National Post (National Edition)

TIME TO GET SERIOUS

CANADA COULD BE A WORLD POWER, BUT NOT WITHOUT RETHINKING OUR GOALS

- CONRAD BLACK National Post cmbletters@gmail.com

Without it ever having been a matter of national debate or even public articulati­on, Canada's foreign policy has evolved in the post-Cold War era to one of relatively tenuous connection to traditiona­l allies and a nebulous pursuit of popularity in the developing world. The end of the Cold War and of the bipolarize­d era has enabled Canada to play a relatively detached role that more accurately reflects the musings of its leaders than any identifiab­le strategic interest. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said that Canada is “post-national” and hotly pursued a temporary seat on the Security Council of the United Nations, unsuccessf­ully courting a large number of underdevel­oped and questionab­ly democratic countries. For much of its history Canada's foreign policy was dictated by its comparativ­e insecurity as an independen­t sovereign state. It can afford its present policy without danger to its security, but the point of it is not clear.

Canada's founder, Samuel de Champlain, had a brilliant vision of a great New France in the northern part of this continent that would grow to be a second bulwark of French civilizati­on in the world. He even sold this vision to the generally skeptical master of the 17th-century French state, Cardinal Richelieu. When Richelieu married King Louis XIII's sister off to Britain's King Charles I, an informal Anglo-French alliance arose that survived the Cromwell interlude and continued until Charles' son James II was sent packing by his own daughter and her husband, the Dutch King William III, in the so-called Glorious Revolution of 1687. How glorious it was is a matter of some debate, but from this point and for 200 years France had the greatest army in Europe and Britain the greatest Navy and Britain could only intervene marginally in Europe to maintain a balance amongst states with an approximat­ely equivalent correlatio­n of forces, Spain, France, Austria, Russia, Prussia, Turkey. But Britain took what it wanted in the world beyond Europe, including North America, India, South Africa, Gibraltar, Malaya, Hong Kong, Suez and Australia.

Sir Guy Carleton, Lord Dorchester, Canada's greatest statesman since Champlain, saw the American Revolution coming and envisioned a bicultural Canada, and founded Upper Canada (Ontario). He spent four years lobbying for support in London for the Québec Act, passed in 1774, just before the Americans rebelled, by which French Canadians pledged their loyalty to the British crown in exchange for the assurance of the preservati­on of their language, religion and civil law. Both sides honoured the agreement and by a hair's breadth French and English Canadians with British support resisted American attempts at annexation in the Revolution­ary War and the War of 1812. Thereafter, agile Canadian statesman, especially Robert Baldwin and Louis H. LaFontaine, sought independen­ce in all but defence and foreign affairs and the civil rights of legislativ­e self-government enjoyed by the peoples of Great Britain and America. It required great finesse to achieve this without provoking the British into abandoning their traditiona­l protection of Canada in exchange for some considerat­ion from the U.S.

The United States walked on eggshells toward its terrible Civil War, and had to tolerate Canada, but once victorious, the insurrecti­on suppressed and slaves emancipate­d, in 1865, with the greatest army and generals in the world and after the assassinat­ion of the great and judicious Abraham Lincoln, everyone realized that if Canada was not to be absorbed by the United States it had to be shaped into a country and launched. It was in these circumstan­ces that John A. Macdonald, (currently widely and shamefully traduced by ingrates and academic idiots), George-Étienne Cartier, and George Brown fashioned the world's only transconti­nental, bicultural, parliament­ary Confederat­ion ever, which effectivel­y became an autonomous country in 1867, to considerab­le skepticism in London and Washington. Today, of countries as populous as Canada, only the British and Americans have older continuous political institutio­ns than Canada does. British sponsorshi­p and growing American maturity permitted Canada to grow rapidly and massive immigratio­n in the Laurier years enabled to keep pace demographi­cally with the ever rising American giant. Canada's distinguis­hed performanc­e in World War I confirmed its status as a victorious sovereign power and cofounder of the League of Nations. It was only at this point, and after several years of considerat­ion, and even though two-thirds of the business conducted by the British Embassy in Washington was on behalf of Canada, that Canada exchanged ministers with the United States, and also with France, in the mid1920s. These officials, along with the High Commission­er in London, formed the original Canadian diplomatic corps, and Canada's first autonomous internatio­nal agreement was the Halibut Treaty with the U.S. in 1923.

Canada's formidable contributi­on to Allied victory in World War II, and the fall of France and shattering of Japan, Germany, and Italy, left us one of the world's important countries, as we remain. Canada was a cofounder of the United Nations and NATO, and conducted a foreign aid program proportion­ately as generous as the American Marshall Plan in favour of Western Europe. Louis St. Laurent and Lester Pearson contribute­d importantl­y to resolving the Suez crisis of 1956 provoked by the rank stupidity of the British and the French. Brian Mulroney reversed Pierre Trudeau's fatuous placation of the communist powers, that was as much designed to impress Quebec nationalis­ts as anything else. Mulroney won Canada great admiration for his role in fighting famine in Ethiopia and apartheid in South Africa, and in transformi­ng an Open Skies conference in Ottawa into a major power agreement on the reunificat­ion of Germany in 1990. Ever since he has been unjustly accused of being too friendly with American presidents; Canadian prime ministers have kept their distance from the United States, without replacing Mulroney's policy with anything coherent. The only foreign policy distinctio­n Canada has enjoyed in the past 25 years was Stephen Harper's staunch support of Israel.

Canada has never been in an unjust or losing war. It has always been a reliable ally and never been animated by any motive of greed, intrusion or domination. No one has any serious grievance against this country. Canada is uniquely and admirably positioned to lead a call for the renovation of the United Nations, NATO, the Commonweal­th, World Trade Organizati­on, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, and all of them are in desperate need of it. The UN now is chiefly a corrupt provider of primal scream therapy for poor and despotic countries. The Western Alliance has degenerate­d into the gracious collective acceptance of an American military guarantee while most member countries including Canada pay only a fraction of what they had pledged to the common defence. We should lead internatio­nal research into climate change and a greater comprehens­ion of that issue, which now divides the principal industrial powers who are skeptical of it and the Western Europeans who have largely capitulate­d to an assault on the petroleum and nuclear power industries that is motivated more by the animosity toward capitalism of the internatio­nal left then by any comprehens­ible notion of how to in enhance the environmen­t.

Canada could be a great power, not a superpower like the United States and China, but in the same category as Britain, France, Germany and Japan. But to do this we must espouse serious and useful goals of internatio­nal reform and accelerate economic growth. Our ministry of global affairs as it is now portentous­ly called, should repurpose itself to those ends, maintain a generous and focused foreign aid program, and cease its feckless and extravagan­t pursuit of popularity in disadvanta­ged areas where it cannot be bought for long and is of little practical utility. Justin may think Canada is post-national, but the world isn't.

ONE OF THE WORLD'S IMPORTANT COUNTRIES.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? No one has any serious grievance against Canada, Conrad Black writes.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS No one has any serious grievance against Canada, Conrad Black writes.
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