fbpx
Wikipedia

Canada–United States relations

Relations between Canada and the United States are extensive. The two countries consider themselves among the "closest [of] allies".[1][2]

Both countries are culturally a part of the Anglosphere and compose a part of the broader Western World.[3] Starting with the American Revolution, when Loyalists were resettled in Canada, a vocal element in Canada has warned against American dominance or annexation. The War of 1812 saw invasions across the border in both directions, but the war ended with unchanged borders.[4] The border was demilitarized, as was the Great Lakes region. The British ceased aiding Native American attacks on the United States, and the United States never again attempted to invade Canada. Apart from minor unsuccessful raids, it has remained peaceful.[5] As Britain decided to disengage, fears of an American takeover played a role in the Canadian Confederation (1867), and Canada's rejection of free trade (1911). Military collaboration was close during World War II and continued throughout the Cold War, bilaterally through NORAD and multilaterally through NATO. A high volume of trade and migration continues between the two nations, as well as a heavy overlapping of popular and elite culture; a dynamic that has generated closer ties, especially after the signing of the Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement in 1988 and the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994.

Canada and the United States share the longest border (8,891 km (5,525 mi)) between any two nations in the world,[6][7] and also have significant military interoperability.[8] Recent difficulties have included repeated trade disputes, environmental concerns, Canadian concern for the future of oil exports, the issue of illegal immigration and the threat of terrorism. Trade has continued to expand, especially following the 1988 FTA, the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and the 2020 United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA), which has progressively merged the two economies.[9][10] Co-operation on many fronts, such as the ease of the flow of goods, services, and people across borders are to be even more extended, as well as the establishment of joint border inspection agencies, relocation of U.S. food inspectors agents to Canadian plants and vice versa, greater sharing of intelligence, and harmonizing regulations on everything from food to manufactured goods, thus further increasing the American-Canadian assemblage.[11]

Both Americans and Canadians have generally ranked each other as one of their respective "favorite nations".[12][13]

History edit

Colonial wars edit

 
Map of European colonies in North America, c. 1750. Territorial claims by European powers were fought over during the French and Indian Wars.

Before the British conquest of French Canada in 1760, there had been a series of wars between the British and the French that were fought out in the colonies as well as in Europe and the high seas. In general, the British heavily relied on American colonial militia units, while the French heavily relied on their First Nation allies. The Iroquois Nation were important allies of the British.[14] Much of the fighting involved ambushes and small-scale warfare in the villages along the border between New England and Quebec. The New England colonies had a much larger population than Quebec, so major invasions came from south to north. The First Nation allies, only loosely controlled by the French, repeatedly raided New England villages to kidnap women and children, and torture and kill the men.[15] Those who survived were brought up as Francophone Catholics. The tension along the border was exacerbated by religion, the French Catholics and English Protestants had a deep mutual distrust.[16] There was a naval dimension as well, involving privateers attacking enemy merchant ships.[17]

England seized Quebec from 1629 to 1632, and Acadia in 1613 and again from 1654 to 1670; These territories were returned to France by the peace treaties. The major wars were (to use American names), King William's War (1689–1697); Queen Anne's War (1702–1713); King George's War (1744–1748), and the French and Indian War (1755–1763). In Canada, as in Europe, this era is known as the Seven Years' War.

New England soldiers and sailors were critical to the successful British campaign to capture the French fortress of Louisbourg in 1745,[18] and (after it had been returned by treaty) to capture it again in 1758.[19]

American Revolutionary War edit

 
The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec, December 31, 1775, by John Trumbull, depicting the failed American invasion of northeastern Quebec.

At the outset of the American Revolutionary War, the American revolutionaries hoped the French Canadians in Quebec and the Colonists in Nova Scotia would join their rebellion and they were pre-approved for joining the United States in the Articles of Confederation. When northeastern Quebec was invaded, thousands joined the American cause and formed regiments that fought during the war; however most remained neutral and some joined the British effort. Britain advised the French Canadians that the British Empire already enshrined their rights in the Quebec Act, which the American colonies had viewed as one of the Intolerable Acts. The American invasion was a fiasco and Britain tightened its grip on its northern possessions; in 1777, a major British invasion into New York led to the surrender of the entire British army at Saratoga and led France to enter the war as an ally of the U.S. The French Canadians largely ignored France's appeals for solidarity.[20]

The American forces had much better success in southwestern Quebec, owing to the leadership of Virginia militia leader George Rogers Clark. In 1778, 200 men under Clark, supplied and supported mainly by Virginia, came down the Ohio River near Louisville, Kentucky, marched across southern Illinois, and then captured Kaskaskia without loss of life. From there, part of his men took Vincennes, but was soon lost to British Lieutenant Colonel Henry Hamilton, the commander at Fort Detroit. It was later retaken by Clark in the Siege of Fort Vincennes in February 1779. Roughly half of Clark's militia in the theater were Canadien volunteers sympathetic to the American cause.[21]

In the end, America won its independence and the Treaty of Paris compelled Britain to cede parts of southwestern Canada to them. Following America's independence, Canada became a refuge for about an estimated 70,000 or 15% of Loyalists who either wanted to leave the U.S. or were compelled by Patriot reprisals to do so. Among the original Loyalists, there were 3,500 free African Americans. Most went to Nova Scotia and in 1792, 1,200 migrated to Sierra Leone. About 2,000 black slaves were brought in by Loyalist owners; they remained slaves in Canada until the Empire abolished slavery in 1833. Around 85% of the loyalists remained in the new United States and became American citizens.[22]

War of 1812 edit

The Treaty of Paris, which ended the war, called for British forces to vacate all their forts south of the Great Lakes border. Britain refused to do so, citing failure of the United States to provide financial restitution for Loyalists who had lost property in the war. The Jay Treaty in 1795 with Great Britain resolved that lingering issue and the British departed the forts. Thomas Jefferson saw the nearby British presence as a threat to the United States, and so he opposed the Jay Treaty, and it became one of the major political issues in the United States at the time.[23] Thousands of Americans immigrated to Upper Canada (Ontario) from 1785 to 1812 to obtain cheaper land and better tax rates prevalent in that province; despite expectations that they would be loyal to the U.S. if a war broke out, in the event they were largely non-political.[24]

 
 
The United States Declaration of War against the British (left) and Issac Brock's proclamation issued in response to it in Upper Canada (right)

Tensions mounted again after 1805, erupting into the War of 1812, when the United States declared war on Britain. The Americans were angered by British harassment of U.S. ships on the high seas and seizure of 6,000 sailors from American ships, severe restrictions against neutral American trade with France, and British support for hostile Native American tribes in Ohio and territories the U.S. had gained in 1783. American "honor" was an implicit issue. While the Americans could not hope to defeat the Royal Navy and control the seas, they could call on an army much larger than the British garrison in Canada, and so a land invasion of Canada was proposed as the most advantageous means of attacking the British Empire. Americans on the western frontier also hoped an invasion would bring an end to British support of Native American resistance to American expansion, typified by Tecumseh's coalition of tribes.[25] Americans may also have wanted to acquire Canada.[26][27][28][29][30]

Once war broke out, the American strategy was to seize Canada. There was some hope that settlers in western Canada—most of them recent immigrants from the U.S.—would welcome the chance to overthrow their British rulers. However, the American invasions were defeated primarily by British regulars with support from Native Americans and Upper Canada militia. Aided by the large Royal Navy, a series of British raids on the American coast were highly successful, culminating with an attack on Washington that resulted in the British burning of the White House, the Capitol, and other public buildings. At the end of the war, Britain's American Indian allies had largely been defeated, and the Americans controlled a strip of Western Ontario centered on Fort Malden. However, Britain held much of Maine, and, with the support of their remaining American Indian allies, huge areas of the Old Northwest, including Wisconsin and much of Michigan and Illinois. With the surrender of Napoleon in 1814, Britain ended naval policies that angered Americans; with the defeat of the Indian tribes, the threat to American expansion was ended. The upshot was both the United States and Canada asserted their sovereignty, Canada remained under British rule, and London and Washington had nothing more to fight over. The war was ended by the Treaty of Ghent, which took effect in February 1815.[31] A series of postwar agreements further stabilized peaceful relations along the Canada–US border. Canada reduced American immigration for fear of undue American influence, and built up the Anglican Church of Canada as a counterweight to the largely American Methodist and Baptist churches.[32]

In later years, Anglophone Canadians, especially in Ontario, viewed the War of 1812 as a heroic and successful resistance against invasion and as a victory that defined them as a people. The myth that the Canadian militia had defeated the invasion almost single-handed, known logically as the "militia myth", became highly prevalent after the war, having been propounded by John Strachan, Anglican Bishop of York.

Post War of 1812 and mid-19th century edit

In the aftermath of the War of 1812, pro-British conservatives led by Anglican Bishop John Strachan took control in Ontario ("Upper Canada") and promoted the Anglican religion as opposed to the more republican Methodist and Baptist churches. A small interlocking elite, known as the Family Compact took full political control. Democracy, as practiced in the US, was ridiculed. The policies had the desired effect of deterring immigration from the United States. Revolts in favor of democracy in Ontario and Quebec ("Lower Canada") in 1837 were suppressed; many of the leaders fled to the US.[33] The American policy was to largely ignore the rebellions,[34] and indeed ignore Canada generally in favor of westward expansion of the American Frontier.

The Webster–Ashburton Treaty formalized the U.S.–Canada border in Maine, averting the Aroostook War. During the Manifest Destiny era, the "Fifty-Four Forty or Fight" agenda called for U.S. annexation of what became Western Canada; the U.S. and Britain instead agreed to a boundary of the 49th parallel. As harsher fugitive slave laws were passed, Canada became a destination for slaves escaping on the Underground Railroad.

American Civil War edit

 
Confederate soldiers force a bank teller to pledge allegiance to the Confederate States of America while conducting the raid at St. Albans, Vermont. The Confederate soldiers launched their raid from the Province of Canada.

During the American Civil War, the British Empire was neutral. About 40,000 Canadians volunteered for the Union Army—many already lived in the U.S., and a few for the Confederate Army.[35] However, hundreds of Americans who were called up in the draft fled to Canada.[36]

Several events caused strained relations between the British Empire and the United States, over the former's unofficial role in supporting the Confederacy. Blockade runners loaded with arms came from Britain and made use of Canadian ports in the Maritimes to break through the Union blockade to deliver the weaponry to the Confederacy in exchange for cotton. Attacks were made on American merchant shipping by British-built Confederate warships such as CSS Alabama.[37] On December 7, 1863, pro-Confederate Canadian sympathizers hijacked an American steamer and killed a crew member off the coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts then used the steamer, originally intended as a blockade runner, to flee back to the Maritimes where they were later able to escape justice for murder and piracy. Confederate Secret Service agents also used Canada as a base to attack American border towns, such as St. Albans, Vermont on October 19, 1864, where they killed an American citizen, robbed three banks of over US$200,000, then escaped to Canada where they were arrested but then released by a Canadian court to widespread American anger. Many Americans suspected – falsely – that the Canadian government knew of the raid ahead of time.[38] American Secretary of State William H. Seward let the British government know that "it is impossible to consider those proceedings as either legal, just or friendly towards the United States."[39]

Alabama claims edit

Americans were angry at Britain's perceived support for the Confederacy during the American Civil War. Some leaders demanded a huge payment, on the premise that British involvement had lengthened the war by two years,[37] a claim confirmed by post-Civil War historians and scholars.[40][41] Senator Charles Sumner, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, originally wanted to ask for $2 billion in war reparations, or alternatively the ceding of all of Canada to the United States.[42][43]

When American Secretary of State William H. Seward negotiated the Alaska Purchase with Russia in 1867, he intended it as the first step in a comprehensive plan to gain control of the entire northwest Pacific Coast. Seward was a firm believer in Manifest Destiny, primarily for its commercial advantages to the U.S. Seward expected British Columbia to seek annexation to the U.S. and thought Britain might accept this in exchange for the Alabama claims. Soon other elements endorsed annexation, Their plan was to annex British Columbia, Red River Colony (Manitoba), and Nova Scotia, in exchange for dropping the damage claims. The idea reached a peak in the spring and summer of 1870, with American expansionists, Canadian separatists, and Pro-American Englishmen seemingly combining forces. The plan was dropped for multiple reasons. London continued to stall, American commercial and financial groups pressed Washington for a quick settlement of the dispute on a cash basis, growing Canadian nationalist sentiment in British Columbia called for staying inside the British Empire, Congress became preoccupied with Reconstruction, and most Americans showed little interest in territorial expansion.

