Gaza places Canada at a crossroads before the UN

By voting for a ceasefire in Gaza, Canada broke with a resolutely pro-Israeli record before the United Nations (UN), a “principled” position that has long reduced its influence in the world. believes former ambassador Louise Blais.

“I think that the vast majority of member countries would have thought that we were going to abstain,” confides the former number 2 of the Canadian delegation to the UN regarding the historic vote of December 12.

The Trudeau government took a position before the United Nations General Assembly in New York in favor of a non-binding motion demanding an “immediate humanitarian ceasefire” in Gaza. A total of 152 other countries voted in this way, 23 abstained and 10 opposed, including Israel and its closest ally, the United States.

“It surprised me since, since the government of Paul Martin [de 2003 à 2006], Canada votes against, or at least abstains from, any resolution that appears to target Israel. Because the position [du Canada] was that Israel is too targeted by these resolutions and that there is no balance at the UN”, explains in an interview with Duty Louise Blais, Deputy Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations from 2017 to 2021 and now diplomat in residence at Laval University.

A principle that cost a lot

Canada has thus not only changed the discourse it has used since the outbreak of hostilities in October, but also its voting habits before the UN. Over the years, the country has opposed “hundreds of times” motions favorable to the Palestinian cause and supported by the vast majority of countries, according to the former ambassador’s estimate.

Often isolated with the United States in the face of this international consensus, Ottawa voted “on principle” for its Israeli ally, she explains. And the country paid the price, diplomatically.

“Often, we were told by the ambassadors of these other countries: “Why? We don’t understand Canada,” recalls Mme Blais. She even argues that this attitude was “an undeniable factor” in Canada’s two failures to obtain a seat on the Security Council, in 2010 and 2020.

” It is [devenu] difficult for Canada to advance its positions internationally, at the level of international law, humanitarian law, and to have the reputation of being coherent […] The cost [de s’être opposé au consensus sur la Palestine] is huge, huge. And I think it’s now more appreciated by Canadians. »

The Assembly becomes militant

Canada’s unique voice on this issue before the UN fell until recently to a certain general indifference among public opinion. The Hamas attacks against Israel on October 7 and the major conflict in Gaza that followed changed things, notes Louise Blais. All eyes are now on the Canadian position.

“We must give credit to the mobilization of the General Assembly this fall in the face of the paralysis of the Security Council. [L’institution devient] more militant, more activist, to reflect a position that is generalized across the planet,” she said, drawing a parallel with the consensus on the condemnation of Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

“And that, I think, is good news. Because, somewhere, the supreme organ of the UN is the Assembly, it is the most democratic, in which each State has a vote. »

Louise Blais believes that the motion voted on December 12, although non-binding and “symbolic,” has the power to put pressure on the United States and remind it that opposing the international consensus has a cost. diplomatic.

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