Wednesday, January 24, 2007

makes one wonder ...

Mystery meeting: officials won't say what O'Connor discussed on U.S. visit
January 24th, 2007

OTTAWA (CP) -
The government of accountability and transparency is looking decidedly opaque this week.

A day after Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor met with his U.S. counterpart, the federal Conservative government was still refusing to say what the pair talked about. O'Connor visited Washington on Tuesday for his first meeting with new U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

But O'Connor refused to speak to reporters about the taxpayer-funded trip. ....

There was one clue to the secrecy: a source said staff were ordered by the Prime Minister's Office to keep quiet Tuesday so as not to take publicity away from Stephen Harper's speech on the one-year anniversary of his election win.



Mystery meeting: officials won't say what O'Connor discussed on U.S. visit
January 24th, 2007

OTTAWA (CP) -
The government of accountability and transparency is looking decidedly opaque this week.

A day after Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor met with his U.S. counterpart, the federal Conservative government was still refusing to say what the pair talked about. O'Connor visited Washington on Tuesday for his first meeting with new U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

But O'Connor refused to speak to reporters about the taxpayer-funded trip.

"Due to time constraints, there was no time for a media availability, however, I'm sure there will be plenty of opportunities the next time he is in Washington," spokeswoman Isabelle Bouchard wrote in an e-mail Tuesday.

When asked Tuesday and again Wednesday what was discussed, officials said they had no information to provide.

Bouchard said only that it was a good meeting and that the minister "looks forward to working constructively with his American counterpart in the future."

Canadian officials didn't announce the meeting until the day of the visit.

There was one clue to the secrecy: a source said staff were ordered by the Prime Minister's Office to keep quiet Tuesday so as not to take publicity away from Stephen Harper's speech on the one-year anniversary of his election win.

The visit was a chance for O'Connor to get to know Gates, who took over from Donald Rumsfeld after Republicans fared poorly in last fall's midterm elections.

While officials were keeping mum on the meeting, the mission in Afghanistan was likely to have been high on the agenda. Other topics may have included the situation in Iraq, NATO policy, Norad, missile defence, and Canada's new military equipment purchases.

Gates has been warning that the United States can't drop the ball in Afghanistan despite all the focus on Iraq.

Eight Canadian MPs are at the NATO base in Kandahar this week to review the country's progress in the war against the Taliban. But O'Connor has barred them from leaving the base citing security reasons - a decision that doesn't sit well with opposition MPs who note that other dignitaries have been escorted outside the base.

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