Thursday, April 23, 2009

WTF? "Bear Head, Schreiber and Mulroney--and the TH 495"

Further to this post, testimony from a senior public servant (Babbling's style may be catching, title-wise):
Bear Head plan called iffy from start
Ex-bureaucrat says project was political [no shoot, Karlheinz and...]

A controversial project to build German-designed armoured vehicles in Canada made no economic sense but was kept alive for years for political reasons, a public inquiry was told Wednesday.

Harry Swain, a retired senior bureaucrat, testified that the Industry Department was never convinced of the merits of the project championed by German-Canadian businessman Karlheinz Schreiber.

"We spent a lot of analytical time on it," said Swain. "I don’t believe we ever changed our view."

The so-called Bear Head project, first proposed in 1985, lies at the heart of the inquiry into business dealings between Schreiber and former Conservative prime minister Brian Mulroney.

The project initially won favour with key ministers in Mulroney’s government because it promised to generate jobs in economically depressed Cape Breton.

In later versions, pitched by the German manufacturing firm Thyssen AG to both the Mulroney Tories and the Liberal government of Jean Chretien, the focus shifted to job-creation in Quebec.

But Swain, who dealt with the file first at the Privy Council Office and later as deputy minister of industry, said inviting Thyssen into Canada could have undercut the London, Ont., operations of General Motors, which had long supplied the Canadian Forces with armoured troop carriers and also exported them to other countries.

Swain made the point forcefully in a December 1993 memo to John Manley, the incoming industry minister in the new Liberal government.

After recounting the history of the project under the Tories, Swain added in a handwritten note:

"Thyssen’s persistence in this folly has been encouraged by far too many ministers, each of whom was willing to subsidize production in some desperate place at the expense of London. The Forces do not need their (Thyssen’s) hardware, and Canada hardly needs a second exporter."

Swain said Wednesday he made the same point to Manley in more direct language when he later spoke to him personally.

"I was encouraging the minister to, in effect, shut this down," he testified.

The paper trail shows, however, that some Liberal cabinet members took a different view. Andre Ouellet, then foreign affairs minister, was described in one memo as backing the project "based on the projected 500 jobs to be created in the Montreal area."

Negotiations with Thyssen and its subsidiary, Bear Head Industries, went on for another year and a half until the Chretien government finally put an end to the project in mid-1995.

The internal debate echoed previous splits between Mulroney-era cabinet ministers when the Tories held power.

Evidence at the inquiry has shown Elmer MacKay and Lowell Murray backed the original plan for a manufacturing plant in Cape Breton. But two successive defence ministers, Perrin Beatty of Ontario and Bill McKnight of Saskatchewan, were opposed.

A memo drafted in 1986 by Robert Fowler, then a senior Privy Council official, described Mulroney himself as appearing to favour the project in its early stages — "strongly encouraged by both Messrs Doucet and McMillan."

Swain said those were references to Charlie McMillan and Fred Doucet, both senior aides to Mulroney at the time.

That assertion was challenged by Doucet’s lawyer, Robert Houston, who suggested the memo referred to Gerry Doucet, a lawyer, lobbyist and brother of Fred.

The issue is important because Fred Doucet later acted as an intermediary between Schreiber and Mulroney in their business dealings.

Schreiber, who was chairman of Bear Head Industries, says he paid Mulroney $300,000 to lobby for the project in 1993-94. He claims the deal was struck just before Mulroney stepped down as prime minister, although the money didn’t change hands until later.

Mulroney has admitted taking $225,000 from Schreiber but says he violated no federal ethics rules.

He says his lobbying was confined to foreign leaders whose countries might have provided export markets for Thyssen.
Now, the former prime minister has said that he was, er, hired to promote the TH 495 to, amongst other countries, Russia, France and China. Does anyone seriously believe the Russians or French (more here) would buy a German armoured vehicle, especially given their indigenous industries? Or that, just a few years after Tian An Min, the Government of Canada would have given an export permit for arms sales to China?

Something is rotten in...Occam's Razor and all that.

1 Comments:

Blogger herringchoker said...

Actually Mulroney said he was trying to get agreement for the major powers to buy AIFVs that the UN could use on peacekeeping missions - sort of a group pool. I'm not sure if that's a better answer, but it's certainly more plausible. Anyone who's been on a peacekeeping mission knows that many countries like Nepal & Bangledash were always borrowing equipment (usually ex-Warsaw Pact BTRs) to make up for their shortages.

11:11 a.m., April 24, 2009  

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