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Graeme Smith, foreign correspondent for The Globe and Mail, appears on CTV's Canada AM, Friday, Nov. 20, 2009. Minister of National Defence and Minister for the Atlantic Gateway Peter MacKay speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ont., on Thursday Nov. 19, 2009. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

MacKay casts doubt on ex-diplomat's torture allegations

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After suggesting Richard Colvin, the diplomat whose allegations about Afghan detainee transfers sparked a firestorm, is a Taliban dupe, the defence minister eased up on his attacks.
CTV News Channel: Peter Mackay and Robert Gates
Defence Minister Peter Mackay and U.S. Secretary of Defence Robert Gates both say the federal and U.S. government's realize big challenges are ahead in Afghanistan and they are committed to securing the safety of all Afghan citizens and solid defence relations with the country.
Power Play: Gar Pardy on the allegations
The former director general of Consular Affairs alleges the government is 'absolutely' trying to cover up it's knowledge of Afghan detainee abuse and is now involved in 'gutter politics.'
Power Play: U.S. Sen. John McCain
U.S. Sen. John McCain, who was a victim of prisoner abuse in Vietnam, weighed in on the allegations of detainee abuse, saying such things often propel insurgent recruitment.
Power Play: MPs debate detainee issue
Conservative MP Laurie Hawn, Liberal MP Ujjal Dosnajh and NDP MP Paul Dewar debate the allegations of Afghan prisoner torture and it's implications on the government and Canadian Forces.
CTV News Channel: Allan Cutler, whistleblower
The former bureaucrat who blew the whistle on the Liberal sponsorship scandal discusses the pressure that has been placed on ex-diplomat Richard Colvin for his testimony on the Afghan detainee treatment scandal.
CTV News Channel: Jack Harris, NDP defence critic
The NDP defence critic says despite the governments objections over Richard Colvin's claims he still believes an inquiry should be launched and says the issue is not about Colvin but whether there was a real risk of torture to detainees in Afghanistan.
CTV News Channel: Tom Clark on the fallout
The host of CTV's Power Play says despite Richard Colvin's senior position within the federal government, the Tories will continue to try and tear down his credibility, but many are wondering what's in it for Colvin and what is his motivation behind the allegations?
Canada AM: Graeme Smith, Globe and Mail
The federal government has turned the tables on a senior diplomat and are questioning his credibility over allegations of an alleged Afghan torture cover-up.
Canada AM: Jane Taber, Globe and Mail
The co-host of CTV's Question Period says Peter Mackay's attack on Richard Colvin was a strategic defence, but she also notes that Colvin did the right thing by revealing his findings.
CTV National News: Roger Smith on the response
Defence Minister Peter MacKay responded to the allegations made by an ex-diplomat that Canada knew Afghan detainees were being tortured by attacking the credibility of the evidence supporting the claim.

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Graeme Smith, foreign correspondent for The Globe and Mail, appears on CTV's Canada AM, Friday, Nov. 20, 2009. Minister of National Defence and Minister for the Atlantic Gateway Peter MacKay speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ont., on Thursday Nov. 19, 2009. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Minister of National Defence and Minister for the Atlantic Gateway Peter MacKay speaks during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ont., on Thursday Nov. 19, 2009. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Fri. Nov. 20 2009 8:57 AM ET

Opposition members are pushing for a public inquiry into the Afghan torture issue, while the Conservative government seeks to undermine the diplomat who repeatedly warned Ottawa about the problem.

In a set of explosive allegations made public earlier this week, Richard Colvin told a House of Commons special committee that all detainees captured by Canadian Forces in Afghanistan were tortured after being handed over the Afghan authorities.

In response, Defence Minister Peter MacKay has described Colvin as a "suspect source" who has been duped by Taliban-planted stories in Afghanistan.

In the House of Commons on Thursday, MacKay said the ex-diplomat hadn't provided "one scintilla of evidence" that wasn't second or third-hand information.

But the defence minister side-stepped questions about how a "dupe" could be promoted to work as an intelligence officer in Washington, where Colvin works today.

Colvin learned of the problem in 2006, when he was Canada's No. 2 diplomat in Afghanistan. From 2006-2007, he wrote reports that were widely circulated among the foreign affairs and defence departments that warned of torture in Afghan jails.

But senior members of the government said they did not see these reports early on and MacKay has questioned why Colvin didn't come directly to them with the allegations he has recently made public.

Globe and Mail reporter Graeme Smith told CTV's Canada AM that Colvin was "somebody the Canadian government obviously trusts," who currently holds a sensitive position as Canada's senior intelligence liaison in Washington.

"He's a senior Canadian official and this is probably not the last of it that we've seen, in terms of senior officials throwing accusations back and forth because we're talking about war crimes here. And the blame for all this is percolating upwards in the system and it's going to be a question of who knew what when," said Smith, who has reported extensively on Afghanistan.

Following Colvin's testimony earlier this week, opposition members quickly began asking for a public inquiry, and challenging the government on the torture issue, which spurred the remarks by MacKay on Thursday.

Liberal MP Bob Rae said the government's tactics were "reprehensible," and said the government is obliged to respond to the allegations Colvin has raised and not smear him.

NDP Jack Layton said that it's only "a matter of time" before an inquiry is called and that it's unacceptable for the government to attack a whistleblower who went by the book.

Globe and Mail reporter Jane Taber told Canada AM that MacKay's remarks in the House of Commons suggested the government's approach is to attack Colvin's credibility and to criticize those who believe him.

"What (MacKay) did, and what it seems the government officials are doing, is basically attacking the credibility of (Colvin's) evidence and also attacking his credibility in an interesting way, by suggesting that anyone who listens to what he has to say is...a Taliban supporter," Taber said during a phone interview from Ottawa on Friday morning.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who has just returned to Canada after travelling to India, has yet to comment on the allegations raised this week.

With files from The Canadian Press

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