innovation and play the facilitating role that was the country’s hallmark for decades before the recent change.
Canada will no longer be persona non grata at the UN, where Harper’s government was alone and unwelcome in the institution’s many committees; trust will be restored in international institutions.
On more specific issues – such as taking in refugees or the Israel-Palestine conflict – the change may not be rapid, but a slow recalibration may take place. More Syrian refugees will be accepted, and Canada once again will likely play a useful middle ground on Israel-Palestine, devoting itself to constructive answers to a suffering region rather than ideological fantasies.
In other words, Canadian policy will return to its natural position of catalyst on complex issues that require international cooperation and the light, but innovative touch of Canadian diplomacy. Equally importantly: Canada’s culture of pragmatic and pluralistic politics is a natural counter to rising extremism across the globe. Positive exemplars are desperately needed.
In many ways, this is a reversion to a Canadian tradition – one bred in the Cold War. However, the increasingly dangerous geopolitics in Ukraine, the Middle East, or the South China Sea, and the increasing need for multilateral cooperation on global health, economic and environmental issues, mean that Canada’s role as a diplomat and facilitator is needed more than ever.
There are countries out there, such as Brazil and India or even those in the limping EU, who may see much utility in such an actor re-engaging again, ready to lead and play an active role, rather than sit on the sidelines while global affairs deteriorate.
Trudeau’s combination of idealism and realism and his pragmatic pursuit of solutions represent Canada’s natural international vocation. These are necessary ingredients in an increasingly chaotic world.
Many will celebrate Canada’s return to constructive diplomacy, led by a man whose instincts are keen, whose quest for knowledge is great, and whose entire character reeks of a commitment to working together for a better world.
The article has been excerpted from: ‘Canada as the world knew it’.
Courtesy: Aljazeera.com