Keith William MacLellan (30 November 1920–29 September 1998) was a Canadian soldier, scholar, and diplomat who championed the cause of a federal, united Canada. He served as Ambassador to Pakistan and Afghanistan, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, Jordan, and Syria.

Keith MacLellan
Keith William MacLellan on a diplomatic mission
Canada Ambassador to Pakistan and Afghanistan
In office
1974–1977
Canada Ambassador to Yugoslavia and Bulgaria
In office
1977–1979
Canada Ambassador to Jordan
In office
1982–1985
Canada Ambassador to Syria
In office
1984–1985
Personal details
Born(1920-11-30)November 30, 1920
Aylmer, Quebec
DiedSeptember 29, 1998(1998-09-29) (aged 77)
Ottawa, Ontario

Personal life and education edit

 
MacLellan in official outfit

MacLellan was born on 30 November 1920 in Aylmer, Quebec, the son of William David MacLellan and Edith Olmsted. He was a direct descendant of Philemon Wright,[citation needed] the founder of Hull, Quebec, which was later amalgamated into the municipality of Gatineau.

MacLellan grew up in Montreal, Quebec, where he studied political science and pre-law at McGill University. During his time as a student, he joined the Canadian Officers' Training Corps.[1] In 1942, he helped John Sutherland and his sister found the First Statement, a Canadian literary magazine.[citation needed]

In 1942 MacLelland put his studies on hold to join the army, and shortly after he was sent overseas to the United Kingdom.[2] During his deployment in Belgium in 1944 he met Countess Marie Antoinette LeGrelle, whom he married on 11 September 1946. Marie Antoinette belonged to the Le Grelle family, a line of nobles from Antwerp, Belgium. She was the daughter of Count Adelin Le Grelle and Rosalie de Swert; the niece of Count Jacques Legrelle, who helped organise the Comet Line;[3] and the aunt of Cécilia Ciganer-Albéniz, who was briefly the First Lady of France in 2007.

Post-war, MacLellan studied philosophy, politics and economics at New College, Oxford, obtaining a Master's of Arts in 1947.[2] In this time, he was on the college's rowing team and was a contemporary of political figures such as Tony Wedgewood Benn and the organisers of the Oxford Manifesto.[citation needed]

He subsequently returned to Canada, where he worked at Imperial Oil before joining Canada's Department of External Affairs in 1950.

He is survived by his four children, Dr. Keith MacLellan, Dr. Anne-Marie MacLellan, Janet MacLellan, and Andrew MacLellan.

War years edit

 
MacLellan in his Special Air Service uniform

Like many of his generation, his studies were interrupted by the war and he joined the Royal Montreal Regiment, with whom he trained, was commissioned as an officer and was sent to the United Kingdom.

It was in the United Kingdom that he transferred to the 1st Special Air Service (1st SAS), becoming one of only two Canadians serving in the 1st SAS during the war. In this time, he was part of small jeep mounted units that operated behind enemy lines in Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany and Norway.

While his precise involvement in operations is unknown, it is known that:

  • he joined "A Sqn" 1st SAS in 1944.
  • he was detached for a short period (Dec 1944-Jan 1945) for either or both Operation Franklin and Operation Regent during the Battle of the Bulge where he was part of a group sent to hunt the SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny's commandos.
  • he returned to his squadron and took part in Operation Archway (March–May 1945) where his unit operated behind the German lines first in support of the Rhine Crossing, and subsequently in advance of the Allied armies, finally reaching Keil in May 1945.
  • he took part in Operation Apostle, (May–August 1945) in Norway, where the SAS were deployed to disarm some 300,000 German soldiers at the end of the war.

It is also known that he was part of the SAS detachment that first liberated the Bergen Belsen concentration camp, which his unit discovered while operating ahead of the allied armies after the Rhine crossing.[note 1]

It was during the liberation of Antwerp in 1944, that he first met Comtesse Marie Antoinette LeGrelle whom he married after the war as a student at Oxford.

External Affairs edit

 
Keith W. MacLellan as ambassador to Yugoslavia between 1977 and 1979.

Keith MacLellan joined the Department of External Affairs in 1950, and was part of the group of Canadian Foreign Service officers who helped shape Canada's post-war diplomatic efforts and policy.

The group represented a Canadian identity on the world stage that was, within the constraints of the Cold War, both allied with, yet independent from, the existing American and British identities.[4] The group's ethos of "multilateralism" successfully defined Canada's separate identity while enabling it to exert influence through institutions such as the United Nations and the World Health Organization.

MacLellan's career dealt with political instability in a number of countries, most notably: Laos in 1965–1966, which was in turmoil throughout the 1960s due to the conflict in neighbouring Vietnam and the resulting Laotian Civil War; Afghanistan in 1974–1977, where a series of coups in the 1970s eventually led to the Soviet invasion of 1979; and Pakistan, also from 1974–1977, during the deposition of then Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Finally, he witnessed the onset of Yugoslavia's disintegration when President Josip Broz Tito's illness in 1979, and subsequent death in 1980, created the power vacuum that would ultimately end in civil war.[citation needed]

Negotiating A Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty with Pakistan edit

 
Keith William MacLellan as the ambassador of Canada in Pakistan

It was however in Pakistan that Keith MacLellan faced his greatest diplomatic challenge, namely to try to get Pakistan and its then Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto to sign up to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and abandon its aim of manufacturing a nuclear bomb in response to India having exploded their own device, Smiling Buddha, on 18 May 1974.