The "Alabama Claims" dispute went to international arbitration. In one of the first major cases of arbitration, the tribunal in 1872 rejected the American claims for damages relating to the British blockade running but ordered Britain to pay $15.5 million only for damages caused by British-built Confederate ships.[37] Britain paid and the episode ended in peaceful relations.[44][45]

Late 19th century edit

Canada became a self-governing dominion in 1867 in internal affairs while Britain retained control of diplomacy and of defence policy. Prior to Confederation, there was an Oregon boundary dispute in which the Americans claimed the 54th degree latitude. The Oregon Treaty of 1846 largely resolved the issue, splitting the disputed territory – the northern half became British Columbia, and the southern half eventually formed the states of Washington and Oregon.

 
The Battle of Eccles Hill in 1870. The American-based Fenian Brotherhood launched several raids into Canada in 1866 and 1870–71.

Strained relations with America continued, however, due to a series of small-scale armed incursions called the "Fenian raids" conducted by Irish-American Civil War veterans across the border from 1866 to 1871 in an attempt to trade Canada for Irish independence.[46] The American government, angry at Canadian tolerance of Confederate raiders during the American Civil War of 1861–1865, moved very slowly to disarm the Fenians.[47] The Fenian raids were small-scale attacks carried out by the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish Republican organization based among Irish Catholics in the United States. Targets included British Army forts, customs posts and other locations near the border. The raids were small, unsuccessful episodes in 1866, and again from 1870 to 1871. They aimed to bring pressure on Great Britain to withdraw from Ireland. None of these raids achieved their aims and all were quickly defeated by local Canadian forces.[48]

The British government, in charge of diplomatic relations, protested cautiously, as Anglo-American relations were tense. Much of the tension was relieved as the Fenians faded away and in 1872 by the settlement of the Alabama Claims, when Britain paid the U.S. $15.5 million for war losses caused by warships built in Britain and sold to the Confederacy.

Disputes over ocean boundaries on Georges Bank and over fishing, whaling, and sealing rights in the Pacific were settled by international arbitration, setting an important precedent.[49]

Early 20th century edit

Alaska boundary edit

 
Border claims made during the Alaska boundary dispute. The border dispute was settled by arbitration in 1903, with the modern boundary marked by a yellow line.

A short-lived controversy was the Alaska boundary dispute, settled in favor of the United States in 1903. The issue was unimportant until the Klondike Gold Rush brought tens of thousands of men to Canada's Yukon, and they had to arrive through American ports. Canada needed its port and claimed that it had a legal right to a port near the present American town of Haines, Alaska. It would provide an all-Canadian route to the rich goldfields. The dispute was settled by arbitration, and the British delegate voted with the Americans—to the astonishment and disgust of Canadians who suddenly realized that Britain considered its relations with the United States paramount compared to those with Canada. The arbitration validated the status quo, but made Canada angry at London.[50][51]

1907 saw a minor controversy over USS Nashville sailing into the Great Lakes via Canada without Canadian permission. To head off future embarrassments, in 1909 the two sides signed the International Boundary Waters Treaty and the International Joint Commission was established to manage the Great Lakes and keep them disarmed. It was amended in World War II to allow the building and training of warships.[52]

Free trade rejected edit

 
A 1911 Conservative campaign poster warns that the big American companies ("trusts") will hog all the benefits of reciprocity as proposed by Liberals, leaving little left over for Canadian interests

Anti-Americanism reached a shrill peak in 1911 in Canada.[53] The Liberal government in 1911 negotiated a Reciprocity treaty with the U.S. that would lower trade barriers. Canadian manufacturing interests were alarmed that free trade would allow the bigger and more efficient American factories to take their markets. The Conservatives made it a central campaign issue in the 1911 election, warning that it would be a "sell out" to the United States with economic annexation a special danger.[54] The Conservative slogan was "No truck or trade with the Yankees", as they appealed to Canadian nationalism and nostalgia for the British Empire to win a major victory.[55][56]

World War I edit

British Canadians were annoyed in 1914–16 when the United States insisted on neutrality and seemed to profit heavily while Canada was sacrificing its wealth and its youth. However when the US finally declared war on Germany in April 1917, there was swift cooperation and friendly coordination, as one historian reports:

Official co-operation between Canada and the United States—the pooling of grain, fuel, power, and transportation resources, the underwriting of a Canadian loan by bankers of New York—produced a good effect on the public mind. Canadian recruiting detachments were welcomed in the United States, while a reciprocal agreement was ratified to facilitate the return of draft-evaders. A Canadian War Mission was established at Washington, and in many other ways the activities of the two countries were coordinated for efficiency. Immigration regulations were relaxed and thousands of American farmhands crossed the border to assist in harvesting Canadian crops. Officially and publicly, at least, the two nations were on better terms than ever before in their history, and on the American side, this attitude extended through almost all classes of society.[57]

Post-First World War edit

Canada demanded and received permission from London to send its own delegation to the Versailles Peace Talks in 1919, with the proviso that it sign the treaty under the British Empire. Canada subsequently took responsibility for its own foreign and military affairs in the 1920s. Its first ambassador to the United States, Vincent Massey, was named in 1927. The United States' first ambassador to Canada was William Phillips. Canada became an active member of the British Commonwealth, the League of Nations, and the World Court, none of which included the U.S.

In July 1923, as part of his Pacific Northwest tour and a week before his death, US President Warren Harding visited Vancouver, making him the first head of state of the United States to visit confederated Canada. The then Premier of British Columbia, John Oliver, and then mayor of Vancouver, Charles Tisdall, hosted a lunch in his honor at the Hotel Vancouver. Over 50,000 people heard Harding speak in Stanley Park. A monument to Harding designed by Charles Marega was unveiled in Stanley Park in 1925.[58]

Relations with the United States were cordial until 1930 when Canada vehemently protested the new Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act by which the U.S. raised tariffs (taxes) on products imported from Canada. Canada retaliated with higher tariffs of its own against American products and moved toward more trade within the British Commonwealth. U.S.–Canadian trade fell 75% as the Great Depression dragged both countries down.[59][60]

Down to the 1920s, the war and naval departments of both nations designed hypothetical war game scenarios on paper with the other as an enemy. These were routine training exercises; the departments were never told to get ready for a real war. In 1921, Canada developed Defence Scheme No. 1 for an attack on American cities and for forestalling an invasion by the United States until British reinforcements arrived. Through the later 1920s and 1930s, the United States Army War College developed a plan for a war with the British Empire waged largely on North American territory, in War Plan Red.[61]

Herbert Hoover meeting in 1927 with British Ambassador Sir Esme Howard agreed on the "absurdity of contemplating the possibility of war between the United States and the British Empire".[62]

 
Franklin D. Roosevelt speaking at Queen's University at Kingston. Roosevelt spoke on the US relations with Canada while there.

In 1938, as the roots of World War II were set in motion, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt gave a public speech at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, declaring that the United States would not sit idly by if another power tried to dominate Canada. Diplomats saw it as a clear warning to Germany not to attack Canada.[63]

Second World War edit

The two nations cooperated closely in World War II,[64] as both nations saw new levels of prosperity and a determination to defeat the Axis powers. Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King and President Franklin D. Roosevelt were determined not to repeat the mistakes of their predecessors.[65] They met in August 1940 at Ogdensburg, issuing a declaration calling for close cooperation, and formed the Permanent Joint Board on Defense (PJBD).

King sought to raise Canada's international visibility by hosting the August 1943 Quadrant conference in Quebec on military and political strategy; he was a gracious host but was kept out of the important meetings by Winston Churchill and Roosevelt.

Canada allowed the construction of the Alaska Highway and participated in the building of the atomic bomb. 49,000 Americans joined the RCAF (Canadian) or RAF (British) air forces through the Clayton Knight Committee, which had Roosevelt's permission to recruit in the U.S. in 1940–42.[66]

American attempts in the mid-1930s to integrate British Columbia into a united West Coast military command had aroused Canadian opposition. Fearing a Japanese invasion of Canada's vulnerable British Columbia Coast, American officials urged the creation of a united military command for an eastern Pacific Ocean theater of war. Canadian leaders feared American imperialism and the loss of autonomy more than a Japanese invasion. In 1941, Canadians successfully argued within the PJBD for mutual cooperation rather than the unified command for the West Coast.[67]

Newfoundland edit

The United States built large military bases in Newfoundland during World War II. At the time it was a British crown colony, having lost dominion status. The American spending ended the depression and brought new prosperity; Newfoundland's business community sought closer ties with the United States as expressed by the Economic Union Party. Ottawa took notice and wanted Newfoundland to join Canada, which it did after hotly contested referendums. There was little demand in the United States for the acquisition of Newfoundland, so the United States did not protest the British decision not to allow an American option on the Newfoundland referendum.[68]

Cold War edit

 
A NATO summit in Paris, May 1955. Both Canada and the United States are founding members of the military alliance.

Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, working closely with his Foreign Minister Louis St. Laurent, handled foreign relations 1945–48 in a cautious fashion. Canada donated money to the United Kingdom to help it rebuild; was elected to the UN Security Council; and helped design NATO. However, Mackenzie King rejected free trade with the United States,[69] and decided not to play a role in the Berlin airlift.[70] Canada had been actively involved in the League of Nations, primarily because it could act separately from Britain. It played a modest role in the postwar formation of the United Nations, as well as the International Monetary Fund. It played a somewhat larger role in 1947 in designing the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.[71] After the mid-20th century onwards, Canada and the United States became extremely close partners. Canada was a close ally of the United States during the Cold War.

