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Saudi Arabia expels Canadian ambassador for urging release of activists

Oldgateboatdriver said:
95% of Sausi doctors studying in Canada at the resident/fellow level go back to Saudi Arabia or somewhere around there after they graduate. (BTW, what is this bull***t of "recalling" them? They are not the property of the Kingdom [except if you accept that the kingdom is an absolute monarchy that owns its people and they have to obey the king]).

The reason they go back to Saudi Arabia is because they are studying here in positions supernumerary to regular med school/residency/fellowship.  Just as we would expect someone whose education is subsidized under a program such as MOTP to do what we tell them, if these individuals have a contract that includes a return of service then when their "employer" (especially one that owns their passport) says come home, you go home.  Their positions were bought and paid for by the KSA and while the students/residents have to meet the same prerequisites as others attending a Canadian med school, they don't compete with Canadians for the slots.  It is likely that the terms of the contract that the Saudi government has with the med schools includes a clause making the continued attendance of the student contingent on them being contractually obligated to the KSA.  When the CF paid for supernumerary med school or residency slots for MOTP/MMTP that was part of the terms for continuing attendance at whatever school.

As for the rest, while it may sting a bit until the situation with fewer residents settle down, it won't cripple the Canadian medical system.  Most of the problems really only affect Ontario and Quebec.  They seem to have been the medical education destination for most Saudis and judging from the web pages of mostly Ontario based med schools, they are the ones that made it into a business.
 
PuckChaser said:
The drop of a hat in August, 3 weeks before the school year starts? Get real. We'd be getting the bottom third who don't have placements.

School year is irrelevant to interns and fellows. Their "schooling" is over and they only work in hospitals until they apply for their MD exams at the professional level or their fellowship at the specialist level at that point. Those people (in such programs) can switch from one place to the other mid-way through their program , and do so on a frequent basis, so - yeah! it's no big deal and it doesn't mean getting "bottom thirds", which some (most??) Saudi doctors may already be anyway, but getting the job just because they bring money!  ;)


Also, a couple million dollars in tuition per year is a pretty big chunk of change.

A couple million dollars to those universities, raking in about 100-150 millions a year, is no big deal, and even less for the Federal government if it choses to compensate them - stop making this into  a "Canada is a weak economy relying on the Saudis" narrative that is completely false: We don't need Saudi Arabia , and their not spending a dime in Canada is not going to make any bloody difference in the end.


I don't get how you can be so flippant with the situation, and not provide any sort of background information to back up your claims that this is "no big deal".

You got the background above, but on top of that, I have three medical doctors in the family (with one a top surgeon in the USA) so I have at least a clue of how the medical system works (because I hear about it on a constant basis, unfortunately!).
 
Thucydides said:
I can't really see how the actions of the current government have advanced our permanent interests.
As an ideally self-sovereign middle global power that is culturally averse to militarism Canada will always have a permanent interest in what is at least conceivably capable of leveling the playing field with bigger global powers. Like the freemen against King John in 1215 that something is due process and the rule of law, which is why they are enshrined in our charter and strongly implied in the CAF oath of allegiance.

It's bad enough to deride this as "virtue signalling", but to elevate the interests of the KSA over our own as some kind of rational realpolitiks-game just to score partisan points against our government is a little disgusting. Their permanent interest is in the maintenance of their monarchy. Our permanent interest is in the maintenance of ours and what it stands for, and our monarchy is absolutely nothing but a tourist attraction without habeas corpus, due process and the rule of law.
Even the comment upthread about the difference between Canada and the UnitedStates "twitter diplomacy" fails to take into account the Americans are using Twitter as battlespace preparation to advance their interests, and of course the Americans actually have the ability to follow through, with hard or soft power.
Yes, we all know the US has the "might to make right". They have the luxury of ignoring their ideals when they choose. Canada doesn't. Nobody expected this relatively innocuous and unoriginal tweet would be so contentious, but now that it has flared into a full-blown international incident I would've thought picking sides - at the very least in our own country - would have been easy. That terrorism-exporting KSA garners any sympathy around here is surprising and a little enraging.
 
Perhaps you need to re read my posts. The KSA is doing things to advance their interests, and they likely see Canada's actions in a sinister light because of the way the Liberal government has been consorting with a known arm of the Muslim Brotherhood. A competent government would never have wandered into that territory.

