Washington: At a time when Khalistani groups in Canada are protesting the invitation extended to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the G7 Summit, former Pentagon official and senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Michael Rubin, has strongly criticised former Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau for amplifying ‘exaggerated claims around Hardeep Singh Nijjar and the Khalistan movement’.
Trudeau’s approach led to ties between India and Canada hitting an all-time low. Some had even believed that Modi would not be invited to the G7 Summit being hosted by Canada.
Rubin not only praised Modi’s strategic diplomacy, but also called for action against Khalistani extremism.
“The grievances about Hardeep Singh Nijjar and the Khalistan movement were not real”: Rubin said, accusing Trudeau of appeasing radical Sikh extremists in Canada and shifting blame to India rather than acknowledging domestic issues.
“Even Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s critics will acknowledge that he has grown tremendously in office and he’s now one of the most influential statesmen not only in Asia but in the world. The fact of the matter is that this magnanimity is strategic and it also forces the Canadians to recognise that the problem all along was in Canada and not with India. So, kudos to Prime Minister Modi for this strategy and for rejoining and agreeing to go to Alberta and the fact of the matter is that a strong relationship between India and all of North America is within everybody’s interests, especially given the rise of China,” Rubin told ANI.
Stressing on the need for decisive measures from Canada, Rubin said: “It is so essential that India continues to press Canada to address the Khalistan movement head-on to designate the Khalistan movement and extremists as terrorists, to uproot terror finance and to stigmatize forever these groups that really have no popular legitimacy back home in Punjab or for that matter, among the larger peaceful Sikh community in Canada. It’s time to stop allowing the loud, extreme voices to win and instead recognise that those same loud, extreme voices oftentimes deserve to be in prison for their involvement in terror, tax fraud and organised crime in Canada, in San Francisco and elsewhere.”
Reiterating his criticism of Trudeau, Rubin again dismissed the narrative around Nijjar and the Khalistan movement.
“The grievances about Hardeep Singh Nijjar and the Khalistan movement were not real. They were exaggerations that Justin Trudeau amplified…Justin Trudeau may have wanted so much to appease radical Sikh extremists in various constituencies that he was willing to take an organised crime hit between various Sikh groups and mafias and blame an outside power for it, rather than acknowledge the problem and the fault was Canada’s alone. That is Justin Trudeau’s problem. But now that Justin Trudeau is gone and likely will never return to power, Prime Minister Carney is taking a sober approach and recognising that he is not going to be tied to Justin Trudeau’s fictions..,” he said.
He praised Modi’s decision to accept Canadian prime minister Mark Carney’s invitation to the G7 Summit. According to him, PM Modi’s magnanimity in attending the summit shows “India has nothing to hide.”
Rubin contrasted former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s approach with that of Carney’s, saying Carney “understands the importance of India” and wants to “restore maturity to the relationship.”
“Canadian PM Mark Carney originally is a banker. He understands the importance of India. Justin Trudeau was a politician who peddled in image and imagination, and therefore it makes sense that Carney wants to restore maturity to the relationship,” Rubin said.
“It actually makes sense for Prime Minister Modi to show that the problem was not Canada itself, but the immaturity and unprofessionalism of Justin Trudeau,” he added.
Further, the American security expert highlighted that the Indian government is “willing to have a serious dialogue, much like they had with the United States.”
Rubin added that the problem with “Justin Trudeau is that for his own domestic, political reasons and to assuage radical constituencies, he was basically shooting from the hip without any factual basis to support his accusations against India.”
“What Prime Minister Modi is showing is that India has nothing to hide. If you’re going to have a serious law enforcement dialogue, it’s got to be two-way. We’ve got to talk about illegal immigration into Canada, terror finance in Canada, radical Sikh mafias and how the Khalistan movement is tied to organised crime and terrorism,” he added.
Rubin also raised concerns about the Khalistani movements, stating, “when you give safe haven to any terror group. Ultimately, your own interests are going to be subverted.”
“Justin Trudeau and frankly Pierre Trudeau before him, by embracing and tolerating the Khalistan movement in the face of some of the worst terrorist attacks in the 20th century, what they did is ultimately undermine Canada’s moral authority and its strategic importance,” he added.