Vietnam War resisters edit

While Canada openly accepted draft evaders and later deserters from the United States, there was never a serious international dispute due to Canada's actions, while Sweden's acceptance was heavily criticized by the United States. The issue of accepting American exiles became a local political debate in Canada that focused on Canada's sovereignty in its immigration law. The United States did not become involved because American politicians viewed Canada as a geographically close ally not worth disturbing.[72]

Nixon Shock 1971 edit

 
Richard Nixon addresses a joint session of the Parliament of Canada, 1972

The United States had become Canada's largest market, and after the war, the Canadian economy became dependent on smooth trade flows with the United States so much that in 1971 when the United States enacted the "Nixon Shock" economic policies (including a 10% tariff on all imports) it put the Canadian government into a panic. Washington refused to exempt Canada from its 1971 New Economic Policy, so Trudeau saw a solution in closer economic ties with Europe. Trudeau proposed a "Third Option" policy of diversifying Canada's trade and downgrading the importance of the American market. In a 1972 speech in Ottawa, Nixon declared the "special relationship" between Canada and the United States dead.[73]

Relations deteriorated on many points in the Nixon years (1969–74), including trade disputes, defense agreements, energy, fishing, the environment, cultural imperialism, and foreign policy. They changed for the better when Trudeau and President Jimmy Carter (1977–1981) found a better rapport. The late 1970s saw a more sympathetic American attitude toward Canadian political and economic needs, the pardoning of draft evaders who had moved to Canada, and the passing of old such as the Watergate scandal and the Vietnam War. Canada more than ever welcomed American investments during "the stagflation" that hurt both nations.[74]

1990s edit

 
American, Canadian, and Mexican dignitaries initialing the draft North American Free Trade Agreement in October 1992

The main issues in Canada–U.S. relations in the 1990s focused on the North American Free Trade Agreement, which was signed in 1994. It created a common market that by 2014 was worth $19 trillion, encompassed 470 million people, and had created millions of jobs.[75] Wilson says, "Few dispute that NAFTA has produced large and measurable gains for Canadian consumers, workers, and businesses". However, he adds, "NAFTA has fallen well short of expectations."[76]

Migration history edit

From the 1750s to the 21st century, there has been an extensive mingling of the Canadian and American populations, with large movements in both directions.[77]

New England Yankees settled large parts of Nova Scotia before 1775 and were neutral during the American Revolution.[78] At the end of the American Revolution, about 75,000 United Empire Loyalists moved out of the new United States to Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the lands of Quebec, east and south of Montreal. From 1790 to 1812 many farmers moved from New York and New England into Upper Canada (mostly to Niagara, and the north shore of Lake Ontario). In the mid and late 19th century gold rushes attracted American prospectors, mostly to British Columbia after the Cariboo Gold Rush, Fraser Canyon Gold Rush, and later to the Yukon Territory. In the early 20th century, the opening of land blocks in the Prairie Provinces attracted many farmers from the American Midwest. Many Mennonites immigrated from Pennsylvania and formed their own colonies. In the 1890s some Mormons went north to form communities in Alberta after the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints rejected plural marriage.[79] The 1960s saw the arrival of about 50,000 draft-dodgers who opposed the Vietnam War.[80]

 
Loyalists landing in present day New Brunswick. Large movements of population occurred in both directions from the late-18th to 20th century.

Canada was a way-station through which immigrants from other lands stopped for a while, ultimately heading to the U.S. In 1851–1951, 7.1 million people arrived in Canada (mostly from Continental Europe), and 6.6 million left Canada, most of them to the U.S.[81] After 1850, the pace of industrialization and urbanization was much faster in the United States, drawing a wide range of immigrants from the North. By 1870, 1/6 of all the people born in Canada had moved to the United States, with the highest concentrations in New England, which was the destination of Francophone emigrants from Quebec and Anglophone emigrants from the Maritimes. It was common for people to move back and forth across the border, such as seasonal lumberjacks, entrepreneurs looking for larger markets, and families looking for jobs in the textile mills that paid much higher wages than in Canada.[82]

The southward migration slacked off after 1890, as Canadian industry began a growth spurt. By then, the American frontier was closing, and thousands of farmers looking for fresh land moved from the United States north into the Prairie Provinces. The net result of the flows was that in 1901 there were 128,000 American-born residents in Canada (3.5% of the Canadian population) and 1.18 million Canadian-born residents in the United States (1.6% of the U.S. population).[83]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, about 900,000 French Canadians moved to the U.S., with 395,000 residents there in 1900. Two-thirds went to mill towns in New England, where they formed distinctive ethnic communities. By the late 20th century, most had abandoned the French language (see New England French), but most kept the Catholic religion.[84][81] About twice as many English Canadians came to the U.S., but they did not form distinctive ethnic settlements.[85]

Relations between political executives edit

The executive of each country is represented differently. The President of the United States serves as both the head of state and head of government, and his "administration" is the executive, while the Prime Minister of Canada is head of government only, and his or her "government" or "ministry" directs the executive.

W. L. Mackenzie King and Franklin D. Roosevelt (October 1935 – April 1945) edit

 
Mackenzie King, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Winston Churchill at the First Quebec Conference in 1943.

In 1940, W. L. Mackenzie King and Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a defense pact, known as the Ogdensburg Agreement. King hosted conferences for Churchill and Roosevelt, but did not participate in the talks.

Louis St. Laurent and Harry S. Truman (November 1948 – January 1953) edit

Prime Minister Laurent and President Truman were both anti-communist during the early years of the Cold War.

John G. Diefenbaker and Dwight Eisenhower (June 1957 – January 1961) edit

President Dwight Eisenhower (1952–1961) took pains to foster good relations with Progressive Conservative John Diefenbaker (1957–1963). That led to approval of plans to join together in NORAD, an integrated air defence system, in mid-1957. Relations with President John Kennedy were much less cordial. Diefenbaker opposed apartheid in the South Africa and helped force it out of the Commonwealth of Nations. His indecision on whether to accept Bomarc nuclear missiles from the United States led to his government's downfall.[86]

John G. Diefenbaker and John F. Kennedy (January 1961 – April 1963) edit

Diefenbaker and President John F. Kennedy did not get along well personally. This was evident in Diefenbaker's response to the Cuban Missile Crisis, where he was slow to support the United States. However, Diefenbaker's Minister of Defence went behind Diefenbaker's back and did send Canada's military to high alert given Canada's legal treaty obligations, and in order to try and appease Kennedy.[87]

Lester B. Pearson and Lyndon B. Johnson (November 1963 – April 1968) edit

In 1965, Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson gave a speech in Philadelphia criticizing American involvement in the Vietnam War.[88] This infuriated Lyndon B. Johnson, who gave him a harsh talk, saying "You don't come here and piss on my rug".[89]

Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan (September 1984 – January 1989) edit

 
Ronald Reagan (left) and Brian Mulroney in Venice, Italy, June 11, 1987

Relations between Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan were famously close.[90] This relationship resulted in negotiations for the Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement, and the U.S.–Canada Air Quality Agreement to reduce acid-rain-causing emissions, both major policy goals of Mulroney, that would be finalized under the presidency of George H. W. Bush. Mulroney delivered eulogies at the funerals of both Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

Jean Chrétien and Bill Clinton (November 1993 – January 2001) edit

 
Jean Chrétien shakes hands with Bill Clinton during the APEC summit meeting in November 1993

Although Jean Chrétien was wary of appearing too close to President Bill Clinton,[citation needed] both men had a passion for golf. During a news conference with Prime Minister Chrétien in April 1997, President Clinton quipped "I don't know if any two world leaders have played golf together more than we have, but we meant to break a record".[91] Their governments had many small trade quarrels over the Canadian content of American magazines, softwood lumber, and so on, but on the whole were quite friendly. Both leaders had run on reforming or abolishing NAFTA, but the agreement went ahead with the addition of environmental and labor side agreements. Crucially, the Clinton administration lent rhetorical support to Canadian unity during the 1995 referendum in Quebec on separation from Canada.[92]

Jean Chrétien and George W. Bush (January 2001 – December 2003) edit

 
Jean Chrétien shakes hands with George W. Bush during a meeting in September 2002

Relations between Chrétien and George W. Bush were strained throughout their overlapping times in office. Canada offered its full assistance to the U.S. as the September 11 attacks were unfolding. One tangible show of support was Operation Yellow Ribbon, in which more than 200 U.S.-bound flights were diverted to Canada after the U.S. shut down their airspace. Later, however, Chrétien publicly mused that U.S. foreign policy might be part of the "root causes" of terrorism. Some Americans criticized his "smug moralism", and Chrétien's public refusal to support the 2003 Iraq war was met with negative responses in the United States, especially among conservatives.[93]

Stephen Harper and George W. Bush (February 2006 – January 2009) edit

Stephen Harper and George W. Bush were thought to share warm personal relations and also close ties between their administrations. Because Bush was so unpopular among liberals in Canada (particularly in the media), this was underplayed by the Harper government.[94]

Shortly after being congratulated by Bush for his victory in February 2006, Harper rebuked U.S. ambassador to Canada David Wilkins for criticizing the Conservatives' plans to assert Canada's sovereignty over the Arctic Ocean waters with military force.[95]

Stephen Harper and Barack Obama (January 2009 – November 2015) edit

 
Barack Obama meeting with Stephen Harper in Ottawa, February 2009

President Barack Obama's first international trip was to Canada on February 19, 2009, thereby sending a strong message of peace and cooperation.[96] With the exception of Canadian lobbying against "Buy American" provisions in the U.S. stimulus package, relations between the two administrations were smooth.

They also held friendly bets on hockey games during the Winter Olympic season. In the 2010 Winter Olympics hosted by Canada in Vancouver, Canada defeated the US in both gold medal matches, entitling Stephen Harper to receive a case of Molson Canadian beer from Barack Obama; in reverse, if Canada had lost, Harper would have provided a case of Yuengling beer to Obama.[97] During the 2014 Winter Olympics, alongside U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry & Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird, Stephen Harper was given a case of Samuel Adams beer by Obama for the Canadian gold medal victory over the US in women's hockey, and the semi-final victory over the US in men's hockey.[98]

Canada–United States Regulatory Cooperation Council (RCC) (2011) edit

On February 4, 2011, Harper and Obama issued a "Declaration on a Shared Vision for Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness"[99][100] and announced the creation of the Canada–United States Regulatory Cooperation Council (RCC) "to increase regulatory transparency and coordination between the two countries."[101]

Health Canada and the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) under the RCC mandate, undertook the "first of its kind" initiative by selecting "as its first area of alignment common cold indications for certain over-the-counter antihistamine ingredients (GC January 10, 2013)".[102]

On December 7, 2011, Harper flew to Washington, met with Obama and signed an agreement to implement the joint action plans that had been developed since the initial meeting in February. The plans called on both countries to spend more on border infrastructure, share more information on people who cross the border, and acknowledge more of each other's safety and security inspection on third-country traffic. An editorial in The Globe and Mail praised the agreement for giving Canada the ability to track whether failed refugee claimants have left Canada via the U.S. and for eliminating "duplicated baggage screenings on connecting flights".[103] The agreement is not a legally binding treaty, and relies on the political will and ability of the executives of both governments to implement the terms of the agreement. These types of executive agreements are routine—on both sides of the Canada–U.S. border.

Justin Trudeau and Barack Obama (November 2015 – January 2017) edit

 
President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, March 2016

President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first met formally at the APEC summit meeting in Manila, Philippines in November 2015, nearly a week after the latter was sworn into the office. Both leaders expressed eagerness for increased cooperation and coordination between the two countries during the course of Trudeau's government with Trudeau promising an "enhanced Canada–U.S. partnership".[104]

On November 6, 2015, Obama announced the U.S. State Department's rejection of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, the fourth phase of the Keystone oil pipeline system running between Canada and the United States, to which Trudeau expressed disappointment but said that the rejection would not damage Canada–U.S. relations and would instead provide a "fresh start" to strengthening ties through cooperation and coordination, saying that "the Canada–U.S. relationship is much bigger than any one project."[105] Obama has since praised Trudeau's efforts to prioritize the reduction of climate change, calling it "extraordinarily helpful" to establish a worldwide consensus on addressing the issue.[106]

Although Trudeau has told Obama his plans to withdraw Canada's McDonnell Douglas CF-18 Hornet jets assisting in the American-led intervention against ISIL, Trudeau said that Canada will still "do more than its part" in combating the terrorist group by increasing the number of Canadian special forces members training and fighting on ground in Iraq and Syria.[107]

Trudeau visited the White House for an official visit and state dinner on March 10, 2016.[108] Trudeau and Obama were reported to have shared warm personal relations during the visit, making humorous remarks about which country was better at hockey and which country had better beer.[109] Obama complimented Trudeau's 2015 election campaign for its "message of hope and change" and "positive and optimistic vision". Obama and Trudeau also held "productive" discussions on climate change and relations between the two countries, and Trudeau invited Obama to speak in the Canadian parliament in Ottawa later in the year.[110]

Justin Trudeau and Donald Trump (January 2017 – January 2021) edit

 
President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, June 2019

Following the victory of Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Trudeau congratulated him and invited him to visit Canada at the "earliest opportunity".[111] Prime Minister Trudeau and President Trump formally met for the first time at the White House on February 13, 2017, nearly a month after Trump was sworn into the office. Trump has ruffled relations with Canada with tariffs on softwood lumber.[112] Diafiltered Milk was brought up by Trump as an area that needed negotiating.[113]

In 2018, Trump and Trudeau negotiated the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA), a free trade agreement concluded between Canada, Mexico, and the United States that succeeded the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).[114] The agreement has been characterized as "NAFTA 2.0",[115][116][117] or "New NAFTA",[118][119] since many provisions from NAFTA were incorporated and its changes were seen as largely incremental. On July 1, 2020, the USMCA entered into force in all member states.

