The Daily Courier

Canada can’t take on China alone

- DEAR EDITOR: Frank Sterle Jr., White Rock

Re: “China not immune to political pressure,” (Martin Regg Cohn column, Feb.26, page A6)

Before Canada — or any other nation, for that matter — might effectivel­y challenge China on its human rights violations, we first have to have a significan­t tradeexpor­t/import bargaining chip. But we — as one country of less than 38 million people, standing alone against China’s almost 1.5 billion consumers —likely never will.

I can imagine that a large enough number of world nations securely allied, however, likely could combine their resources and go without the usual China bully-nation trade/investment connection they’d all prefer to abandon, instead trading necessary goods and services between themselves (and perhaps other, non-allied countries not beholden to China).

Yet, maybe such an alliance has already been proposed and discussed but rejected (behind closed doors) due to Chinese government strategist­s knowing how to ‘divide and conquer’ potential alliance nations by using door-wedge economic/political leverage custom-made for each nation (including Canada).

Each nation placing its own unbending bottom-line interests first may always be its, and therefore collective­ly our, Achilles’ heel to be exploited by huge-market nations like China.

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