Canada had what was believed at the time to be a trump card in the international effort to curb Pakistan's ambitions; namely the supply of uranium and technical support to Pakistan's Canadian manufactured KANUPP nuclear power plant. KANUPP was believed at the time to be Pakistan's only source of fissile material from which a bomb could be made. At the same time, matters were complicated by France agreeing to sell Pakistan a nuclear fuel reprocessing plant and technical expertise which would have the capability of turning the "spent fuel" from KANUPP into large quantities of weapons grade plutonium.[5]

While inconceivable in this day and age of instant communications and "special envoy" shuttle diplomacy, the task of bringing Prime Minister Bhutto to the negotiating table and obtaining an agreement fell on Keith MacLellan as Canada's representative in Pakistan.

Unfortunately, both Canada and the West had seriously underestimated Bhutto's determination to develop Pakistan's own bomb and the sacrifices that it was prepared to pay in order to do so.[note 2] In fact, unknown to them, Bhutto had formally launched Pakistan's nuclear programme within 3 months of being elected Prime Minister in 1972[6] and subsequently accelerated the programme in 1974 by launching Project-706, which was later described by Time Magazine as "Pakistan's equivalent of the U.S.'s Manhattan Project" . Part of this project involved developing the technology and expertise to produce and refine uranium from other sources than Canada.[5]

As a result, the threat of Canadian sanctions on the KANNUP reactor were less of an ultimate deterrent than was believed at the time. Consequently, negotiations between Keith MacLellan and Prime Minister Bhutto finally broke down in 1976 and despite a State Visit to Ottawa by Bhutto, Canada withdrew its support for the reactor.[7] This action however only resulted in a delay rather than a cessation of Pakistan's nuclear programme.

While accounts vary as to the length of the delay before Canadian uranium and expertise were replaced by domestic product, with some sources stating that the impact as little as two years,[citation needed] prior to the sanction Pakistan had initially projected having a working device by the early-mid 1980s, whereas it actually only detonated its first device in 1998 .

Postings Abroad edit

MacLellan represented Canada in the following roles:

Duration Location Position
1953–1957 Berne, Switzerland 3rd Secretary
1958 Los Angeles, USA Counsellor
1959–1963 Rome, Italy First Secretary
1965–1966 Vientiane, Laos Canadian Commissioner at the International Commission for Supervision and Control (ICSC/ICC)
1966–1967 London, England 1st Secretary / Interim High Commissioner
1967-1971? Brussels, Belgium 1st Secretary/Charge D'Affaires
1974–1977 Pakistan and Afghanistan Ambassador
1977–1979 Yugoslavia and Bulgaria Ambassador
1982–1985 Jordan Ambassador
1984–1985 Syria Ambassador

Politics edit

In 1979, MacLellan requested a leave of absence from the Department of External Affairs in order to run for Parliament and contribute to the federalist cause during the 1980 Quebec Referendum. When his request was denied, he resigned.[2]

He returned to his hometown of Montreal to stand as the Progressive Conservative candidate for the riding of Lasalle in the 1979 federal election.[2] MacLellan was defeated by Liberal incumbent John Campbell by a wide margin, receiving only 9.59% of the vote.[8]

He subsequently rejoined the Department of External Affairs, where he was posted as Ambassador first to Jordan and then to Syria.[2] MacLellan formally retired from the department in 1985.[citation needed]

In 1988, he ran for parliament once again in Saint-Henri—Westmount, however he was not successful. MacLellan received 39.29% of the vote, losing narrowly to Liberal candidate David Berger, who received 41.61%.[9]

Despite not being elected to parliament, MacLellan continued to be involved in politics, devoting his later years to Canadian-Quebecois unity and the Scottish Clan MacLellan history. He was first elected as President of the St. Andrew's Society of Montreal, and later President of the St Andrew's Society of Ottawa.[citation needed] He also stood as the director of Clan MacLellan of America, and a convenor of the Franco-Scottish Society of Québec.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ "Keith MacLellan" (PDF). Canadian War Museum. Retrieved 13 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e Schwartz, Susan (12 November 2017). "Remembrance Day: Royal Montreal Regiment honours veteran and diplomat Keith MacLellan". The Gazette.
  3. ^ Ottis, Sherri Greene (2001). Silent Heroes: Downed Airmen and the French Underground. University Press of Kentucky. p. 144. ISBN 0-8131-2186-8.
  4. ^ Keating, Tom. "Multilateralism and Canadian Foreign Policy: A Reassessment" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 August 2010. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
  5. ^ a b "Who Has the Bomb". Time Magazine. 3 June 1985. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  6. ^ Weissman, Steve; Krosney, Herbert (1981). The Islamic Bomb: The Nuclear Threat to Israel and the Middle East. New York: Times Books. ISBN 9780812909784.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  7. ^ "Karachi / KANUPP". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  8. ^ "1979 Federal Election". Canadian Elections Database.
  9. ^ "1988 Federal Election". Canadian Elections Database.

Notes edit

  1. ^ His participation in this event was formally recognised by the Canadian Jewish Congress in 1983
  2. ^ "If India builds the Bomb, we will eat grass or leaves, even go hungry. But we will get one of our own - we have no other option." - Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, 1965