In June 2018, after Trudeau explained that Canadians would not be "pushed around" by the Trump tariffs on Canada's aluminum and steel, Trump labelled Trudeau as "dishonest" and "meek", and accused Trudeau of making "false statements", although it is unclear which statements Trump was referring to. Trump's adviser on trade, Peter Navarro, said that there was a "special place in hell" for Trudeau as he employed "bad faith diplomacy with President Donald J. Trump and then tries to stab him in the back on the way out the door ... that comes right from Air Force One."[120][121] Days later, Trump said that Trudeau's comments are "going to cost a lot of money for the people of Canada".[122]

In June 2019, the U.S. State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said the US "view Canada's claim that the waters of the Northwest Passage are internal waters of Canada as inconsistent with international law".[123]

Justin Trudeau and Joe Biden (January 2021 – present) edit

 
President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, March 2023

Following the victory of Joe Biden in the 2020 U.S. presidential election, Trudeau congratulated him on his successful victory; indicating a significant improvement in Canada–U.S. relationships, which had been strained in the years prior during the Presidency of Donald Trump.

On January 22, 2021, Biden and Trudeau held their first phone call. Trudeau was the first foreign leader to receive a phone call from Biden as President.[124]

On February 23, 2021, Biden and Trudeau held their first bilateral meeting. Although virtual, the bilateral meeting was Biden's first as President. The two leaders discussed "COVID-19, economic recovery, climate change, and refugees and migration" among other subjects.[125]

Military and security edit

 
North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), long headquartered in the Cheyenne Mountain Complex in Colorado, exemplifies military co-operation between Canada and the U.S.

The Canadian military, like forces of other NATO countries, fought alongside the United States in most major conflicts since World War II, including the Korean War, the Gulf War, the Kosovo War, and most recently the war in Afghanistan. The main exceptions to this were the Canadian government's opposition to the Vietnam War and the Iraq War, which caused some brief diplomatic tensions. Despite these issues, military relations have remained close.

American defense arrangements with Canada are more extensive than with any other country.[126] The Permanent Joint Board of Defense, established in 1940, provides policy-level consultation on bilateral defense matters. The United States and Canada share North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) mutual security commitments. In addition, American and Canadian military forces have cooperated since 1958 on continental air defense within the framework of the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD). Canadian forces have provided indirect support for the American invasion of Iraq that began in 2003.[127] Moreover, interoperability with the American armed forces has been a guiding principle of Canadian military force structuring and doctrine since the end of the Cold War. Canadian navy frigates, for instance, integrate seamlessly into American carrier battle groups.[128]

In commemoration of the 200th Anniversary of the War of 1812 ambassadors from Canada and the US, and naval officers from both countries gathered at the Pritzker Military Library on August 17, 2012, for a panel discussion on Canada-US relations with emphasis on national security-related matters. Also as part of the commemoration, the navies of both countries sailed together throughout the Great Lakes region.[129]

According to Canadian and U.S. officials, a U.S. fighter jet shot down an unidentified object over Canada on 23 February 2023 on the orders of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. The operation was coordinated by the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), a joint U.S.-Canadian air defense organization. Prime Minister Trudeau said investigators were looking for debris. This decision was made following the conversation between Biden and Trudeau.[130]

The foreign policies of the countries have been closely aligned, yet ultimately independent, since the Cold War.[131] There is also debate on whether the Northwest Passage is in international waters or under Canadian sovereignty. [132][133][134][135][136][137]

Iran hostage crisis edit

During the 1979 revolution, protesters invaded the US embassy and took many hostages. Six Americans evaded capture and were sheltered by the British and Canadian diplomatic missions. After a US military operation to get them out of Iran failed,[138] Canadian diplomat Ken Taylor, Secretary of State for External Affairs Flora MacDonald, and Prime Minister Joe Clark decided to smuggle the six Americans out of Iran on an international flight by using Canadian passports. An Order in Council was made to issue multiple official copies of Canadian passports with fake identities to the American diplomats in the Canadian sanctuary. The passports contained forged Iranian visas prepared by the US Central Intelligence Agency.[139]

War in Afghanistan edit

 
American and Canadian ISAF soldiers gather to commemorate the 65th anniversary of 1st Special Service Force in Bagram, Afghanistan. The 1st Special Service Force was an American-Canadian unit during World War II.

Canada's elite JTF2 unit joined American special forces in Afghanistan shortly after the al-Qaeda attacks on September 11, 2001. Canadian forces joined the multinational coalition in Operation Anaconda in January 2002. On April 18, 2002, an American pilot bombed Canadian forces involved in a training exercise, killing four and wounding eight Canadians. A joint American-Canadian inquiry determined the cause of the incident to be pilot error, in which the pilot interpreted ground fire as an attack; the pilot ignored orders that he felt were "second-guessing" his field tactical decision.[140][141] Canadian forces assumed a six-month command rotation of the International Security Assistance Force in 2003; in 2005, Canadians assumed operational command of the multi-national Brigade in Kandahar, with 2,300 troops, and supervises the Provincial Reconstruction Team in Kandahar, where al-Qaida forces are most active. Canada has also deployed naval forces in the Persian Gulf since 1991 in support of the UN Gulf Multinational Interdiction Force.[142]

The Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C. maintains a public relations website named CanadianAlly.com, which is intended "to give American citizens a better sense of the scope of Canada's role in North American and Global Security and the War on Terror".

The New Democratic Party and some recent Liberal leadership candidates have expressed opposition to Canada's expanded role in the Afghan conflict on the ground that it is inconsistent with Canada's historic role (since the Second World War) of peacekeeping operations.[143]

2003 Invasion of Iraq edit

According to contemporary polls, 71% of Canadians were opposed to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[144] Many Canadians, and the former Liberal Cabinet headed by Paul Martin (as well as many Americans such as Bill Clinton and Barack Obama),[145] made a policy distinction between conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, unlike the Bush Doctrine, which linked these together in a "Global war on terror".

Responding to ISIS/Daesh edit

 
Canadian Minister of Defence Harjit Sajjan meets with US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter at NATO headquarters in 2016

Canada has been involved in international responses to the threats from Daesh/ISIS/ISIL in Syria and Iraq, and is a member of the Global Coalition to Counter Daesh. In October 2016, Foreign Affairs Minister Dion and National Defence Minister Sajjan met the U.S. special envoy for this coalition. The Americans thanked Canada "for the role of Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) in providing training and assistance to Iraqi security forces, as well as the CAF's role in improving essential capacity-building capabilities with regional forces".[146]

Illicit drugs edit

In 2003, the American government became concerned when members of the Canadian government announced plans to decriminalize marijuana. David Murray, an assistant to U.S. Drug Czar John P. Walters, said in a CBC interview that, "We would have to respond. We would be forced to respond."[147] However, the election of the Conservative Party in early 2006 halted the liberalization of marijuana laws until the Liberal Party of Canada legalised recreational cannabis use in 2018.[148]

A 2007 joint report by American and Canadian officials on cross-border drug smuggling indicated that, despite their best efforts, "drug trafficking still occurs in significant quantities in both directions across the border. The principal illicit substances smuggled across our shared border are MDMA (Ecstasy), cocaine, and marijuana."[149] The report indicated that Canada was a major producer of Ecstasy and marijuana for the U.S. market, while the U.S. was a transit country for cocaine entering Canada.

Trade edit

 
Timber being floated along the Fraser River in Vancouver. Trade disputes over softwood lumber exist between the two countries.

Canada and the United States have the world's second largest trading relationship, with huge quantities of goods and people flowing across the border each year. Since the 1987 Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement, there have been no tariffs on most goods passed between the two countries.

In the course of the softwood lumber dispute, the U.S. has placed tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber because of what it argues is an unfair Canadian government subsidy, a claim that Canada disputes. The dispute has cycled through several agreements and arbitration cases. Other notable disputes include the Canadian Wheat Board, and Canadian cultural protectionism in cultural industries such as magazines, radio, and television. Canadians have been criticized about such things as the ban on beef since a case of Mad Cow disease was discovered in 2003 in cows from the United States (and a few subsequent cases) and the high American agricultural subsidies. Concerns in Canada also run high over aspects of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) such as Chapter 11.[150]

Environmental issues edit

 
Richard Nixon and Pierre Trudeau at the signing ceremony for the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement in 1972

A principal instrument of this cooperation is the International Joint Commission (IJC), established as part of the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 to resolve differences and promote international cooperation on boundary waters. The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement of 1972 is another historic example of joint cooperation in controlling trans-border water pollution.[151] However, there have been some disputes. Most recently, the Devil's Lake Outlet, a project instituted by North Dakota, has angered Manitobans who fear that their water may soon become polluted as a result of this project.

Beginning in 1986, the Canadian government of Brian Mulroney began pressing the Reagan administration for an "Acid Rain Treaty" in order to do something about U.S. industrial air pollution causing acid rain in Canada. The Reagan administration was hesitant, and questioned the science behind Mulroney's claims. However, Mulroney was able to prevail. The product was the signing and ratification of the Air Quality Agreement of 1991 by the first Bush administration. Under that treaty, the two governments consult semi-annually on trans-border air pollution, which has demonstrably reduced acid rain, and they have since signed an annex to the treaty dealing with ground level ozone in 2000.[152][153][154][155] Despite this, trans-border air pollution remains an issue, particularly in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence watershed during the summer. The main source of this trans-border pollution results from coal-fired power stations, most of them located in the Midwestern United States.[156] As part of the negotiations to create NAFTA, Canada and the U.S. signed, along with Mexico, the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation that created the Commission for Environmental Cooperation that monitors environmental issues across the continent, publishing the North American Environmental Atlas as one aspect of its monitoring duties.[157]

Currently neither of the countries' governments support the Kyoto Protocol, which set out time scheduled curbing of greenhouse gas emissions. Unlike the United States, Canada has ratified the agreement. Yet after ratification, due to internal political conflict within Canada, the Canadian government does not enforce the Kyoto Protocol, and has received criticism from environmental groups and from other governments for its climate change positions. In January 2011, the Canadian minister of the environment, Peter Kent, explicitly stated that the policy of his government with regards to greenhouse gas emissions reductions is to wait for the United States to act first, and then try to harmonize with that action – a position that has been condemned by environmentalists and Canadian nationalists, and as well as scientists and government think-tanks.[158][159]

With large freshwater supplies in Canada and long-term concern about water scarcity in parts of the United States, water export availability or restriction has been identified as an issue of possible future contention between the countries.[160]

Newfoundland fisheries dispute edit

The United States and Britain had a long-standing dispute about the rights of Americans fishing in the waters near Newfoundland.[161] Before 1776, there was no question that American fishermen, mostly from Massachusetts, had rights to use the waters off Newfoundland. In the peace treaty negotiations of 1783, the Americans insisted on a statement of these rights. However, France, an American ally, disputed the American position because France had its own specified rights in the area and wanted them to be exclusive.[162] The Treaty of Paris (1783) gave the Americans not rights, but rather "liberties" to fish within the territorial waters of British North America and to dry fish on certain coasts.

