Despite being an important trade and
defence partner, the US tends to ignore Canada. But that's
paradoxically because the two get along so well, as Jordan Michael Smith
writes.
US President Barack Obama's visit to Ottawa today comes
six years after his last trip to Canada. Canadians could be forgiven for
hoping that Mr Obama would pay more attention to America's northern
neighbour than he has.
Mr Obama's first foreign excursion as
president was to Canada, in February 2009, after all. And with his
half-Kenyan ancestry and several childhood years spent living in
Indonesia, he is the most cosmopolitan leader in American history.
Alas, Mr Obama devoted no more resources to Canada than previous presidents have.
"Canada's
interests have hardly advanced during his time in office and, in some
cases, have suffered," rued a columnist in the Toronto Sun. To be
Canadian is to permanently lament the country's status - or lack of it -
in American life.
One Canadian diplomat to the US entitled his
memoirs, I'll Be With You in a Minute, Mr Ambassador. It was a refrain
he heard often in Washington.
To say that Canada figures little in
the mental America landscape would be charitable. With the exception of
the cities in some states on the border - the top of New York,
Michigan, and Washington state, in particular - Americans hardly think
of Canada at all.
This can annoy Canadians to no end. Canada's
only neighbour is the most powerful nation in the history of the world, a
country that is permanently the subject of the world's spotlight.
America
has the globe's attention, being the agenda-setter for everything from
sports to international security issues to popular music for much of the
planet. And about Canada, it has ... not much to say.
Sometimes
Canadian insecurity can reach absurd levels. Canadians were furious
when, nine days after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, then-President George W
Bush thanked many nations for their expressions of support but forgot
to mention Canada.
A speechwriter in the White House said he was
"inundated by requests - challenges really - from Canadian media to
explain the speech and defend" the omission.
Many Canadians thought the exclusion was a deliberate snub. But the
reality, explained one of Bush's advisors, was that they just forgot all
about Canada when working on the address.
In one sense, America's
general obliviousness to Canada is bizarre. Canada is the US largest
trading partner, larger than China and Mexico, two countries which
receive far more concern in America.
Canada and America have the largest shared border in the world, and, remarkably, it is undefended.
Until post-9/11 security measures were enacted, a passport wasn't even required to travel between the two countries.
Under
the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), the centrepiece
of the US - Canada military relationship, US. and Canadian forces
jointly conduct defence policies that, at least on paper, demonstrate a
partnership that exists on an equal basis.
If all countries in the world enjoyed as warm
relations as Canada and the United States possess, the United Nations
could disband.
It is precisely that harmonious relationship,
however, that explains America's inattention toward Canada. The US
ignores its northern neighbour because it can afford to.
From the
south, America panics about invading crime, terrorism, and drugs.
Indeed, hyping the vastly inflated threat from Mexico has fuelled
presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump's political success.
But because Canada so obviously poses no threat even to such a fearful nation as America, it gets ignored.
American
officials have exaggerated problems infiltrating from Canada. Every few
years, an American border official will declare the Canadian border to
be insecure and engendering terrorism and drugs.
In March 2016, one customs official told CBS New
York that he was seeing the smuggling of aliens, narcotics, and
counterfeit currency. This followed a 2011 claim by the US border chief
that the terrorist threat from Canada exceeded that from Mexico. And
that hyperbole, in turn, came on the heels of 2009 alarms that drug
trafficking from motorcycle gangs and Asian gangs were a serious
problem.
These horror scenarios are repetitive of earlier panics -
the New York Times reported in 1897 that American officials were
worried Chinese men were being smuggled in from Canada, dressed as women.
Alas,
such anxiety failed to capture the American public's attention in 1897,
and similar warnings fail to do so now. Canada is simply too peaceful.
Not all of America's inattention to Canada can be blamed on
pacific relations, of course. There is the simple matter of American
insularity.
Americans travel far less to foreign countries than citizens of other nations, are more likely to speak only one language, and lack so much knowledge of the rest of the world that a government-appointed task force described US ignorance a genuine threat to national security.
Canadians are exposed to this unawareness in a unique way, being so dependent on America, and in such close proximity.
This imbalance is not going away anytime soon. And so neither is Canadian insecurity about being overlooked.
But as Mexico shows, sometimes the worst thing to happen to a country can be American attention.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-36512850
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