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If you think of yourselves as helpless and ineffectual, it is certain that you will create a despotic government to be your master. The wise despot, therefore, maintains among his subjects a popular sense that they are helpless and ineffectual. Frank Herbert (1920 - 1986), The Dosadi Experiment

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U.S.-Canada Military Plan Could Place Troops in Each Other’s Country

http://www.progressive.org…
hat tip: blacklistednews.com

The militaries of the United States and are wrapping up a seven-day exercise called “Vigilant Shield” on Tuesday. This marks the continuation of an ever-closer relationship between the two.

For instance, did you know that the United States could go into in times of emergency? And the Canadian could go into the United States?

This extraordinary fact appears in a joint document of the U.S. Northern Command and the Command. (The Pentagon established NorthCom in October 2002, and the Canadian established the Command in June 2005.)

The document is entitled “-US Civil Assistance Plan,” and it is dated February 14, 2008.

David Pugliese of the Ottawa Citizen broke the story about this plan at the time, but it received little attention in the United States.

“The purpose of the -United States Civil Assistance Plan () is to provide a framework for the of one nation to provide support to the of the other nation in the performance of civil support operations (e.g., floods, forest fires, hurricanes, earthquakes, and effects of a terrorist attack).” This framework is designed “to save lives, prevent human suffering, and mitigate damage to property,” the plan says.

The plan anticipates scenarios for using for using violence. “Opposing forces are not expected during the conduct of operations described in this plan,” it says. “However . . . commanders should consider the following Anti-Terrorism/Force Protection issues: (1) Terrorists organizations could conduct operations against the Canadian or US force, or in the civil support operations area; (2) State/provincial and local police capabilities could be severely degraded in the area of operations, allowing a corresponding rise in criminal activity that could affect the Canadian or US force; and (3) Environmental factors ranging from weather to contamination and disease could significantly affect the Canadian or US forces.”

Both the Canadian and U.S. forces have the right to use deadly force in self-defense, the plan says, though “there are no standing . . . rules of engagement or rules for the use of force,” the plan says. “Consequently, every mission will require unique guidance to deployed forces.”

“Support for law enforcement operations is not covered in this plan,” the document says. But it “will be included in the -United States Combined Defense Plan.” That plan is not readily available.

Cross-border support “will only be provided when agreed to by appropriate authorities in both the Government of and the U.S. Government,” the document says. Command and NorthCom “will develop potential options of the forces of one nation to support the forces of the other.” These options will then go to ’s Chief of the Defence Staff, which will seek the approval of the Canadian government. On the U.S. side, NorthCom “will present options to the SecDef, who will subsequently seek the approval of the President to deploy forces to .”

“Execution authority,” the document says, rests with the Command and with NorthCom.

Training for such eventualities has already been approved. “Cross-border movement of resources is authorized for training and exercises in preparation for bilateral -to- civil support,” the document says.

The document was signed by Lieutenant-General M. J. Dumais, commander, Command, and General Victor E. Renuart, commander, US Northern Command.

“It’s completely bizarre and it’s frightening,” says Kevin Best, a social justice activist in who has long worried about the increasing U.S. presence in .

As far as ’s presence in the U.S., Best said, jokingly, “That’s really scary for you guys, isn’t it?”

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