After the War of 1812, the Convention of 1818 between the United States and Britain specified exactly what liberties were involved.[163] Canadian and Newfoundland fishermen contested these liberties in the 1830s and 1840s. The Canadian–American Reciprocity Treaty of 1854, and the Treaty of Washington of 1871 spelled-out the liberties in more detail. However the Treaty of Washington expired in 1885, and there was a continuous round of disputes over jurisdictions and liberties. Britain and the United States sent the issue to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague in 1909. It produced a compromise settlement that permanently ended the problems.[164][165]

Common memberships edit

Canada and the United States both hold membership in a number of multinational organizations, including:

Territorial disputes edit

 
A "buoy" on Machias Seal Island. The waters around the island is one of several maritime territorial disputes between the two countries.

The two countries have had a number of territorial disputes throughout their histories. Current maritime territorial disputes between the two countries include the Beaufort Sea, Dixon Entrance, Strait of Juan de Fuca, San Juan Islands, Machias Seal Island, and North Rock. Additionally, the United States is one of several countries that contends the Northwest Passage is international waters; whereas the Canadian government asserts it forms Canadian Internal Waters. The Inside Passage is also disputed as international waters by the United States.

Historical boundary disputes include the Aroostook War at the MaineNew Brunswick border; the Oregon boundary dispute at the present day British ColumbiaWashington border; and the Alaska Boundary Dispute at the Alaska–British Columbia border. The Maine–New Brunswick boundary dispute was resolved through the Webster–Ashburton Treaty in 1842, the Oregon boundary dispute through the Oregon Treaty of 1846, and the Alaska boundary dispute through arbitration in 1903.

Northwest Passage edit

 
Popular routes on the Northwest Passage

A long-simmering dispute between Canada and the U.S. involves the issue of Canadian sovereignty over the Northwest Passage (the sea passages in the Arctic). Canada's assertion that the Northwest Passage represents internal (territorial) waters has been challenged by other countries, especially the U.S., which argue that these waters constitute an international strait (international waters). Canadians were alarmed when Americans drove the reinforced oil tanker Manhattan through the Northwest Passage in 1969, followed by the icebreaker Polar Sea in 1985, which actually resulted in a minor diplomatic incident. In 1970, the Canadian parliament enacted the Arctic Waters Pollution Prevention Act, which asserts Canadian regulatory control over pollution within a 100-mile zone. In response, the United States in 1970 stated, "We cannot accept the assertion of a Canadian claim that the Arctic waters are internal waters of Canada. ... Such acceptance would jeopardize the freedom of navigation essential for United States naval activities worldwide." A compromise of sorts was reached in 1988, by an agreement on "Arctic Cooperation", which pledges that voyages of American icebreakers "will be undertaken with the consent of the Government of Canada". However the agreement did not alter either country's basic legal position. Paul Cellucci, the American ambassador to Canada, in 2005 suggested to Washington that it should recognize the straits as belonging to Canada. His advice was rejected and Harper took opposite positions. The U.S. opposes Harper's proposed plan to deploy military icebreakers in the Arctic to detect interlopers and assert Canadian sovereignty over those waters.[166][167]

Views of presidents and prime ministers edit

Presidents and prime ministers typically make formal or informal statements that indicate the diplomatic policy of their administration. Diplomats and journalists at the time—and historians since—dissect the nuances and tone to detect the warmth or coolness of the relationship.

  • Prime Minister John A. Macdonald, speaking at the beginning of the 1891 election (fought mostly over Canadian free trade with the United States), arguing against closer trade relations with the U.S. stated "As for myself, my course is clear. A British subject I was born—a British subject I will die. With my utmost effort, with my latest breath, will I oppose the 'veiled treason' which attempts by sordid means and mercenary proffers to lure our people from their allegiance." (February 3, 1891.[168])

Canada's first Prime Minister also said:

It has been said that the United States Government is a failure. I don't go so far. On the contrary, I consider it a marvelous exhibition of human wisdom. It was as perfect as human wisdom could make it, and under it the American States greatly prospered until very recently; but being the work of men it had its defects, and it is for us to take advantage by experience, and endeavor to see if we cannot arrive by careful study at such a plan as will avoid the mistakes of our neighbors. In the first place we know that every individual state was an individual sovereignty—that each had its own army and navy and political organization – and when they formed themselves into a confederation they only gave the central authority certain specific rights appertaining to sovereign powers. The dangers that have risen from this system we will avoid if we can agree upon forming a strong central government—a great Central Legislature—a constitution for a Union which will have all the rights of sovereignty except those that are given to the local governments. Then we shall have taken a great step in advance of the American Republic. (September 12, 1864)

  • Prime Minister John Sparrow Thompson, angry at failed trade talks in 1888, privately complained to his wife, Lady Thompson, that "These Yankee politicians are the lowest race of thieves in existence."[169]
  • After the World War II years of close military and economic cooperation, President Harry S. Truman said in 1947 that "Canada and the United States have reached the point where we can no longer think of each other as 'foreign' countries."[170]
  • President John F. Kennedy told Parliament in Ottawa in May 1961 that "Geography has made us neighbors. History has made us friends. Economics has made us partners. And necessity has made us allies. Those whom nature hath so joined together, let no man put asunder."[171]
  • President Lyndon Johnson helped open Expo '67 with an upbeat theme, saying that "We of the United States consider ourselves blessed. We have much to give thanks for. But the gift of providence we cherish most is that we were given as our neighbours on this wonderful continent the people and the nation of Canada." Remarks at Expo '67, Montreal, May 25, 1967.[172]
  • Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau famously said that being America's neighbour "is like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even-tempered the beast, if one can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt."[173][174]
  • Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau, sharply at odds with the U.S. over Cold War policy, warned at a press conference in 1971 that the overwhelming American presence posed "a danger to our national identity from a cultural, economic and perhaps even military point of view."[175]
  • President Richard Nixon, in a speech to Parliament in 1972 was angry at Trudeau, declared that the "special relationship" between Canada and the United States was dead. "It is time for us to recognize", he stated, "that we have very separate identities; that we have significant differences; and that nobody's interests are furthered when these realities are obscured."[176]
  • In late 2001, President George W. Bush did not mention Canada during a speech in which he thanked a list of countries who had assisted in responding to the events of September 11, although Canada had provided military, financial, and other support.[177] Ten years later, David Frum, one of President Bush's speechwriters, stated that it was an unintentional omission.[178]
  • Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in a statement congratulating Barack Obama on his inauguration, stated that "The United States remains Canada's most important ally, closest friend and largest trading partner and I look forward to working with President Obama and his administration as we build on this special relationship."[179]
  • President Barack Obama, speaking in Ottawa at his first official international visit on February 19, 2009, said, "I love this country. We could not have a better friend and ally."[180]

Public opinion edit

Today there remain cross-border cultural ties [181][182][183] and according to Gallup's annual public opinion polls, Canada has consistently been Americans' favorite nation, with 96% of Americans viewing Canada favorably in 2012.[184][185] As of spring 2013, 64% of Canadians had a favorable view of the U.S. and 81% expressed confidence in then-US President Obama to do the right thing in international matters. According to the same poll, 30% viewed the U.S. negatively.[186] In addition, according to Spring 2017 Global Attitudes Survey, 43% of Canadians view the U.S. positively, while 51% hold a negative view.[187] More recently, however, a poll in January 2018 showed Canadians' approval of U.S. leadership dropped by over 40 percentage points under President Donald Trump, in line with the view of residents of many other U.S. allied and neutral countries.[188] Since then, Canadian opinion of the U.S. has improved significantly, following an international rebound in the U.S image abroad following the transition as President of the United States from Donald Trump to Joe Biden, with 61% of Canadians having a favorable opinion of the United States in 2021.[189]

Anti-Americanism edit

Since the arrival of the Loyalists as refugees from the American Revolution in the 1780s, historians have identified a constant theme of Canadian fear of the United States and of "Americanization" or a cultural takeover. In the War of 1812, for example, the enthusiastic response by French militia to defend Lower Canada reflected, according to Heidler and Heidler (2004), "the fear of Americanization".[190] Scholars have traced this attitude over time in Ontario and Quebec.[191]

 
A Canadian political cartoon from 1869 of a "Young Canada" kicking out Uncle Sam from "Dominion House", while John Bull watches in the background

Canadian intellectuals who wrote about the U.S. in the first half of the 20th century identified America as the world center of modernity, and deplored it. Anti-American Canadians (who admired the British Empire) explained that Canada had narrowly escaped American conquest with its rejection of tradition, its worship of "progress" and technology, and its mass culture; they explained that Canada was much better because of its commitment to orderly government and societal harmony. There were a few ardent defenders of the nation to the south, notably liberal and socialist intellectuals such as F. R. Scott and Jean-Charles Harvey (1891–1967).[192]

Looking at television, Collins (1990) finds that it is in Anglophone Canada that fear of cultural Americanization is most powerful, for there the attractions of the U.S. are strongest.[193] Meren (2009) argues that after 1945, the emergence of Quebec nationalism and the desire to preserve French-Canadian cultural heritage led to growing anxiety regarding American cultural imperialism and Americanization.[194] In 2006 surveys showed that 60 percent of Québécois had a fear of Americanization, while other surveys showed they preferred their current situation to that of the Americans in the realms of health care, quality of life as seniors, environmental quality, poverty, educational system, racism and standard of living. While agreeing that job opportunities are greater in America, 89 percent disagreed with the notion that they would rather be in the United States, and they were more likely to feel closer to English Canadians than to Americans.[195] However, there is evidence that the elites and Quebec are much less fearful of Americanization, and much more open to economic integration than the general public.[195]

The history has been traced in detail by a leading Canadian historian J.L. Granatstein in Yankee Go Home: Canadians and Anti-Americanism (1997). Current studies report the phenomenon persists. Two scholars report, "Anti-Americanism is alive and well in Canada today, strengthened by, among other things, disputes related to NAFTA, American involvement in the Middle East, and the ever-increasing Americanization of Canadian culture."[196] Jamie Glazov writes, "More than anything else, Diefenbaker became the tragic victim of Canadian anti-Americanism, a sentiment the prime minister had fully embraced by 1962. [He was] unable to imagine himself (or his foreign policy) without enemies."[197] Historian J. M. Bumsted says, "In its most extreme form, Canadian suspicion of the United States has led to outbreaks of overt anti-Americanism, usually spilling over against American residents in Canada."[198] John R. Wennersten writes, "But at the heart of Canadian anti-Americanism lies a cultural bitterness that takes an American expatriate unaware. Canadians fear the American media's influence on their culture and talk critically about how Americans are exporting a culture of violence in its television programming and movies."[199] However Kim Nossal points out that the Canadian variety is much milder than anti-Americanism in some other countries.[200] By contrast Americans show very little knowledge or interest one way or the other regarding Canadian affairs.[201] Canadian historian Frank Underhill, quoting Canadian playwright Merrill Denison summed it up: "Americans are benevolently ignorant about Canada, whereas Canadians are malevolently informed about the United States."[202]