I did come across another alternative theory from one of my correspondents outside of the military community, who believes this was a deliberate ploy by the Liberals to distract the media from the state of the NAFTA talks. I am a bit dubious about that, since the second and third order effects are unpredictable, but there are lots of potential ways to examine the issue once you step back and look at the larger picture, and realize that other nations have agency and agendas which do not align with ours. The appearance of advancing the interests of the Muslim Brotherhoods, or disrupting the forming alignment of the Gulf States, Israel and the United States against Iran would look extremely different through the eyes of the KSA. The fact that no other nation has come on the side of Canada in this dispute serves to illustrate our lack of power or importance internationally, and that the causes of the dispute have no resonance with the national interests of other nations.

No, the Liberals stepped into this one on their own.
 
KSA is repugnant, but then so is the PRC, if the Liberals were consistent in their concerns I might believe they are taking the high road. Working for this government, I see that "virtue signaling" is one of their primary goals, particularly ones that increase their approval rating with selected classes of voters. Sending these concerns via normal diplomatic channels would not garner the same amount of virtue signaling points as using Twitter. Hence the reason that platform was used. The true recipients are Canadians not KSA. 
 
beirnini said:
It's bad enough to deride this as "virtue signalling", but to elevate the interests of the KSA over our own as some kind of rational realpolitiks-game just to score partisan points against our government is a little disgusting. Their permanent interest is in the maintenance of their monarchy. Our permanent interest is in the maintenance of ours and what it stands for, and our monarchy is absolutely nothing but a tourist attraction without habeas corpus, due process and the rule of law.

It's virtue signalling if the government will send angry words via Twitter to score political points, but when it comes to the hard business of cancelling a $15B CAD arms deal, the Liberal morale compass isn't worth that much. In fact, the Minister wouldn't even go on record a year ago in the HoC to state they were not happy with KSA being on the UN Women's Rights Commission.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QeSTLe37sI

No one minds a principled position, if you're going to maintain that position at all costs. The fact that Liberals were not upset enough to cancel the arms deal, but for some reason needed to jump on Twitter to register outrage after being rebuffed numerous times through official channels that should make people wonder if the Trudeau Liberals actually hold the principles and values they claim to. I mean, 0 tolerance for sexual harassment (guilty before proven innocent) only applied to everyone below the Prime Minister, so why should we believe he's willing to make hard decisions that effect his polling numbers to stand up for those principles.
 
beirnini said:
Nobody expected this relatively innocuous and unoriginal tweet would be so contentious, but now that it has flared into a full-blown international incident I would've thought picking sides - at the very least in our own country - would have been easy. That terrorism-exporting KSA garners any sympathy around here is surprising and a little enraging.

Yes, I could feel my stomach turning thinking about that.

I find it odd that some people want to dismiss this issue immediately as virtue signalling. The point of the message was about supporting Raif Badawi and his family. A man that is being violently punished for exercising free speech in his oppressive theocratic country.

I thought conservatives were for human liberty and freedom of speech?

I know that using twitter seems like a cheap shot and degrades the message, many times to the point of futility.
But then I remember how ridiculous some face to face political messages can become.
I still laugh about that time at the 2014 G20 meeting when Harper told Putin to "get out of Ukraine". I can just hear Putin snickering in Russian. And then nothing happens. It's about as disappointing as poking at an empty hornet's nest.

Sometimes, or most times on the political elementary school playground, the side that cries the least won the fight.

So far it seems Saudi Arabia is losing the fight by a tantrum and a half.



 
Please re read Puckchaser's post just above. No one here is expressing any sympathy for the KSA, but some of us are trying to discern their motives, and explain why the United States and the rest fo the Western world (and indeed everyone) is sitting quietly on the sidelines.

Longer term, Saudi Arabia will likely put together a large voting coalition in the UN to prevent Canada from gaining a security council seat when out comes up next, rubbing the Liberal's face in it (since this seemed to be one of their big foreign policy goals), and making the sacrifice of treasure and potentially blood in Mali irrelevant as well.

As for the term "Virtue Signalling", it is highly appropriate, since it refers to making statements when you have neither the inclination or means to back them up, and don't expect any consequences for making such a statement. It certainly backfired on the Government this time.
 
Til.Valhall said:
Yes, I could feel my stomach turning thinking about that.

I find it odd that some people want to dismiss this issue immediately as virtue signalling. The point of the message was about supporting Raif Badawi and his family. A man that is being violently punished for exercising free speech in his oppressive theocratic country.

