Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Are we next?

USA Ambassador to Canada can't understand why Canada would not want to be the 51st State. Maybe these will help him understand if someone reads them to him.



 Trump's attack on Venuzuela seems to have triggered even more madness. Declaring that USA must have Greenland for security reasons in nonsense as USA has a military base on Greenalnd and a defense agreement with Denmark. Yes, Greenland has mineral resources but I expect Trump is too stupid to know why that is important. Stephen Miller is actually running foreign policy along homeland security's ICE, deporting, imprisonng or out right killing Brown pople. There are 65 million Hispanics in US of which many were there before USA was a country. If Stephen Miller has his way they will all be disposed of one way or another. 

Whether Trump will attack Canada militarily or not is debateable. Economic warfare is more likely. CUSMA is up for renewal and Trump will likely refuse to negotiate a new agreement. Carney is doing his best to put Canada in the EU trading block and now in the EU SAFE program. F35's are out, Grippen is in. NATO is dead. 

This is from Sean Prpick on Facebook, taken from a Globe and Mail opinion piece. 

A pretty bracing column has been published in the Globe & Mail by leading scholars Thomas Homer-Dixon and Adam Gordon, raising the possibility of a post-Venezuela military invasion of Canada. Their scenario hinges on failed independence referendum in Alberta creating a “casus belli” for Trump, who will denounce the results as “fake” and then roll invasion forces across the 49th parallel. But…I’m going to raise the ante here and say the scenario could be even worse.
I think there’s a better than even chance that a sympathetic Sask Party government will be so "moved" by Premier Smith’s referendum, should it take place, they will stage a coordinated referendum here at the same time.
Homer-Dixon and Gordon predict a 30% “Yes” vote for separation in Alberta.
I think it would be about 15% here in Saskatchewan, but the margin of victory for pro-Canada forces in twin referendums probably doesn’t matter.
The vote here in my province would be be equally “fake” in Trump’s eyes and any results coming out from Elections Saskatchewan will just incite him more.
And that'll raise the chances he’ll invade, not only sending military columns through Alberta border crossings but ours as well.
Homer-Dixon and Gordon are right.
However fantastic these scenarios appear today we have to be ready in the near future.
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“We Need to Prepare for the Possibility that the U.S. Uses Military Coercion Against Canada”
By Thomas Homer-Dixon, who is executive director of the Cascade Institute at Royal Roads University and professor emeritus at the University of Waterloo.
And Adam Gordon, who served as the senior legal and policy adviser to Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and is currently an affiliated researcher at the Cascade Institute.
So, this is the “peace president" ?
Donald Trump promised that under his leadership the U.S. would eschew “nation building,” “forever wars,” “regime change,” and violent foreign engagements more generally.
Yet since his second inauguration, he’s ordered military action in Syria, Yemen, Somalia and Iraq; bombed Iran’s nuclear weapons complexes; and blown up more than a score of boats allegedly carrying drugs in the Caribbean.
In just the past two weeks, he has launched missiles against Islamic terrorists in northern Nigeria, declared that the U.S. was “locked and loaded” for another attack on Iran, and now decapitated Venezuela’s government.
In this context, Canadians must acknowledge the real risk that Mr. Trump will use military coercion against our country.
It’s important to connect three recent data points. First, in his press conference on Saturday, Mr. Trump explicitly stated that the Venezuela operation’s aim was to secure access to the country’s oil. Then, in an interview with The Atlantic on Sunday, he refused to rule out military action to seize Greenland – despite the fact that Greenland is a democracy and, through Denmark, a NATO member – saying, “We do need Greenland, absolutely
From Mr. Trump’s perspective, three dominant powers – Russia, China, and the U.S. – are establishing coercive hegemony in their respective domains. With its oil, minerals and water, Canada is a vital resource hinterland in the U.S.’s part of the map.
Second, the just-released U.S. National Security Strategy outlines the “‘Trump corollary’ to the Monroe Doctrine” and identifies U.S. “pre-eminence” in the Western Hemisphere as a main geostrategic objective.
But Canada can’t count on exclusion from the doctrine’s ambit. In the 1950s through the 1980s, when the U.S. intervened in Guatemala, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Chile, Nicaragua, Grenada, and Panama, it was looking south and treated us as more an irrelevancy than a vassal. In contrast, today the Trump administration has little affection for Canada, and it’s clearly concerned about geostrategic insecurities as far north as the high Arctic.
Third, and finally, nothing in international law protects Canada that shouldn’t have protected Venezuela. As a nation, we rely on exactly the same rules – the obligation to respect state sovereignty, the prohibition on use of force and the principle of non-intervention – for our own
Connecting these dots, a plausible scenario for U.S. application of military force against Canada to seize our oil resources goes something like this.
An independence referendum in Alberta – during which separatists receive a huge infusion of grey MAGA money – sees a majority vote to remain part of Canada, but with 30 per cent or more voting for separation. Mr. Trump declares the result is “fake” and that actual support for separation was “well over” 50 per cent.
Alberta separatists then appeal to the U.S. for help, claiming various kinds of oppression.
The U.S. moves troops to the northern Montana border and tells the rest of Canada that Alberta must be allowed to join America as the “51st state.”
In the above situation, ensuring electoral-process integrity is clearly job one. We can also make it clear to the U.S. that any use of military force will be extremely costly, by dramatically accelerating investments in national service and homeland defence, rapidly building out domestic defence industries, and developing a national drone strategy.
Finally, we should bolster ties with traditional allies and novel partners alike and work alongside those who are similarly threatened by giant neighbours, such as Finland, the Baltic republics, Mexico and Taiwan.
We should aim to marshal a global consensus that such flagrant violations of international law are unacceptable and will bring the U.S. costly reputational harm, as has been true for Russia – harm that will only grow exponentially if the U.S. repeats such actions in Canada or elsewhere.
The world is wildly non-linear now, so little can be predicted with confidence.
“Running” Venezuela – whatever that means – will almost certainly not work in the longer term, as the country fractures or rallies against the U.S.; and elsewhere in the world, China might use the action against Venezuela as a license to attack Taiwan
But whatever surprises are in store, one fact is certain: our neighbour’s autocratic and avaricious leader is demonstrably eager to use his country’s massive military power to advance his interests.
We must get ready.

4 comments:

  1. Prepare for the worst, hope for the best. What more can we do?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I live by Canada border, and I see a lot less vehicles here. But every so often I will one in parking lot. And I wonder why there even here. With you know who in the White House.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree. Why people cross the line is beyond me. It is not entirely safe. Canadians have ended up in ICE concentration camps

      Delete

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