Canadian public opinion on U.S. presidents edit

 
Anti-Trump rally organized in Vancouver in January 2017

United States President George W. Bush was "deeply disliked" by a majority of Canadians according to the Arizona Daily Sun. A 2004 poll found that more than two thirds of Canadians favoured Democrat John Kerry over Bush in the 2004 presidential election, with Bush's lowest approval ratings in Canada being in the province of Quebec where just 11% of the population supported him.[203] Canadian public opinion of Barack Obama was significantly more positive. A 2012 poll found that 65% of Canadians would vote for Obama in the 2012 presidential election "if they could" while only 9% of Canadians would vote for his Republican opponent Mitt Romney. The same study found that 61% of Canadians felt that the Obama administration had been "good" for America, while only 12% felt it had been "bad". Similarly, a Pew Research poll conducted in June 2016 found that 83% of Canadians were "confident in Obama to do the right thing regarding world affairs".[204] The study also found that a majority of members of all three major Canadian political parties supported Obama, and also found that Obama had slightly higher approval ratings in Canada in 2012 than he did in 2008. John Ibbitson of The Globe and Mail stated in 2012 that Canadians generally supported Democratic presidents over Republican presidents, citing how President Richard Nixon was "never liked" in Canada and that Canadians generally did not approve of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's friendship with President Ronald Reagan.[205]

A November 2016 poll found 82% of Canadians preferred Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump.[206] A January 2017 poll found that 66% of Canadians "disapproved" of Donald Trump, with 23% approving of him and 11% being "unsure". The poll also found that only 18% of Canadians believed Trump's presidency would have a positive impact on Canada, while 63% believed it would have a negative effect.[207] A July 2019 poll found 79% of Canadians preferred Joe Biden or Bernie Sanders over Trump.[208] A Pew Research poll released in June 2021, showed that Canadian opinion of American president Joe Biden is much more favorable than his predecessor Donald Trump, with 77% approving of his leadership and having confidence in him to do the right thing.[189]

