Nightmare Vision of North America
Agreements and treaties won't erase the
stark differences between Canada and the United States
March 23
2005
Counterbias.com
by John Chuckman
John Manley, prominent Liberal politician in Canada, has shown a
stunning lack of judgment in chairing a private group proposing a
new security-economic regime for
Canada, Mexico, and the United States.
One hopes the proposal is not a feeler for something quietly
supported by Paul Martin's government. We do know that Mr. Martin's
goal of improving relations with George Bush has been a bit of a
runaway train, gone off the tracks. The Prime Minister is almost
certainly looking for ways to right the engine and fire up the
boilers.
I could dwell on the difficulty of anyone's improving relations with
a man of Mr. Bush's remarkably unpleasant character. After all,
Canada has produced no more affable or charming politician than
former Prime Minister Jean Chretien, and Mr. Chretien it seems could
not entirely disguise a sense of repulsion. I am sure he did not
greatly miss his cancelled invitation to share charred cow, root
beer, and sermons from the Book of Revelations down in Crawford,
Texas.
Of course, no matter how unpleasant the current President is, Canada
must have a decent relationship with America. Geography dictates
this, but so does Canada's basic national character. Canada does not
make enemies, which is why so many Americans traveling in Europe and
other places wear Maple Leaf patches on their backpacks or pins in
their lapels.
Criticism of Manley's scheme is possible on many levels, but my
chief criticism is that the authors simply do not understand that no
country can make a binding deal of this nature with the United
States. It is simply impossible. Yes, America's government might
well sign an agreement, but the agreement would shortly prove
worthless, except in just those portions with visceral appeal to
Americans. This conclusion comes neither from prejudice nor mordant
humor but from having lived half my life in each country and being a
serious student of history.
The point of the scheme is to avoid the massive back-ups in trade
and travel that occurred in the aftermath of 9/11 by creating what
would be effectively a single border for the countries of North
America. Canada and Mexico would give up their independent
decision-making regarding circumstances of entry, including for
refugees, an area of international affairs where Canada has been far
more generous and humane than the United States in past decades.
There is even provision for educational efforts to promote a sense
of North American identity.
My most enduring memory of crossing the Canadian border is of a
gruff, unpleasant American border guard seizing a banana from a man
traveling into the United States. Traffic was heavy and slow,
allowing us the chance to view this little passion play. The man's
car was parked, having been selected for detailed search. With
nothing found amiss, the guard seized a banana from the man's lunch
on the car's front seat and marched truculently back to his office
with it. His reason for doing so? The banana didn't have a sticker.
Now, I know not all Americans are like this guard, but enough of
them are to heavily color the national character.
Former Governor Weld of Massachusetts, who also sat on the
trilateral panel, called the proposal daring and spoke against those
who would "hide their heads in the
sand." Well, all I could think of is American border guards
stationed alongside Canadians in places like Nova Scotia, seizing
bananas from lunch bags. Governor Weld is oblivious to the real
concerns of his country's northern neighbor which are more about
Canadian heads being shoved into the sand than anyone hiding there.
But then Weld is a conservative former governor from the same state
that gave Canada the most obnoxious American Ambassador ever
appointed, another former conservative governor, Mr. Cellucci, a man
with no grace who has specialized in traveling around Canada telling
Canadians what their policies should be. His recall wasn't requested
surely only because the government already felt intense displeasure
from Washington over its decision not to contribute troops to the
killing fields of Iraq.
The panel's scheme is a vision of Fortress America scowling at the
world with its two small neighboring principalities huddled in the
shadows of outer works or pens under the massive walls. The scheme
is sweetened for Canada and Mexico by offering supposed new
certainties in trade access to the world's largest national market.
The outer works supposedly have open doors through the looming
walls.
No matter what Canada and Mexico do to prepare against it, should
there be another major terrorist-style attack on the United States,
precisely the same pattern of behavior is to be expected. America
has behaved irrationally for three solid years since 9/11, and no
treaty, no agreement, or no arrangement will prevent a re-kindling
of America's blast-furnace rage at its rich gated community again
having been rudely broken into by "some of them." I recall an
engraved wooden sign some years ago in the window of a luxurious
land-yacht at a trailer park in Arizona, "We don't call 9-1-1," with
a drawing of crossed smoking pistols. The sign was funny,
but funny only in its succinctly capturing an ugly truth about the
lawless, uncivil character of many Americans.
It was Americans themselves who let the 9/11 gang into their country
with visas and permitted them to study such arcane matters as
learning to be airline pilots. 9/11 was nothing more than "blowback"
from unsavory CIA operations in Afghanistan and other places, yet
Americans never stopped talking about Canada as a haven for
terrorists, and, to this day, American intelligence officials and
others have not been held accountable for what they so clearly
permitted to happen. But this failure represents a real thread
running through the American character: no one is responsible for
anything, unless he or she happens to be a foreigner or someone from
America's more undesirable classes.
Government in the United States is a kind of loosely organized
chaos, which is how Americans have always wanted to be governed. No
matter what the source of authority, the American system allows for
exceptions, bending of the rules, or scholastic-like quibbling over
definitions. This pliability about rules doesn't exclude frequent
bouts of brutal excess in enforcing the very same rules. Bush, as
Governor of Texas, ferociously enforced the same rules about drugs
he flouted for years as a feckless rich drifter.
