THE ART OF APOLOGIES: A

THE ART OF APOLOGIES: A Canadian MP has apologized for calling Americans “bastards.”: “A Liberal MP has apologized for saying about Americans: “I hate those bastards.” MP Carolyn Parrish was speaking to reporters about Canada’s diplomatic initiative on Iraq. At the end of her comments, after most of the cameras were turned off, Parrish said, ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

THE ART OF APOLOGIES: A Canadian MP has apologized for calling Americans "bastards.": "A Liberal MP has apologized for saying about Americans: "I hate those bastards." MP Carolyn Parrish was speaking to reporters about Canada's diplomatic initiative on Iraq. At the end of her comments, after most of the cameras were turned off, Parrish said, 'Damn Americans … I hate those bastards.' CBC reporter Susan Lunn, who heard Parrish make the comment, said the MP then laughed as she was walking away.... 'My comments do not reflect my personal opinion of the American people and they certainly do not reflect the views of the government of Canada,' she said in her written statement. Late last year, the prime minister's communications director, Françoise Ducros, resigned after calling U.S. President George W. Bush 'a moron' during a conversation with a reporter in Prague." Parrish's statement is probably false -- the "bastards" comment was -- obviously -- her personal opinion. Maybe she changed her mind later, but she can't claim aliens made her say it. As one American e-mailed the CBC in reaction to the story: "If she hates us, I'd rather her say it and at least have the guts to stick to it... I'd rather be aware of honest hate rather than the smarmy lies of a pretended friend." This kind of story makes me flash back to 1985, when Reagan was heard muttering "sons of bitches" into a microphone as the press was leaving a Cabinet meeting. Reagan never apologized -- his press spokesman said, with a straight face, that what Reagan had really uttered was "It's sunny and you're rich." In handling it that way, Reagan was able to back away from what he said. He used an obvious lie to avoid telling a more insidious lie.

THE ART OF APOLOGIES: A Canadian MP has apologized for calling Americans “bastards.”: “A Liberal MP has apologized for saying about Americans: “I hate those bastards.” MP Carolyn Parrish was speaking to reporters about Canada’s diplomatic initiative on Iraq. At the end of her comments, after most of the cameras were turned off, Parrish said, ‘Damn Americans … I hate those bastards.’ CBC reporter Susan Lunn, who heard Parrish make the comment, said the MP then laughed as she was walking away…. ‘My comments do not reflect my personal opinion of the American people and they certainly do not reflect the views of the government of Canada,’ she said in her written statement. Late last year, the prime minister’s communications director, Françoise Ducros, resigned after calling U.S. President George W. Bush ‘a moron’ during a conversation with a reporter in Prague.” Parrish’s statement is probably false — the “bastards” comment was — obviously — her personal opinion. Maybe she changed her mind later, but she can’t claim aliens made her say it. As one American e-mailed the CBC in reaction to the story: “If she hates us, I’d rather her say it and at least have the guts to stick to it… I’d rather be aware of honest hate rather than the smarmy lies of a pretended friend.” This kind of story makes me flash back to 1985, when Reagan was heard muttering “sons of bitches” into a microphone as the press was leaving a Cabinet meeting. Reagan never apologized — his press spokesman said, with a straight face, that what Reagan had really uttered was “It’s sunny and you’re rich.” In handling it that way, Reagan was able to back away from what he said. He used an obvious lie to avoid telling a more insidious lie.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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