CBCnews

Message on the Fourth

"Bonjour y'all! I've taken French. It didn't take to me." And with that, US Ambassador David Wilkins kicked off the Fourth of July celebrations at his posh Ottawa digs.

More than 3,000 diplomats, politicians and Ottawa somebodies ignored afternoon showers to enjoy the hospitality.

Among those making the rounds were former prime minister Joe Clark and his wife, Maureen McTeer; Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion; Bloc Québécois MP Claude Bachand; Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day; Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin; Chief of Defence Staff Rick Hillier; retired Major General Lewis MacKenzie; and House of Commons Speaker Peter Milliken.

The Ambassador dished up authentic Southern fare and hammed it up for the cameras, showing off his special red, white and blue Fourth of July belt while his wife Susan modeled her Ann Hand Lady Freedom Scarf.

But, Wilkins struck a serious note when asked about the war in Afghanistan. He urged reporters to look at the "successes," observing that the Taliban and the terrorist training camps have been taken out and that the country has a "national assembly elected as in Canada and the United States."

"Canada and the United States are helping this young democracy survive against terrorists," he said. "And if we pull out now, in my opinion, the terrorists will follow us home."