America presents an odd face in its dealings abroad, odd at least to
countries like Canada where respect for order and good government is
deeply valued. America's is a Picasso-like image, seeming to be a
single face, but with perspectives going off in several directions.
The noted American historian, Page Smith, observed the
characteristic time and again in America's national history and
described it loosely as "schizophrenia."
For Canadians the most obvious recent examples come under the
Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and the latter North American Free
Trade Treaty. As most Canadians are well aware, the U.S., whenever
it has suited its interests, simply has ignored the authority of
bilateral panels created by these treaties to settle trade disputes.
The story of Canadian softwood lumber is only the most extreme in a
long series of disagreements. You could write a book on the subject.
The U.S. lost its arguments, time after time, in every international
dispute-settling institution, and it has been told it is violating
the rules of the WTO. Yet the matter remains unresolved.
Think of the comic-opera ending to the recent decision to open
borders again to Canadian beef. A single infected cow had caused the
best part of two years' hardship for Canadian beef exporters. Any
country is entitled to protect the health of its citizens under the
rules of trade, but America's action went well beyond that goal. It
is after all Americans who always say it is "the science" that
should count in matters like global warming, but the science here
supports Canada which made big changes in its beef industry, not to
mention the honest reporting of the infection in the first place.
Can there be any doubt in the course of these events that more than
one animal with mad-cow disease has been quietly shot and buried on
the dusty plains of Texas or Arizona?
A judge in Billings, Montana, decides for local ranchers who stand
on no principle other than protecting themselves from the falling
prices of returned competition. How on earth does a district court
have the ability to derail a matter relating to international
treaties? Yet, this event precisely captures the confused American
concept of government and the country's inherent inability to make
and scrupulously keep international agreements.
There is nothing unique in the Canadian experience. Everyone who has
signed economic treaties with the U.S. has been treated the same
way. Mexico, for example, one of whose most important crops is
avocados, was barred, under one pretense or another, from exporting
avocados into the U.S. for years after implementing the North
American Free Trade Treaty. Mexico's crop is less costly than that
raised by American farmers and would have serious economic impact,
but as anyone who has studied first-year economics knows, that is
precisely the kind of competitive effect that free trade is supposed
to generate.
You don't need to look only at economic treaties. The Bush
administration was perfectly content to turn its back on a sound
anti-ballistic missile treaty when it felt like pursuing its new
failing-every-test anti-ballistic missile system intended to swell
defense contractors' profits and keep the Cold War paranoia pot
stirred. No knowledgeable person expects any so-called rogue state
to have the ability to launch an ICBM at the United States for
fifteen years. Right now, anyone wanting to harm the U.S. with an
atomic device need only bring a fishing boat into port on any of its
coasts.
The American government defied the U.N. over Iraq, even though its
membership in this organization includes many important treaty
obligations. The invasion was just about as illegal and without
justification as Hitler's invasion of Poland. U.N. inspectors could
have indefinitely maintained surveillance to keep Iraq free of
weapons Bush falsely claimed were there. The cost would have been a
fraction of invasion, and one hundred thousand civilians need not
have died. And what can we say of a United States that unilaterally
ignores its treaty obligations to pay U.N. dues, demanding instead
changes in the organization to its own liking? Or what of the
appointment of a new American U.N. ambassador, John Bolton, who for
years has preached contempt and utter diplomatic ignorance of the
institution?
There is no higher authority in the U.S. than the Constitution, a
document Americans have been trained to regard almost with religious
awe, and yet Americans time and time again violate the principles
and clear intentions of this document. Its exalted Bill of Rights
was simply ignored for the best part of two centuries where Black
Americans were concerned.
You are not supposed to face double jeopardy under the American
Constitution, the Founders being well aware of horribly abusive
practices in some courts of Europe, yet a form of double jeopardy is
practiced every day in America. Accused persons tried under the
criminal law are often tried again for precisely the same matter
under civil law, often with the opposite verdict. I understand the
lawyers' technical explanations of this, but a person found innocent
under the tougher standards of criminal law should be presumed
innocent of the same charge under the less-demanding standards of
the civil law. Not so in America. Any unbiased observer could only
call it a form of double jeopardy, scholastically redefined.
What of America's penchant for insane law suits? Does this reflect
anything more than willingness to seize a chance at a big jackpot
without a sense of responsibility, good citizenship, or decency?
America, most importantly, is a signatory to weighty treaties
outlawing torture and mistreatment of prisoners. Yet today the CIA
quietly runs regular airline flights delivering prisoners into the
hands of torturers. The U.S. military operates a small gulag of
hideous prisons in Cuba, Iraq, and Afghanistan whose whole purpose
is the deliberate mistreatment of prisoners and where prisoners
receive none of the rights recognized in the Constitution, the
United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, and the Geneva Accords.
Thousands of prisoners simply disappeared in the deserts of
Afghanistan with no explanation.
No, a nation which behaves as the United States does is incapable of
signing a binding international agreement without afterward picking
through its terms for just those parts serving its own changing
interests.
Furthermore, I suspect that America's obsession with security is
going to fade. There are many reasons for believing this, but the
chief one is that the costs are wildly out of proportion to the
risks. During the height of the Cold War, America's government
gradually, quietly came around to the view that building a huge
chain of well-equipped bomb shelters was not worth the cost.
John Chuckman, a lifelong student of history, is former chief
economist for a large Canadian oil company. His writing has appeared
in Counterpunch, Media Monitors, Online Journal, Scoop, and
Dissident Voice.