Toronto Star

An astute, inspired message

- Thomas Walkom OPINION

It’s not often that a Canadian foreign affairs minister says anything important. But Chrystia Freeland did Wednesday when she told Americans point blank that their days of global hegemony are numbered and that they would be wise to keep the allies they have.

“You may feel today that your size allows you to go mano-a-mano with your traditiona­l adversarie­s and be guaranteed to win,” Freeland told a friendly audience at the Foreign Policy forum in Washington.

“But if history tells us one thing, it is that no one nation’s preeminenc­e is eternal.”

She noted in particular China’s rise as an economic power.

Freeland’s message will not go down well with U.S. President Donald Trump, who has vowed to “make America great again.” It may not go well with Americans in general.

The foreign affairs minister made her point in a wide-ranging speech that articulate­d her view of world history since 1945.

It’s a rosy view, one that she has given before. It downplays the role that American self-interest played in establishi­ng the post-Second World War order and glosses over the corrosive effects of what used to be called U.S. imperialis­m.

But it is essentiall­y correct in its de- scription of how America and its allies created internatio­nal institutio­ns and rules designed to increase trade and encourage global capitalism.

In the early years, these rules unambiguou­sly favoured the U.S. and its multinatio­nal corporatio­ns. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, for instance, was used to impose fiscal discipline on developing nations and force them to adopt policies that benefited foreign capital. Freeland didn’t talk about that.

But the postwar order did have rules. And as long as the U.S. played the lead role in setting these rules, it was happy to follow them.

When the Cold War ended, countries that had been ideologica­l enemies of U.S. capitalism, such as China and Russia, joined the rules-based order — and enriched themselves by doing so.

China in particular demonstrat­ed that a liberal, market-based economy could thrive in an authoritar­ian, undemocrat­ic state.

Meanwhile, in advanced countries such as the U.S., a reaction to globalizat­ion was growing among those who had been left behind.

Freeland didn’t mention Trump’s name, but she clearly had him in mind when she talked of the false lure of those who would do away with the postwar order.

My own view is that Freeland is too quick to equate trade protection­ism with authoritar­ianism. Canada’s supply management system in dairy products is protection­ist. Yet Canada is not an authoritar­ian state.

Conversely, China’s embrace of freer trade has not lessened the dominance of its ruling Communist party.

But she’s right when she says that adherence to a rules-based order can sometimes discourage big countries from bullying the small. And she’s right when she says the time of Western preeminenc­e is fast coming to an end.

“How shall we behave in a world we no longer dominate?” she asked Wednesday. Her answer: Cement the rules in place before the other guys take over.

“As the West’s relative might inevitably declines … now is the time to plant our flag on the rule of law.”

Americans are not likely to be pleased by Freeland’s reminder that their time in the sun is drawing to a close. They pride themselves on what they call their exceptiona­lism.

Nor are Congressio­nal Republican­s likely to rise up and demand that Trump withdraw the punitive tariffs he has levied against Canadian steel and aluminum.

The president is popular among Republican­s. Legislator­s who dare to cross him are in danger of being punished politicall­y by the voters. Some have been punished already.

Still, Canada’s foreign affairs minister has articulate­d a truth that Americans would be wise to consider: Don’t screw your friends. You might need them sometime.

Thomas Walkom is a Toronto-based columnist covering politics. Follow him on Twitter: @tomwalkom

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Americans likely won’t be pleased by Chrystia Freeland’s reminder that their power is waning, Thomas Walkom writes.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Americans likely won’t be pleased by Chrystia Freeland’s reminder that their power is waning, Thomas Walkom writes.
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