As veteran diplomats and foreign policy specialists trade blows over who is to blame for the crisis in Canada-U.S. relations — How Obama Lost Canada; How Obama Won Canada; Obama Didn’t Lose Canada; Maybe Canada Lost Obama, Ever Think of That? — thoughtful observers on both sides of the border are concerned that important nuances in the debate are being overlooked.
While managing a bilateral relationship is never easy, especially one
as complex and multi-faceted as that between Canada and the U.S.,
sources close to the Canadian government stress that America totally did
not break up with Canada, Canada broke up with it first. They point to
the Obama administration’s politically motivated decision to block
approval of the Keystone XL pipeline extension as an important irritant
in the relationship, adding that America has been avoiding Canada in the
halls for weeks.
On the other hand, long-time State Department watchers suggest Canada
may have erred in focusing its diplomatic efforts too intently on the
administration, in a capital in which power
is increasingly dispersed, and besides Canada didn’t even look at
America in the library even though they were like studying at the same table.
Seeking to downplay tensions, they note that today’s disputes pale in
comparison to the controversies that have sometimes roiled relations
between the two countries in the past, such as over Vietnam or that
thing at the party last year after grad.
Nonetheless, it is clear that on a number of issues there is a
gathering sense of grievance on the Canadian side, a feeling that
Canada’s concerns are not taken seriously in official Washington.
Sources in the department of Foreign Affairs, who did not want to be
named because they had English Lit with America right after lunch, cited
a long list of perceived slights, from the Buy America provisions in
the stimulus bill to the failure to support Canada’s bid for a seat on
the Security Council to the lack of recognition of Canada’s contribution
to the Afghanistan mission. Would it have killed America, these sources
ask, just to call?
In response, Canada has moved to more aggressively assert its
interests, for example warning it might cultivate China and other export
markets for its crude oil, scaling back its commitment to Afghanistan
and changing its Facebook status to “it’s complicated.” Notwithstanding
the two countries’ partnership in the North American Free Trade
Agreement, it has pursued its own trade agreements with a number of
other powers. In bilateral meetings the tone has noticeably cooled.
People familiar with the situation say you could see it in their body
language — nothing overt, but let’s just say, awkward. More >>
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