Friday, November 03, 2006

Letter to the UWO Gazette



Printed Nov 1, 2006

In his letter of last week, Jan Kool claims that UWO research on Stryker vehicles saves the lives of Canadian soldiers serving in Afghanistan. In response to this, we at CounterStryker make three observations.

First, the overwhelming majority of 2,131 Strykers produced by General Dynamics are for the US Army, deployed in four brigades serving in Iraq. Only 66 (less than 5% of the total) are for Canada. Contrary to what Mr. Kool asserts, the Stryker is a different vehicle from the LAV more widely used by Canada. The claim that Stryker research saves Canadian lives is thus largely a cover for supplying the Pentagon with a major weapons system used in a catastrophic war of occupation launched on the basis of mis- and dis-information, without justification in international law.

Second, Canadian soldiers are dying in Afghanistan because of this American war. Opinions may differ about the advisedness of Canada’s initial involvement in Afghanistan. Almost all observers, however, recognize that the recent escalation of fighting has occurred because the US, diverting resources to its invasion of Iraq, failed to deliver the promised reconstruction of Afghanistan. Canada is thus paying the costs of a bungled American policy. This deep integration of Canada’s military with an incompetent and interventionist US foreign policy is the underlying source of danger to our service men and women. Such integration is only heightened by tying Canada’s economic and military policy to the fortunes of giant US military-industrial corporations such as General Dynamics. Far from protecting Canadian soldiers, Stryker research increases the long term likelihood they will serve as Pentagon cannon fodder.

Third: contrary to what Mr. Kool suggests, we do not believe that either Canadian or US troops “deserve to die” in Afghanistan or Iraq. Even less so, however, do the tens, and probably hundreds of thousands, of Afghani and Iraqi civilians who are the main and most innocent victims of these wars. Strykers are amongst the weapons systems bringing death and destruction to these people, and UWO’s Stryker research makes this university complicit in the carnage.

CounterStruker’s foundational position and task is to end the integration of military and corporate research within a publicly funded university. That our university participates in the design of these vehicles implicates us all in their future use – including each and every death their use inflicts. At CounterStyker we are working towards making the university population aware of the relationships that already exist between the university and weapons manufacturers, as well as other corporate integration so that such projects do not set a precedent for the future of our university. We all have a responsibility to become critically engaged in the discussion.

6 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

A few things wrong with this response that I'm only getting to now. Firstly, the LAV more widely used by Canada is not similar to the Stryker, it IS the Stryker. Both vehicles are MOWAG Piranha Light Armoured Vehicles. The only difference between the American Stryker and the Canadian LAV is the armament. Other than that, they are the same vehicle. Secondly, I remember thinking when I read Counter-Stryker's response so many months ago that if you had done your research, you would have known that by that time, the 66 additional LAVs headed for Canada had in fact already been cancelled in favour of refurbishing our Leopard tanks. These tanks, with their large guns, are far less surgical and more likely to cause collateral damage than a Light Armoured Vehicle, which was adopted by the CF to lighten up our forces to be better suited to the type of Humanitarian engagement Canada is currently engaged in over in Afghanistan.

To clear up any doubts, I am not a war-mongerer. I am in fact a human rights activist with memberships in many UWO clubs that promote development and peace. I am also a soldier in training to be an infantry platoon leader, where I will employ LAVs overseas. I joined the military out of respect for human rights and to protect those who cannot protect themselves. I only ask for the best possible protection for myself and my future soldiers when we are over there.
The men and women in Afghanistan believe in the mission. Perhaps you should talk to some of them before you judge the Afghan mission.
I am also not stupid, so please do not try to debase my decision to join the forces. Believe me, I thought it fully through and am proud of my decision to join

Please note that I DO NOT and CAN NOT speak on behalf of the Canadian Forces, and that all opinions are my own

Jan Kool

1:25 PM  
Blogger Steel Rat said...

Actually the LAV-25 is not the Stryker. The Stryker is based off thge LAV-III, a genIII vehicle, whereas the LAV-25 (currently in use by the USMC and Canadian Army, et al) is a genII vehicle. There are important differences, but you'd need to see them side by side to tell.

8:53 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

The LAV 25, as you say, is used by the USMC and by the Canadian Forces. We call the LAV 25 the Coyote Armoured Reconnaissance Vehicle, and we emply several hundred of them. In ADDITION, we also employ 751 LAV III, which as you say, is a Gen 3 vehicle based off the Swiss Mowag design... the same as the US Stryker.

So sorry to hear about the de-ratificiation guys...
STAND is still going strong... oh that's right, because we're not radical hippies...

jan

8:05 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

8:05 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

8:05 PM  
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4:52 AM  

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