Resident diplomatic missions edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Canada, Global Affairs (November 24, 2022). "Canada's Indo-Pacific Strategy". GAC. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  2. ^ House, The White (February 24, 2021). "Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau of Canada in Joint Press Statements". The White House. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  3. ^ "The Anglosphere: Past, present and future". The British Academy.
  4. ^ "War of 1812". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved October 25, 2023.
  5. ^ John Herd Thompson, Canada and the United States: ambivalent allies (2008).
  6. ^ "The Canada–U.S. border: by the numbers". cbc.ca. CBC/Radio-Canada. December 7, 2011. Retrieved March 23, 2016.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on July 4, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2008.
  8. ^ Cudmore, James. "Canadian military explored plan to fully integrate forces with U.S. – Politics – CBC News". Cbc.ca. Retrieved January 4, 2017.
  9. ^ Hills, Carla A. "NAFTA's Economic Upsides: The View from the United States." Foreign Affairs 93 (2014): 122.
  10. ^ Michael Wilson, "NAFTA's Unfinished Business: The View from Canada". Foreign Affairs (2014) 93#1 pp. 128+.
  11. ^ "Harper, Obama to begin security talks | CTV News". Ctvnews.ca. February 3, 2011. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
  12. ^ Poushter, Jacob (October 6, 2015). "Canadians Satisfied with U.S. Relationship". Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  13. ^ Brenan, Megan (March 21, 2023). "Canada, Britain Favored Most in U.S.; Russia, N. Korea Least". Gallup, Inc. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
  14. ^ Thomas Morgan, William (1926). "The Five Nations and Queen Anne". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 13 (2): 169–189. doi:10.2307/1891955. JSTOR 1891955.
  15. ^ June Namias, White Captives: Gender and Ethnicity on the American Frontier (1993)
  16. ^ Howard H. Peckham, The Colonial Wars (1965)
  17. ^ Chard, Donald F. (1975). "The Impact of French Privateering on New England, 1689–1713". American Neptune. 35 (3): 153–165.
  18. ^ Shortt, S. E. D. (1972). "Conflict and Identity in Massachusetts: The Louisbourg Expedition of 1745". Social History/Histoire Sociale. 5 (10): 165–185.
  19. ^ Johnston, A. J. B. (2008). "D-Day at Louisbourg". Beaver. 88 (3): 16–23.
  20. ^ Mason Wade, The French Canadians, 1760–1945 (1955) p. 74.
  21. ^ George W. Geib (1987). "The Old Northwest Under British Control, 1763–1783" and "Indiana A Part of the Old Northwest, 1783–1800". Butler University. pp. 42–44.
  22. ^ Thomas B. Allen, Tories: Fighting for the King in America's First Civil War (2011) p. xviii
  23. ^ Bradford Perkins, The First Rapprochement: England and the United States, 1795–1805 (1955)
  24. ^ Rawlyk, George A. (1994). The Canada Fire: Radical Evangelicalism in British North America, 1775–1812. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 122. ISBN 9780773512214. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  25. ^ Alan Taylor, The Civil War of 1812: American Citizens, British Subjects, Irish Rebels, & Indian Allies (2010).
  26. ^ Stagg 2012, pp. 5–6.
  27. ^ George F. G. Stanley, 1983, p. 32[full citation needed]
  28. ^ David Heidler, Jeanne T. Heidler, The War of 1812, pg4[full citation needed]
  29. ^ Tucker 2011, p. 236.
  30. ^ Nugent 2008, p. 73, 75.
  31. ^ Mark Zuehlke, For Honour's Sake: The War of 1812 and the Brokering of an Uneasy Peace (2007) is a Canadian perspective.
  32. ^ W.L. Morton, The Kingdom of Canada (1969) ch 12
  33. ^ Dunning, Tom (2009). "The Canadian Rebellions of 1837 and 1838 as a Borderland War: A Retrospective". Ontario History. 101 (2): 129–141. doi:10.7202/1065615ar.
  34. ^ Orrin Edward Tiffany, The Relations of the United States to the Canadian Rebellion of 1837–1838 (1905). excerpt and text search
  35. ^ Robin W. Winks, "The Creation of a Myth: 'Canadian' Enlistments in the Northern Armies during the American Civil War", Canadian Historical Review, 1958 39(1): 24–40.
  36. ^ Adam Mayers, Dixie & the Dominion: Canada, the Confederacy, and the War for the Union (2003)
  37. ^ a b c "Alabama Claims, 1862–1872". GlobalSecurity.org.
  38. ^ Mayers, Dixie & the Dominion pp 105–116.
  39. ^ Congressional series of United States public documents. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1870. p. 71.
  40. ^ David Keys (June 24, 2014). "Historians reveal secrets of UK gun-running which lengthened the American civil war by two years". The Independent.
  41. ^ Paul Hendren (April 1933). "The Confederate Blockade Runners". United States Naval Institute.
  42. ^ Sexton, Jay (2005). Debtor Diplomacy: Finance and American Foreign Relations in the Civil War Era, 1837–1873. Oxford University Press. p. 206. ISBN 9780199281039. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  43. ^ Theodore C. Blegen, "A Plan for the Union of British North America and the United States, 1866". Mississippi Valley Historical Review 4.4 (1918): 470–483 online.
  44. ^ Doris W. Dashew, "The Story of An Illusion: The Plan To Trade 'Alabama' Claims For Canada", Civil War History, December 1969, Vol. 15 Issue 4, pp 332–348
  45. ^ Shi, David E. (1978). "Seward's Attempt to Annex British Columbia, 1865–1869". Pacific Historical Review. 47 (2): 217–238. doi:10.2307/3637972. JSTOR 3637972.
  46. ^ Shain, Yossi (1999). Marketing the American Creed Abroad: Diasporas in the U.S. and Their Homelands. Cambridge U.P. p. 53. ISBN 9780521642255. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  47. ^ David Sim, "Filibusters, Fenians, and a Contested Neutrality: The Irish Question and US Diplomacy, 1848–1871". American Nineteenth Century History 12.3 (2011): 265–287.
  48. ^ Robert M. Groceman, "Patriot War and the Fenian Raids: Case Studies in Border Security on the US Canada Border in the Nineteenth Century" (US Army Command and General Staff College Fort Leavenworth United States, 2017) online.
  49. ^ Kurlansky, Mark (1998). Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World. Penguin. p. 117. ISBN 9781440672873. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  50. ^ Munro, John A. (1965). "English-Canadianism and the Demand for Canadian Autonomy: Ontario's Response to the Alaska Boundary Decision, 1903". Ontario History. 57 (4): 189–203.
  51. ^ David G. Haglund, and Tudor Onea. "Victory without Triumph: Theodore Roosevelt, Honour, and the Alaska Panhandle Boundary Dispute". Diplomacy and Statecraft 19.1 (2008): 20-41.
  52. ^ Tucker, Spencer (2011). World War II at Sea: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 142. ISBN 9781598844573.
  53. ^ Baker, W. M. (1970). "A Case Study of Anti-Americanism in English-Speaking Canada: The Election Campaign of 1911". Canadian Historical Review. 51 (4): 426–449. doi:10.3138/chr-051-04-04. S2CID 161614104.
  54. ^ Clements, Kendrick A. (1973). "Manifest Destiny and Canadian Reciprocity in 1911". Pacific Historical Review. 42 (1): 32–52. doi:10.2307/3637741. JSTOR 3637741.
  55. ^ Ellis, Lewis E. (1968). Reciprocity, 1911: a study in Canadian–American relations. Greenwood.
  56. ^ Paolo E. Coletta, The Presidency of William Howard Taft (1973) pp. 141–152.
  57. ^ Hugh Ll. Keenleyside, Canada and the United States (1929) p 373. online
  58. ^ Warren G. Harding & Stanley Park. The History of Metropolitan Vancouver. Vancouver.ca [1] September 16, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved June 11, 2017
  59. ^ Richard N. Kottman, "Herbert Hoover and the Smoot-Hawley Tariff: Canada, A Case Study", Journal of American History, Vol. 62, No. 3 (December 1975), pp. 609–635 in JSTOR
  60. ^ McDonald, Judith; et al. (1997). "Trade Wars: Canada's Reaction to the Smoot–Hawley Tariff", (1997)". Journal of Economic History. 57 (4): 802–826. doi:10.1017/S0022050700019549. JSTOR 2951161. S2CID 154380335.
  61. ^ Carlson, Peter (December 30, 2005). "Raiding the Icebox". The Washington Post.
  62. ^ Bell, Christopher M. (1997). "Thinking the Unthinkable: British and American Naval Strategies for an Anglo-American War, 1918–1931". International History Review. 19 (4): 789–808. doi:10.1080/07075332.1997.9640804.
  63. ^ Arnold A. Offner, American Appeasement: United States Foreign Policy and Germany, 1933–1938 (1969) p. 256
  64. ^ Galen Roger Perras, Franklin Roosevelt and the Origins of the Canadian-American Security Alliance, 1933–1945 (1998)
  65. ^ Richard Jensen, "Nationalism and Civic Duty in Wartime: Comparing World Wars in Canada and America", Canadian Issues / Thèmes Canadiens, December 2004, pp 6–10
  66. ^ Rachel Lea Heide, "Allies in Complicity: The United States, Canada, and the Clayton Knight Committee's Clandestine Recruiting of Americans for the Royal Canadian Air Force, 1940–1942", Journal of the Canadian Historical Association, 2004, Vol. 15, pp 207–230
  67. ^ Galen Roger Perras, "Who Will Defend British Columbia? Unity of Command on the West Coast, 1934–1942", Pacific Northwest Quarterly, Spring 1997, Vol. 88 Issue 2, pp 59–69
  68. ^ McNeil Earle, Karl (1998). "Cousins of a Kind: The Newfoundland and Labrador Relationship with the United States". American Review of Canadian Studies. 28 (4): 387–411. doi:10.1080/02722019809481611.
  69. ^ C. P. Stacey, Canada and the Age of Conflict: A History of Canadian External Policies. Volume 2, 1921–1948: The Mackenzie King Era (1982) pp 420–424.
  70. ^ Hector Mackenzie, "Golden Decade (s)? Reappraising Canada's International Relations in the 1940s and 1950s". British Journal of Canadian Studies 23.2 (2010): 179–206.
  71. ^ Don Munton and John Kirton, eds. Cases and Readings in Canadian Foreign Policy Since World War II (1992) pp 2–18.
  72. ^ Stewart, Luke (2018). "'Hell, they're your problem, not ours': Draft Dodgers, Military Deserters and Canada–United States Relations in the Vietnam War Era". Études Canadiennes / Canadian Studies. Open Edition (85): 67–96. doi:10.4000/eccs.1479. S2CID 181777562.
  73. ^ Bruce Muirhead, "From Special Relationship to Third Option: Canada, the U.S., and the Nixon Shock", American Review of Canadian Studies, Vol. 34, 2004 online edition March 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  74. ^ Lily Gardner Feldman, "Canada and the United States in the 1970s: Rift and Reconciliation". The World Today 34.12 (1978): 484–492. online
  75. ^ Hills, Carla A. "NAFTA's Economic Upsides: The View from the United States". Foreign Affairs 93 (2014): 122. online
  76. ^ Wilson, Michael. "NAFTA's Unfinished Business: The View from Canada". Foreign Affairs 93 (2014): 128. online
  77. ^ Marcus Lee Hansen, The Mingling of the Canadian and American Peoples. Vol. 1: Historical (1940)
  78. ^ John Brebner, The Neutral Yankees of Nova Scotia: A Marginal Colony During the Revolutionary Years (1937)
  79. ^ Marcus Lee Hansen, The Mingling of the Canadian and American Peoples. Vol. 1: Historical (1940); David D. Harvey, Americans in Canada: Migration and Settlement since 1840 (1991)
  80. ^ Renee Kasinsky, "Refugees from Militarism: Draft Age Americans in Canada (1976)
  81. ^ a b Barkan, Elliott Robert (1980). "French Canadians". In Thernstrom, Stephan; Orlov, Ann; Handlin, Oscar (eds.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Harvard University Press. p. 392. ISBN 0674375122. OCLC 1038430174.
  82. ^ John J. Bukowczyk et al. Permeable Border: The Great Lakes Region as Transnational Region, 1650–1990 (University of Pittsburgh Press. 2005)
  83. ^ J. Castell Hopkins, The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs: 1902 (1903), p. 327.
  84. ^ Yves Roby, The Franco-Americans of New England (2004)
  85. ^ Brookes, Alan A. (1980). "Canadians, British". In Thernstrom, Stephan; Orlov, Ann; Handlin, Oscar (eds.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Harvard University Press. p. 191. ISBN 0674375122. OCLC 1038430174.
  86. ^ Soloman Gabriel, Foreign Policy of Canada: A Study in Diefenbaker's Years (1987).
  87. ^ Potter, Mitch (November 18, 2013). "JFK's war with Diefenbaker". The Toronto Star. Retrieved June 12, 2018.
  88. ^ Preston, Andrew (2003). "Balancing War and Peace: Canadian Foreign Policy and the Vietnam War, 1961–1965". Diplomatic History. 27: 73–111. doi:10.1111/1467-7709.00340.
  89. ^ Brean, Joseph (November 17, 2014). "'I've been called worse things by better people': A history of Canadian PMs' not-so-diplomatic one-liners". National Post. National Post. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  90. ^ Grande, Peggy (2017). "8: Rawhide's Ranch". The president will see you now : my stories and lessons from Ronald Reagan's final years (First ed.). New York. ISBN 9780316396455. OCLC 951764632.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  91. ^ "The President's News Conference With Prime Minister Jean Chretien of Canada". The American Presidency Project. April 8, 1997. Retrieved May 16, 2018.
  92. ^ Jehl, Douglas (February 24, 1995). "Clinton, in Talk to Canadians, Opposes Quebec Separation". The New York Times.
  93. ^ Drache, Daniel (2008). Big Picture Realities: Canada and Mexico at the Crossroads. Wilfrid Laurier U.P. p. 115. ISBN 9781554582334. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  94. ^ "Prime ministers and presidents". CBC News. February 18, 2009.
  95. ^ "Guest column: Time, Canada, to negotiate the Northwest Passage". CBC News. Retrieved July 18, 2017.
  96. ^ "Obama to visit Canada Feb. 19, PMO confirms – CTV News". Ctv.ca. January 28, 2009. from the original on June 6, 2009. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  97. ^ "Obama loses boozy bet with Harper". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  98. ^ "Barack Obama follows through on Olympic beer bet". canoe.ca. Archived from the original on February 25, 2014. Retrieved April 27, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  99. ^ "Joint Statement by President Obama and Prime Minister Harper of Canada on Regulatory Cooperation". whitehouse.gov. February 4, 2011. Retrieved February 26, 2011 – via National Archives.
  100. ^ . Office of the Prime Minister of Canada. February 4, 2011. Archived from the original on September 10, 2013. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  101. ^ . Washington, D.C.: Office of the Prime Minister of Canada. December 7, 2011. Archived from the original on July 29, 2013.
  102. ^ . Canada's Action Plan. Government of Canada. January 10, 2013. Archived from the original on November 8, 2014. Retrieved February 15, 2013.
  103. ^ "Canada–U.S. border agreement a good thing". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. September 6, 2012.
  104. ^ Jordan, Roger (November 20, 2015). "Trudeau promises Obama an enhanced Canada–US partnership". World Socialist Web Site. International Committee of the Fourth International. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  105. ^ Harris, Kathleen (November 6, 2015). "Justin Trudeau 'disappointed' with U.S. rejection of Keystone XL". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  106. ^ Hall, Chris (November 20, 2015). "Trudeau warmly embraced by Obama, but don't expect concessions from U.S." CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  107. ^ Cullen, Catherine (November 17, 2015). "Justin Trudeau says Canada to increase number of training troops in Iraq". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  108. ^ "Barack Obama and Justin Trudeau set a date for first meeting in Washington". Toronto Star. The Canadian Press. December 28, 2015. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  109. ^ "Obama welcomes Trudeau to White House, 'About time, eh?'". thestar.com. March 10, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  110. ^ . SWI swissinfo.ch. Archived from the original on March 18, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  111. ^ Harris, Kathleen (November 10, 2016). "Justin Trudeau invites Donald Trump to visit Canada during call that marks 'strong beginning'". CBC News. Retrieved November 11, 2016.
  112. ^ "It's Trudeau's move after Trump goes from tough talk to action with lumber duties: Chris Hall". CBC News. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  113. ^ "Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with United States President Donald Trump". Prime Minister of Canada. April 25, 2017. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  114. ^ "Trump Signs Trade Deal With Canada and Mexico". The New York Times. January 29, 2020.
  115. ^ Long, Heather. "The USMCA is finally done. Here's what is in it". Washington Post.
  116. ^ Lea, Brittany De (November 30, 2018). "NAFTA 2.0: What to know". FOXBusiness.
  117. ^ Montes, Juan (February 13, 2019). "Strikes at Low-Wage Plants Signal Revival of Labor Demands in Mexico". Wall Street Journal – via www.wsj.com.
  118. ^ Swanson, Ana; Tankersley, Jim (January 29, 2020). "Trump Just Signed the U.S.M.C.A. Here's What's in the New NAFTA". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  119. ^ "Under USMCA, Canada rolls with 'new NAFTA'". FreightWaves. July 1, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  120. ^ "'Very dishonest & weak': Trump lashes out at Trudeau following G7 summit". thejournal.ie. Associated Press. June 10, 2018. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  121. ^ Watkins, Eli (June 10, 2018). "Trump's top economic aide on Trudeau: 'It was a betrayal'". CNN. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  122. ^ Dangerfield, Katie. "Donald Trump slams Trudeau (again), says PM will cost Canadians 'a lot of money'". Global News. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  123. ^ "The US is picking a fight with Canada over a thawing Arctic shipping route". Quartz. June 27, 2019.
  124. ^ "Readout of President Joe Biden Call with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada". The White House. January 22, 2021.
  125. ^ "Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau of Canada Before Virtual Bilateral Meeting". The White House. February 23, 2021.
  126. ^ Background note on Canada, U.S. State Department
  127. ^ Lennox, Patrick (2009). At Home and Abroad: The Canada–US Relationship and Canada's Place in the World. UBC Press. p. 107. ISBN 9780774859073. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  128. ^ Canadian Peace Research Institute (2006). Peace Research. Canadian Peace Research and Education Association. Retrieved November 6, 2015. vol 38 page 8
  129. ^ Webcast Panel Discussion July 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine "Ties That Bind" at the Pritzker Military Library on August 17, 2012
  130. ^ Romero, Dennis; Alba, Monica (February 12, 2023). "U.S. shoots down the unidentified object in Canadian airspace". nbcnews.
  131. ^ See Congressional Research Service. Canada–U.S. Relations (Congressional Research Service, 2021) 2021 Report, by an agency of the U.S. Congress; Updated February 10, 2021.
  132. ^ "Canada and the Arctic: The Issue of Northern Sovereignty | Wilson Center". www.wilsoncenter.org. Retrieved September 7, 2023.
  133. ^ Pharand, Donat (1989). "Canada's Sovereignty Over the Northwest Passage". Michigan Journal of International Law. 10 (2).
  134. ^ says, Teknoloji Alemi (April 8, 2020). "The U.S. - Canada Northwest Passage Dispute". Brown Political Review. Retrieved September 7, 2023.
  135. ^ Herrmann, Thomas (June 27, 2019). "Shipping Through the Northwest Passage: A Policy Brief". University of Washington. Retrieved September 7, 2023.
  136. ^ Rothwell, Donald R. (1993). "The Canadian-U.S. Northwest Passage Dispute: A Reassessment". Cornell International Law Journal. 26 (2).
  137. ^ Charron, Andrea (2005). "The Northwest Passage: Is Canada's Sovereignty Floating Away?". International Journal. 60 (3): 831–848. doi:10.2307/40204066. ISSN 0020-7020. JSTOR 40204066.
  138. ^ . www.cia.gov. Archived from the original on February 19, 2013. Retrieved September 24, 2022.
  139. ^ Gervais, Marty (March 28, 1981). "Iran rescue: Our bashful heroes". Windsor Star. p. C8. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
  140. ^ "U.S. 'friendly fire' pilot won't face court martial". CBC News. July 6, 2004. Retrieved January 28, 2004.
  141. ^ "Pilots blamed for 'friendly fire' deaths". BBC News. August 22, 2002. Retrieved January 28, 2007.
  142. ^ . Department of National Defence. September 25, 2006. Archived from the original on April 5, 2007. Retrieved January 28, 2007.
  143. ^ Cox, Wayne S.; Charbonneau, Bruno (2010). Locating Global Order: American Power and Canadian Security After 9/11. UBC Press. p. 119. ISBN 9780774859660. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  144. ^ Harper, Tim (March 22, 2003). "Canadians back Chrétien on war, poll finds". Toronto Star. Retrieved January 12, 2009.
  145. ^ Spector, Norman (November 20, 2006). "Clinton speaks on Afghanistan, and Canada listens". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved January 28, 2007.
  146. ^ . Global Affairs Canada. October 6, 2016. Archived from the original on October 10, 2016. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  147. ^ . Cbc.ca. May 2, 2003. Archived from the original on March 24, 2009. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  148. ^ Canada, Health (January 23, 2020). "Cannabis laws and regulations". aem. Retrieved March 13, 2021.
  149. ^ "ETA Canada Visa Application - Apply for Canadian E-Visa Online".
  150. ^ Miller, Eric (2002). The Outlier Sectors: Areas of Non-free Trade in the North American Free Trade Agreement. BID-INTAL. p. 19. ISBN 9789507381287. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  151. ^ GMcKeating. . Archived from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  152. ^ "Clean Air Markets". August 12, 2014. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  153. ^ "Environment and Climate Change Canada – Air – Canada- United States Air Quality Agreement". January 25, 2005. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  154. ^ "Exclusive Interview: Brian Mulroney remembers his friend Ronald Reagan". News.nationalpost.com. February 4, 2011.
  155. ^ Freed, Kenneth; Gerstenzang, James (April 6, 1987). "Mulroney Asks Reagan for Treaty on Acid Rain". Los Angeles Times.
  156. ^ Cassedy, Edward S.; Grossman, Peter Z. (1998). Introduction to Energy: Resources, Technology, and Society. Cambridge U.P. p. 157. ISBN 9780521637671. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  157. ^ . Archived from the original on May 11, 2015. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  158. ^ "Canada's environment policy to follow the U.S.: Minister". Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  159. ^ . Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  160. ^ Montgomery, Marc (October 1, 2015). "Canada has water, the U.S wants it". RCI English. Radio Canada International. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  161. ^ Michael Rheta Martin (1978). Dictionary of American History: With the Complete Text of the Constitution of the United States. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 227. ISBN 9780822601241. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  162. ^ Murphy, Orville T. (1965). "The Comte De Vergennes, The Newfoundland Fisheries And The Peace Negotiation Of 1783: A Reconsideration". Canadian Historical Review. 46 (1): 32–46. doi:10.3138/chr-046-01-02. S2CID 143808239.
  163. ^ Golladay, V. Dennis (1973). "The United States and British North American Fisheries, 1815–1818". American Neptune. 33 (4): 246–257.
  164. ^ Alvin, C. Gluek Jr (1976). "Programmed Diplomacy: The Settlement of the North Atlantic Fisheries Question, 1907–12". Acadiensis. 6 (1): 43–70.
  165. ^ Kurkpatrick Dorsey (2009). The Dawn of Conservation Diplomacy: U.S.-Canadian wildlife protection treaties in the progressive era. University of Washington Press. p. 19ff. ISBN 9780295989792. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  166. ^ Matthew Carnaghan, Allison Goody, "Canadian Arctic Sovereignty" March 4, 2012, at the Wayback Machine (Library of Parliament: Political and Social Affairs Division, January 26, 2006);
  167. ^ . CTV.ca. Archived from the original on February 22, 2011. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  168. ^ Histor!ca "Election of 1891: A Question of Loyalty" April 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, James Marsh.
  169. ^ Donald Creighton, John A. Macdonald: The Old Chieftain (1955) p. 497
  170. ^ Council on Foreign Relations, Documents on American foreign relations (1957) Volume 9 p 558
  171. ^ John F. Kennedy. Address Before the Canadian Parliament in Ottawa. The American Presidency Project.
  172. ^ . Canada.usembassy.gov. Archived from the original on March 23, 2009. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  173. ^ From a speech by Trudeau to the National Press Club in Washington, DC, on March 25, 1969
  174. ^ J. L. Granatstein and Robert Bothwell, Pirouette: Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy (1991) p. 51
  175. ^ J. L. Granatstein and Robert Bothwell, Pirouette: Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy (1991) p. 195
  176. ^ J. L. Granatstein and Robert Bothwell, Pirouette: Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy (1991) p. 71
  177. ^ "The Rhetoric of 9/11: President George W. Bush – Address to Joint Session of Congress and the American People (9-20-01)". Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  178. ^ Frum, David (September 9, 2011). "David Frum: Why Bush didn't mention Canada in his 9/20 speech". National Post. Retrieved October 12, 2016.
  179. ^ . Office of the Prime Minister of Canada. January 20, 2009. Archived from the original on January 13, 2010. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
  180. ^ "Obama declares love for Canada, banishes Bush era". Reuters. February 19, 2009.
  181. ^ Waugh, Basil (July 7, 2011). "Canadians and Americans are more similar than assumed". News.ubc.ca.
  182. ^ "Canadians and Americans think a lot alike". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  183. ^ . Unitednorthamerica.org. Archived from the original on July 25, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  184. ^ "In U.S., Canada Places First in Image Contest; Iran Last". Gallup.com. February 19, 2010. Retrieved February 26, 2011. published in 2010.
  185. ^ Americans Give Record-High Ratings to Several U.S. Allies Gallup
  186. ^ See Jacob Poushter and Bruce Drake, "Americans' views of Mexico, Canada diverge as Obama attends 'Three Amigos' summit" Pew research Center February 19, 2014
  187. ^ (PDF). June 26, 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2017.
  188. ^ "World's Approval of U.S. Leadership Drops to New Low". Gallup. January 18, 2018. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
  189. ^ a b "America's Image Abroad Rebounds with Transition from Trump to Biden". June 10, 2021.
  190. ^ David Stephen Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler, Encyclopedia of the War of 1812 (2004) p. 194
  191. ^ J. L. Granatstein, Yankee Go Home: Canadians and Anti-Americanism (1997)
  192. ^ Damien-Claude Bélanger, Prejudice and Pride: Canadian Intellectuals Confront the United States, 1891–1945 (University of Toronto Press, 2011), pp 16, 180
  193. ^ Richard Collins, Culture, Communication, and National Identity: The Case of Canadian Television (U. of Toronto Press, 1990) p. 25
  194. ^ David Meren, "'Plus que jamais nécessaires': Cultural Relations, Nationalism and the State in the Canada–Quebec–France Triangle, 1945–1960", Journal of the Canadian Historical Association, 2009, Vol. 19 Issue 1, pp 279–305,
  195. ^ a b Paula Ruth Gilbert, Violence and the Female Imagination: Quebec's Women Writers (2006) p. 114
  196. ^ Groseclose, Barbara S.; Wierich, Jochen (2009). Internationalizing the History of American Art: Views. Penn State Press. p. 105. ISBN 978-0271032009. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  197. ^ Glazov, Jamie (2002). Canadian Policy Toward Khrushchev's Soviet Union. McGill-Queens. p. 138. ISBN 9780773522763. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  198. ^ Bumsted, J. M. (1999). Magocsi, Paul (ed.). Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples. University of Toronto Press. p. 197. ISBN 9780802029386. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  199. ^ Wennersten, John R. (2008). Leaving America: The New Expatriate Generation. Greenwood. p. 44. ISBN 9780313345067. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  200. ^ O'Connor, Brendon (2007). Anti-Americanism: Comparative perspectives. Greenwood. p. 60. ISBN 9781846450266. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  201. ^ Lipset, Seymour Martin (1990). Continental Divide: The Values and Institutions of the United States and Canada. Routledge. ISBN 9780415903097. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  202. ^ La Bossière, Camille R. (1994). Context North America: Canadian/U.S. Literary Relations. U. of Ottawa Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780776603605. Retrieved November 6, 2015.
  203. ^ "Poll: Deep anti-Bush sentiment in Canada". Arizona Daily Sun. October 20, 2004. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  204. ^ Wike, Richard; Poushter, Jacob; Zainulbhai, Hani (June 29, 2016). "2. Obama's international image remains strong in Europe and Asia". Pewglobal.org.
  205. ^ "Who do Canadians want to vote for? Barack Obama". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  206. ^ "Canadians rooting for Hillary Clinton to become president: poll". Global News. November 6, 2016.
  207. ^ "Majority of Canadians don't trust Trump: Poll". Toronto Sun. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  208. ^ "Nearly 8 in 10 Canadians prefer Dems over Trump; Sanders, Biden most popular: poll". CTV News. July 21, 2019.
  209. ^ Canada, Global Affairs (April 29, 2021). "Embassy of Canada to the United States, in Washington, D.C." GAC.
  210. ^ "Embassy of the United States in Ottawa".

