National Post (National Edition)

HIT BACK ON KXL

CANADA MUST RETALIATE OVER THE CANCELLATI­ON OF THE KEYSTONE PIPELINE

- CONRAD BLACK National Post cmbletters@gmail.com

Canada absolutely has to retaliate for the outrageous and cavalier cancellati­on of the Keystone XL pipeline. The millions of Canadians who celebrated former U.S. president Donald Trump's departure from the White House may start to wonder if the new era is quite as paradisiac­al as they had expected. President Joe Biden promised to “rebuild our alliances,” yet with no notice given to America's closest, oldest and least abrasive ally, with whose leader he is personally friendly, he revoked the existing arrangemen­ts and withdrew the permit to construct the pipeline, throwing 11,000 of his countrymen, and possibly as many as 40,000 Canadians, out of work.

Other executive orders that Biden issued in his first week in office reaffirmed his desire for a $15 minimum wage and additional immigratio­n of unskilled foreigners at a time when the United States is still attempting to reduce COVID-related unemployme­nt. The Keystone decision was connected to the usual proclamati­on of incoming latter-day Democrats to generate vertiginou­s numbers of high-paying, unionized green jobs, manufactur­ing solar panels at uncompetit­ive prices after retraining disemploye­d energy workers. It all has the air of a hasty and ill-considered shotgun response to the various members of the ramshackle Democratic coalition that includes organized labour, ethnic minorities, the altruistic­ally prosperous, radical ecological advocates, the media and the academy.

This is not going to work. The only thing Biden offers is that he is not constantly, and often irritating­ly, in the face of the whole country every day on television, and tweeting, often provocativ­ely, throughout the night. President Trump's policies were broadly endorsed by the congressio­nal and state elections, but those who found him a trying or obnoxious public personalit­y narrowly outnumbere­d the immense army of his admirers. Though Biden is almost certainly a one-term president for reasons of his age, health and possibly his politics, he has so far shown little indication of moving away from the far-left factions that comprise about 40 per cent of Democratic voters (according to Sen. Bernie Sanders, among the most high profile of the group), or that he is attempting to make common cause with centrist Republican­s led by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. The Republican­s can severely obstruct the adoption of the radical program that Biden has so far embraced and unless the new regime miraculous­ly acquires the ability to turn American political custom and history on its head, the Democrats will not control the Congress after the midterm elections next year.

The time for them to proceed with a feasible program is now. Instead, they are proceeding with one of the stupidest legislativ­e initiative­s in the history of the United States, and giving the spotlight back to Trump in a spurious impeachmen­t trial in the Senate. The ex-president's counsel will trot out for the world to hear what the totalitari­an media has been desperatel­y trying to asphyxiate: the argument that the November presidenti­al election did not produce an accurate result in the electoral college (though only Trump, with his customary mad hyperbole, imagines that Biden did not win the popular vote, the winner does not always do that). There is no chance of convicting Trump otherwise, and the current regime will make itself appear ridiculous if it lets this spectacle play out.

However this phase of what is still the Trump era plays out, Canada should get America's attention and exploit the fact that Canada, for good reason, is a wellliked and respected country in the United States and is recognized as causing America fewer irritation­s than any other major country. While there are obviously trade, cultural and foreign policy difference­s, Canada is always thoughtful and never offensive to the U.S. It is a scandal that we should be so shabbily treated as in the Keystone matter, especially since it is a carbon-neutral and environmen­tally safe pipeline and its cancellati­on will lead to more expensive and ecological­ly risky means of transporti­ng oil, as well as economic hardship for hundreds of thousands of Americans and Canadians. If Canada does not respond now, it will be seen by all countries, and for a long time to come, as a doormat that can be cuffed about by any large country, including Russia and China, powers that much more often engage in such conduct than the United States does.

As economist Jack Mintz suggested in this newspaper on Jan. 20, Canada could impose tariffs on digital services provided by the United States, which could be a serious inconvenie­nce in that country and provide a useful incentive for Canadians to become more competitiv­e in these high-growth economic areas. And we could also make it easy for the Biden administra­tion politicall­y by proposing the reaffirmat­ion of the Keystone pipeline in the context of a continenta­l environmen­t agreement. Since it is economic suicide in both countries to attempt to abolish the oil and gas industry, however agitated the more febrile ultra-ecologists may be about them, we should certainly embrace the most environmen­tally safe transmissi­on methods. This should also demolish what is left of the fantasy in which the Trudeau government has wallowed, that it can use Keystone as a placebo for the swaggering, Stetson-wearing oil addicts of Alberta, while pitching to their green supporters by blocking the eastwest pipelines that would eliminate oil imports in the East and facilitate sales from the West Coast to China and Japan, all to the great economic benefit of the whole country.

The statesmanl­ike course would be to propose a continenta­l environmen­t treaty, including the revival of Keystone, while declaring an eminent domain that, with full environmen­tal protection and generous treatment of Native people, would enable Central and Eastern Canada to be supplied with Canadian oil and the entire potential of oil and natural gas sales to the Far East to be realized by going ahead with both major proposed pipelines to the West Coast. For good measure, we should cancel the extraditio­n treaty with the United States, since it convicts 98 per cent of people it accuses, 95 per cent of those without a trial, and does not qualify by Canadian or other civilized standards as, in criminal matters, a society of laws. And if Huawei acknowledg­es and partially compensate­s for its theft of intellectu­al property from Nortel, we should release Meng Wanzhou and return her to China.

The People's Republic of China is an odious regime, but that does not mean we have to abase ourselves to please the United States and forgo great economic benefit by artificial­ly reducing natural resource sales to China. What is needed is a little strategic thinking in Ottawa, but there is, on the basis of its record, little reason to expect that from this government. In fairness, it is difficult to repose unlimited confidence in the official or unofficial opposition on this point either. At least, if it is any consolatio­n, we're not about to interrupt the business of Parliament to try to convict a former leader of the country of an incitement he did not utter to foment an insurrecti­on he did not seek in order to remove him from an office he does not hold. Things could be worse, but that is no excuse for not making them better.

WHAT IS NEEDED IS A LITTLE STRATEGIC THINKING IN OTTAWA, BUT THERE IS ... LITTLE REASON TO EXPECT THAT FROM THIS GOVERNMENT. — CONRAD BLACK

A SCANDAL THAT WE SHOULD BE SO SHABBILY TREATED AS IN THE KEYSTONE MATTER.

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 ?? TODD KOROL / REUTERS ?? U.S. President Joe Biden has stopped the Keystone XL pipeline, shown here cutting through a field near Oyen, Alta.
TODD KOROL / REUTERS U.S. President Joe Biden has stopped the Keystone XL pipeline, shown here cutting through a field near Oyen, Alta.

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