Canada in the Great Power Game 1914-2014 (46 page)

BOOK: Canada in the Great Power Game 1914-2014
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There was no discussion whatsoever, as I recall, about changing the role of the overseas forces to atomic carriers, because that wasn’t in Canada, it wasn’t at home here. It didn’t pollute Canada with this nasty business—although it put us right in the middle of the bombing business.

Air Chief Marshal Frank Miller, chairman, Chiefs of Staff Committee, 1960–64

General Foulkes was an excellent man, but.… It must have been in 1957. I was on the Directing Staff of the RCAF Staff College here in Toronto and he came and gave a lecture and he said: “We are going along because we want to be in the Big League.” The Big League! That’s why we got the nuclear weapons.

John Gellner

By mid-1959 there were no fewer than nine different proposals for placing nuclear weapons on Canadian soil or in the hands of the Canadian forces, and half of them had been approved (in principle, at least) by the Canadian government. Everything was proceeding smoothly—and then the tide began to turn.

Should Canadian forces be armed with nuclear weapons? Our own answer is a flat unqualified no.… Nothing can justify nuclear war.… The first step towards preventing it is to stop planning to wage it.

Maclean’s
, September 10, 1960

Canada … can play a noteworthy role in the efforts for peace and disarmament, but this role would be reduced practically to zero if we were a nuclear satellite of Washington.

Le Devoir
, September 23, 1961

In June 1959, the same month Canada made the Starfighter deal, Norman Robertson, just back from two years in Washington as ambassador and now once again undersecretary of state for external affairs, sent Prime Minister Diefenbaker a clipping from the previous month’s copy of the British magazine the
Spectator
. The author of the article, Christopher Hollis, argued that the thermonuclear weapons had changed the nature of war: destruction would now be so great that even if the West emerged from a nuclear war as the nominal victor “there is no chance that the pattern of our own national life … would still survive when we emerge from it.”

Hollis’s article went on to argue for nuclear disarmament and a buildup of
NATO

S
conventional forces: in effect, a reversal of the Western decision to rely on cheap nuclear firepower rather than expensive soldiers that had been taken at a time when the West had a near-monopoly of nuclear weapons. There was, after all, no objective reason why the West could not rely on its superior numbers, wealth and technology to deter the Soviet Union with non-nuclear weapons, if it were willing to pay the cost. However, Hollis didn’t only want the West to stop threatening to use nuclear weapons against a Soviet conventional attack. He advocated unilateral Western nuclear disarmament—no matter what the Soviets did. And attached to Hollis’s article was a memo to Prime Minister Diefenbaker from the undersecretary: “Mr Robertson wishes you to know that his views coincide with those of the author of the article.”

Norman Robertson had hitherto held quite orthodox views on the question of nuclear weapons for Canada, but recently they had begun to change. In March 1959, having just been briefed by some External Affairs officers who had visited SAC and
NORAD
headquarters, he remarked that “the whole philosophy of [nuclear] deterrence had been developed at a time when conditions were vastly different from those existing today.… Our minds should be turned instead to the tremendous political effort that needed to be undertaken to avoid the awesome consequences of nuclear warfare.”

The Soviet Union, of course, had already been living with the grim prospect of those “awesome consequences” for over a decade. What caused numbers of Canadians to begin questioning the West’s nuclear-oriented strategies was the growing probability that the West itself would suffer those same consequences. A policy that had been seen as a regrettable strategic necessity when it implied immolating tens of millions of Soviet citizens became a great deal less acceptable when it also involved the prospect of unstoppable Soviet ICBMs aimed at North America, and millions of Canadians dead. And in June 1959 Robertson got a new minister who shared his thinking: Howard Green.

This was the time when the frozen silence between the two great alliances was hesitantly starting to give way to semi-permanent (if glacially slow) arms control talks—and Howard Green devoted a great deal of time and effort to promoting various proposals to lessen the danger of nuclear war. He insisted that Canada’s ability to take a lead on these issues would be undermined if at the same time it was equipping its own forces with nuclear weapons.

Mr Green was passionately committed to two things. One is that he was against war: he had been a veteran who was wounded in the First World War, and like most people who have seen the horrors of war at first hand he was not a great enthusiast about repeating it for other generations.

The other thing was that he was a tremendous believer in the United Nations.… He was not a great enthusiast about
NATO
, and an essential part of security as he saw it was arms control and disarmament.

George Ignatieff

The great issue during Green’s time in office was a nuclear test ban, which was universally seen as the indispensable condition for any other arms control or disarmament measures. And things were falling
apart: the moratorium on nuclear tests that had been agreed by the United States, the Soviet Union and Britain in 1958 had not led to a treaty on account of differences about “verification,” and the Soviet Union had finally denounced it. In October 1961 the Soviets tested the biggest bomb ever, the “Tsar Bomb”—fifty megatons—and in early 1962 the Americans also began testing again in the atmosphere. But Green never lost heart.

Green felt it necessary to keep up a public facade of optimism which led many to call him naïve, but in fact he was an adroit operator who knew how to exploit Canada’s prestige, especially among the non-aligned states, to get proposals on the agenda that could break the logjam. In October 1962, for example, his close ally General E.L M. Burns, Canada’s representative on the UN Disarmament Committee, put forward (much against the wishes of the United States) the amendment that finally made a limited test-ban treaty possible: it separated underground tests from all the others, and proposed banning all the rest. And it was Green himself who first brought up, at the eighteen-nation Geneva Disarmament Conference, the idea of a ban on all weapons of mass destruction in outer space. That annoyed the Americans even more, but it too produced a treaty in the end.

The Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963 and the ban on nuclear weapons in outer space in 1966 are monuments to Howard Green’s persistence, and it was quite true that Canada’s influence among the neutral countries was very important to these results. But Green’s constant argument that Canada should shun nuclear weapons in order to retain its influence among the non-aligned nations was probably deliberately overstated: the Indians and the Egyptians weren’t really worried about nuclear warheads on Bomarcs in North Bay, or even slung beneath Starfighters in Germany.

The truth is that Green thought the whole nuclear game was insane, and used any argument he could find to keep Canada out of it. From 1959 on, Canadian defence policy was a battleground in which
External Affairs, under Howard Green and Norman Robertson, fought against the Department of National Defence to win Diefenbaker’s support for radically divergent policies, with the nuclear weapons to be acquired from the Americans as the main focus of the argument. Most people in Ottawa still subscribed to the orthodox credo about Western defence policy, but there were a couple of wild cards operating in Green’s and Robertson’s favour. One was that Diefenbaker, unlike most politicians, had no faith in opinion polls. Instead, he read his mail—and Canadians active in the peace movement wrote him a lot of letters. Diefenbaker became persuaded that an anti-nuclear stance was popular with the Canadian public.

Dogs know best what to do with polls.

John Diefenbaker, November 1, 1971

The other wild card was Diefenbaker’s nationalism. He was not reflexively anti-American, but there were signs of strain even when President Eisenhower was still in office.

In spite of all the flowery exchanges between “Ike” and Mr. Diefenbaker, he was already brewing up for trouble with the United States because he thought they were getting above themselves: “They think they can lead the world and shove us all around.”

Q.
Was there a reason for Mr. Diefenbaker’s feelings?

Well, yes, of course. It was the great moment of American imperialism at its height, when they really felt they had the answers to everything in the world, and had dozens of alliances, and were willing to move into any cabbage patch anywhere in the world and fight against Communism or feudalism or anything which didn’t go with the American way of life. It was rather overpowering.

Charles Ritchie, ambassador to Washington, 1962–66

It was this coincidental combination of things—Diefenbaker’s conviction that there was a powerful groundswell of anti-nuclear feeling in the Canadian public, his growing inclination to resist American pressures on every subject, and a small band of determined partisans of nuclear disarmament at External Affairs headed by Green and Robertson—that inexorably led the Conservative government into confrontation with the Americans over nuclear weapons. And Diefenbaker’s legendary capacity for dither, delay and indecision defined Green’s and Robertson’s tactics for them.

By the time Green became secretary of state for external affairs, it was too late for the government to make a principled rejection of the whole idea of nuclear weapons for Canada: the basic agreements to acquire nuclear weapons systems for the Canadian forces both in Canada and in Europe had almost all been signed. So Green simply produced innumerable objections to the terms of the agreements that had to be negotiated with the Americans for the custody of the nuclear warheads.

I was given the task of negotiating these agreements. So, working with the people in National Defence and others, we worked out a draft agreement and sent it up to Mr Green and it sat there for six weeks and nothing happened. Finally General Pearkes, who was the Minister of Defence, got hold of Mr. Green and said: “We’ve got to get moving on this, Howard.” And so Mr. Green called me in and said: “This is not tough enough. Go back to the drawing board.”

And over the loud objections of National Defence, we went back to the drawing board, and the same performance was repeated at least three times. By then I had drawn the conclusion that Mr. Green had no intention of having such an agreement concluded. At that point I decided this was no place for me, so I succeeded in negotiating my way to another assignment.

Q.
Were the armed forces very upset by all this?

I think they just sort of despaired, you know.… They eventually
reached the sort of numbed stage where they felt they would do anything they had to to get the agreement.

Bill Barton, External Affairs, 1952–70

Diefenbaker dealt with this guerrilla warfare between his ministers and advisers by simply stalling on the nuclear warheads—for years. The acquisition of various nuclear-weapons carriers went ahead as planned, Canadian servicemen were sent to the United States for courses on how to handle and use nuclear warheads, and Diefenbaker never said he wouldn’t accept them in the end. But he didn’t actually do anything about arranging to take them, either, and after John F. Kennedy became the president of the United States in early 1961 U.S.-Canadian relations went from bad to worse. It was loathing at first sight.

Kennedy thought that Dief was a mischievous old man who was a nuisance, and I think Dief thought Kennedy was, as he used to say, an arrogant young pup. And then their styles were completely different: that sort of Harvard veneer on top of the Irish politician, and the social mix, and the Camelot bit—it was completely antipathetic to Dief, who was a real populist. He had no use for any of that sort of thing.

And I think that Kennedy wrongly saw Dief as someone from the sticks, and so they were temperamentally … it was very unfortunate.

Charles Ritchie

But despite fraying tempers and an ever-lengthening delay on the outstanding question of accepting nuclear warheads for all of Canada’s new weapons, relations between Ottawa and Washington staggered along without an open break until the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962. Then they fell apart.

I knew that President Kennedy was still smarting over the 1961 Bay of Pigs fiasco.… I also knew that the President thought he had something to prove in his personal dealings with Khrushchev after their unpleasant Vienna meeting, where Khrushchev had treated him like a child, referring to him as “the boy.” I considered that he was perfectly capable of taking the world to the brink of thermonuclear destruction to prove himself the man for our times, a courageous champion of Western democracy.

John Diefenbaker,
One Canada
, vol. 3

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