I thought conservatives were for human liberty and freedom of speech?

I know that using twitter seems like a cheap shot and degrades the message, many times to the point of futility.
But then I remember how ridiculous some face to face political messages can become.
I still laugh about that time at the 2014 G20 meeting when Harper told Putin to "get out of Ukraine". I can just hear Putin snickering in Russian. And then nothing happens. It's about as disappointing as poking at an empty hornet's nest.

Sometimes, or most times on the political elementary school playground, the side that cries the least won the fight.

So far it seems Saudi Arabia is losing the fight by a tantrum and a half.

Except most news has us as the red headed stepchild of the international  community. The community that has told us were on our own, either with diplomatic double speak or with silent alienation of diplomatic ties. We aren't a going concern anymore The billions of precious tax dollars spent in the ME, for, hell, pick a reason and they are now against us. I think any thought of a UN seat or Nobel is out the window for the PM. In one innocuous tweet, we alienated the rest of the world.

Doesn't look like the Saud's lost that much ground. Take away med students, burden our system more, but keep selling us oil? They are making huge compromises to our economy. They are dictating terms like landowners. Gentry to the peasants.

No, I don't think they are losing the fight at all. The rest of the world doesn't like being lectured about how they treat women. How much they pay workers. How much inclusiveness they need to show and to who. Time and a place for everything. Using inept social media skills is not the time or place for this government to try and score some moral high ground.

I'm really, really hoping that this is just the world's way of giving our government a time out and a lesson on joining the big people table. If not, we could be in serious trouble.
 
Thucydides said:
As for the term "Virtue Signalling", it is highly appropriate, since it refers to making statements when you have neither the inclination or means to back them up, and don't expect any consequences for making such a statement. It certainly backfired on the Government this time.

I think we already have plenty of terms and phrases used to describe making a statement without being able to back it up.

But using the term "virtue signalling" is more than that. In common usage, that term clearly voices at least some opposition to a given moral statement.

 
Everything about this government is about virtue signalling, it's their primary goal in order to garner votes with certain select voters. There is a lot of concern that they just made things worse for the detainees and lengthened their imprisonment.
 
Til.Valhall said:
I think we already have plenty of terms and phrases used to describe making a statement without being able to back it up.

But using the term "virtue signalling" is more than that. In common usage, that term clearly voices at least some opposition to a given moral statement
.

You mean like the Saudi's had for our statement on them?
 
Colin P said:
Everything about this every government ever, is about virtue signalling, it's their primary goal in order to garner votes with certain select voters.
 
Actually no, the CPC was not terribly interested in it. Their interest was in reducing the size of government, Harper was critical enough of China to make the relationship frosty, but not by signalling.
 
Colin P said:
Actually no, the CPC was not terribly interested in it. Their interest was in reducing the size of government, Harper was critical enough of China to make the relationship frosty, but not by signalling.

Without getting too far in the weeds, the the CPC was accused of dog-whistling quite often. Another similar term. Same idea but more subtle. Quite often used to dismiss opposing groups on moral grounds.
 
My question in this whole affair is: what was the stated goal of the tweet? To secure the release of the Saudi prisoners?

If so, did it work?

If it didn't work, was it effective diplomacy?

 
SeaKingTacco said:
My question in this whole affair is: what was the stated goal of the tweet? To secure the release of the Saudi prisoners?

If so, did it work?

If it didn't work, was it effective diplomacy?

Maybe, as expressed in this opinion piece, it served to show the world KSA's true colours. 

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/aug/12/saudi-arabia-spat-canada-mohammed-bin-salman-true-colours
 
Since the majority of government are more or less authoritarian, I don't think any needed to be shown their true colours, in fact most don't care. Anyone not understanding KSA current governance by this time has to be dumb and blind.
 
Colin P said:
Since the majority of government are more or less authoritarian, I don't think any needed to be shown their true colours, in fact most don't care. Anyone not understanding KSA current governance by this time has to be dumb and blind ignorant and happy.

Fixed that for you.
 
Interesting article, which reinforces the idea of all this being a virtue circling party by the Liberals. If the KSA is bad (which I think we all grant) then why on earth is the government funding an organizations which indoctrinates children into becoming terrorists? I've yet to see any tweets about that, have you?

https://www.israpundit.org/canadas-middle-east-policy-is-gods-vengeance-on-logic/

I would suggest having principles and internal consistency will serve to prevent a lot of these things happening to Canada going forward.
 
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