy diving units and performing underwater
obstacle clearance and levee inspections.


4. (C) It was late Sunday when Prime Minister Martin
invited Ambassador Wilkins to join him in Halifax. Martin
used the plane ride coming and going as well as several other
opportunities to cover the political ground in both
countries, to discuss the impact in both human and political
terms of Katrina, and to explore ideas on the most burning
issue prior to the disaster: softwood lumber. He pressed
hard on the need to respect NAFTA, saying that our failure to
abide by this agreement has damaged our reputation as a
reliable partner in Canada. Ambassador acknowledged the
importance of the issue and stressed the need to find a way
to get back to the negotiating table. Martin, who insisted
on not discussing this directly in last week,s telephone
conversation with President Bush (sought long before
Katrina),asked for Ambassador,s advice on timing of a
subsequent call. "We still need to have this conversation,"
was the way he put it.


5. (C) Comment: We, like the Canadians, will not link
Katrina with softwood. The images of the hurricane, though,
here have turned a public mood of anger and frustration into
one of universal sympathy, sorrow, and eagerness to help.
The Prime Minister,s Communications Director was blunt when
he said there was no political risk to helping us in this
climate; in fact there would have been risk if they had
waited to help us. He later indicated in reviewing political
issues for this autumn that softwood and the U.S. response
looms large. Our acknowledgement of their support, in public
as the Secretary did in her statement over the weekend, plays
huge here and reassures Canadian self-perceptions. Our
willingness to engage on softwood at an appropriate time will
also play huge.


Visit Canada's Classified Web Site at
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/wha/ottawa
WILKINS