Meet the newest US national security threat: Canada
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — U.S. President Donald Trump has decided that
the hockey-mad country to the north represents a national security risk.
No, it has nothing to do with some Canadians turning to vigilantism, reportedly
harassing the drivers of boats and cars driven by Americans suspected of
sneaking across the temporarily closed border amid U.S. coronavirus hysteria.
Rather, Trump perceives Canada’s aluminum exports as a threat to national
security.
Really? Take off, eh!
Why haven’t we heard from the Pentagon about this so-called Canadian threat?
Theoretically, the U.S. military arsenal is compromised by the fact that Canada
contributes up to 75% of America’s imported raw aluminum. Is the Pentagon
drawing up military options for Trump to address this so-called national
security threat right on the U.S. border? Is the Air Force going to bomb Niagara
Falls?
Nope. Trump’s national security pretext is nonsense.
Instead of military officials or the national security apparatus speaking out,
it’s pencil-pushing, bean-counting government apparatchiks helping Trump ramp up
the same tired rhetoric that has manipulated the hoi polloi into believing it’s
foreign countries that represent a threat to America rather than homegrown
ineptitude.
The problem is that no one in America thinks Canada is a national security
threat. As always, it’s really just an excuse for economic protectionism, with
the secretary of commerce farcically acting as commanding general for the launch
of this new cold war front against the Great White North.
Trump has slapped a 10% tariff on Canadian raw aluminum. In a signed
presidential proclamation, he declared: “I concurred in the [secretary of
commerce’s] finding that aluminum articles were being imported into the United
States in such quantities and under such circumstances as to threaten to impair
the national security of the United States.”
Trump is accusing Canada of weakening America by selling it stuff that it needs
in order to produce things that the U.S. sells back to Canadians at a profit.
Even more comically, Trump made the tariff announcement while standing in front
of boxes full of washing machines at the Whirlpool manufacturing plant in Clyde,
Ohio. Each box was labeled “WASHER” in three languages — English, French and
Spanish — representing the two official languages of Canada and the official
language of the other major North American trade partner of the United States,
Mexico.
Know what would be an even bigger threat to America? If Canadians and Mexicans
stopped buying those aluminum-based products and U.S. workers lost their jobs —
something that might happen when Canada retaliates with dollar-for-dollar
countermeasures.
Instead of admitting that Canada is a fierce competitor in the sector and
calling for the optimization of U.S. production in order to become less reliant
on Canadian sources, Trump chose to punish Canadian competitors for excelling.
What happened to free-market and limited-government principles?
Now Canada knows how Russia feels. And China. And Venezuela. And Syria. And
Iran. And any other country that the U.S. government has labeled a threat to its
national security (and subsequently sanctioned or invaded) because at some point
it introduced economic competition that threatened U.S. dominance on the global
playing field.
Add Europe to the list as well. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recently
announced new guidelines that could punish European companies helping to
complete Nord Stream 2, a strategic natural gas pipeline running from Russia
into Germany, and companies involved in the TurkStream pipeline from Russia to
Turkey. Meanwhile, European countries that, like the U.S., signed a deal with
Iran to limit its nuclear ambitions in exchange for opening Iranian markets to
the West now face U.S. sanctions if they try to engage in commerce with Iran
without America’s explicit blessing.
Unfailingly loyal bootlickers and puppets are treated much differently, however.
Reports from the Wall Street Journal and New York Times suggest that U.S. allies
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have their own well-developed nuclear
programs. As long as these two vassal nations continue to do America’s bidding
in the Middle East, they’ll benefit from a double standard, while Iran is
punished for maintaining its independence and sovereignty.
For too long, Canada has failed to adequately diversify its economic interests
and has taken its relatively easy relationship with the U.S. for granted. It’s
long past time for Canada to forge its own trade relationships based on
independent foreign policy, just as it once did with Cuba. Perhaps it should
even open the door to countries that, like itself, have been labeled a “threat”
to U.S. national security.
And then maybe in a few years Canada can do a regime-change kerfuffle on the ice
with some hockey sticks and a two-four — eh, Trump? Ya hoser.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN