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Alexis Ludwig's avatar

Dan, from the point of view of this American, in your capacity as a well-informed, fundamentally sympathetic, and appropriately critical Canadian observer, you continue to provide a valuable refreshing perspective on the madness convulsing your large neighbor to the south. Keep it up. We need it.

Reading your piece through the lens of my own experience (as a former US diplomat who served the final two decades of his career focused on South America), I recalled the IR theory of "Peripheral Realism" developed in that part of the world, mainly Argentina. Peripheral Realism describes the way in which relatively weak states on the "periphery" of global power navigate their constraints in pursuing their national interests, always mindful of the interests and whims and good or bad ideas of the behemoth to the north. For its part, Canada is cursed (or blessed, depending) by its location smack next to the center of global power: Ugly, in this case, America. Similarly constrained, but not peripheral. How to deal with that? Watching Justin Trudeau's news conference the other day, I couldn't imagine a more deft handling of that difficult spot.

As for the book you invoke, I had not thought about the Ugly American in these terms before, but it has been decades since I read it. It felt frankly OBE for different reasons. For one, Americans abroad in my experience had gotten a lot less ugly over time, sometimes behaving in model fashion relative to certain other (unnamed) nationalities. Also, ironically, considering the blind destructive unilateral approach of our current administration, the relative power of the US (by almost every measure) has declined. At the very least, we're entering a new era of geostrategic competition with a still rising PRC; more likely, centers of global power are multiplying and spreading outwards. US diplomats know they can no longer assume (if they ever foolishly did) that other countries will simply get in line. One reading of the Mad King Trump madness, in this context, is as the last bumptious gasp of an empire in decline, accelerated of course by the hubris and folly. Nice job.

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Rene Cremonese's avatar

We have also done a crappy job in explaining to the general public why foreign aid is provided. The idea that it is pure charity inevitably leads to many arguing that this charity ought to be first applied to those in need at home. Even making the soft power argument as you have done in this piece, Dan, clearly feels esoteric and unconvincing to many wondering how this benefits them in Arkansas or Saskatchewan. The same is true for diplomacy. There are some in our countries who will be supportive on a purely altruistic basis, feeling that it is their duty to assist others in need to the extent that they can. But they seem to be a minority, especially in hard economic times.

It is possible to take the next step to explain that existing in a world where there a fewer dictatorships, healthier and more prosperous countries in general benefits our countries as well. The current approach of the US government presents a good example as to how different the international order can be when based on trying to find win-win rather than “I win and you thus have to lose” scenarios. One might have thought that it was clear that helping prevent the spread of Ebola, HIV AIDS or COVID in other countries is to our benefit as well but we certainly have not been able to convince people on these principles.

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