Cited sources edit

  • Nugent, Walter (June 10, 2008). Habits of Empire. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-26949-2.

Further reading edit

  • Anderson, Greg; Sands, Christopher (2011). Forgotten Partnership Redux: Canada-U.S. Relations in the 21st Century. Cambria Press. ISBN 978-1-60497-762-2. Retrieved November 6, 2015.[permanent dead link]
  • Azzi, Stephen. Reconcilable Differences: A History of Canada–US Relations (Oxford University Press, 2014)
  • Behiels, Michael D. and Reginald C. Stuart, eds. Transnationalism: Canada–United States History into the Twenty-First Century (McGill-Queen's University Press, 2010) 312 pp. online 2012 review
  • Bothwell, Robert. Your Country, My Country: A Unified History of the United States and Canada (2015), 400 pages; traces relations, shared values, and differences across the centuries
  • Boyko, John. Cold fire: Kennedy's northern front (Alfred A. Knopf Canada, 2016)
  • Congressional Research Service. Canada–U.S. Relations (Congressional Research Service, 2021) 2021 Report, by an agency of the U.S. Congress; Updated February 10, 2021
  • Clarkson, Stephen. Uncle Sam and Us: Globalization, Neoconservatism and the Canadian State (University of Toronto Press, 2002)
  • Doran, Charles F., and James Patrick Sewell, "Anti-Americanism in Canada", Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 497, Anti-Americanism: Origins and Context (May 1988), pp. 105–119 in JSTOR
  • Dunning, William Archibald. The British Empire and the United States (1914) online celebratory study by leading American scholar.
  • Dyment, David "Doing the Continental: A New Canadian-American Relationship" (Dundurn Press, 2010)
  • Engler, YvesThe Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy. Co-published: RED Publishing, Fernwood Publishing. April 2009. ISBN 978-1-55266-314-1.
  • Granatstein, J. L. Yankee Go Home: Canadians and Anti-Americanism (1997)
  • Granatstein, J. L. and Norman Hillmer, For Better or for Worse: Canada and the United States to the 1990s (1991)
  • Gravelle, Timothy B. "Partisanship, Border Proximity, and Canadian Attitudes toward North American Integration." International Journal of Public Opinion Research (2014) 26#4 pp: 453–474.
  • Gravelle, Timothy B. "Love Thy Neighbo (u) r? Political Attitudes, Proximity and the Mutual Perceptions of the Canadian and American Publics". Canadian Journal of Political Science (2014) 47#1 pp: 135–157.
  • Greaves, Wilfrid. "Democracy, Donald Trump, and the Canada-US Security Environment". (NAADSN – North American and Arctic Defense Security Network, 2020). online
  • Hacker, Louis M. (March 1924). "Western Land Hunger and the War of 1812: A Conjecture". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. X (4): 365–395. doi:10.2307/1892931. JSTOR 1892931.
  • Hale, Geoffrey. So Near Yet So Far: The Public and Hidden Worlds of Canada-US Relations (University of British Columbia Press, 2012); 352 pages focus on 2001–2011
  • Hillmer, Norman, and Philippe Lagassé, eds. Justin Trudeau and Canadian foreign policy (Springer, 2018) online.
  • Holland, Kenneth. "The Canada–United States defence relationship: a partnership for the twenty-first century". Canadian Foreign Policy Journal ahead-of-print (2015): 1–6. online
  • Holmes, Ken. "The Canadian Cognitive Bias and its Influence on Canada/US Relations". International Social Science Review (2015) 90#1 online.
  • Holmes, John W. "Canadian External Policies since 1945" "International Journal" 18#2 (1963) 137-147. https://doi.org/10.1177/002070206301800201 online
  • Holmes, John W. "Impact of Domestic Political Factors on Canadian-American Relations: Canada", International Organization, Vol. 28, No. 4, Canada and the United States: Transnational and Transgovernmental Relations (Autumn, 1974), pp. 611–635 in JSTOR
  • Innes, Hugh, ed. Americanization: Issues for the Seventies (McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1972). ISBN 0-07-092943-2; re 1970s
  • Keenleyside, Hugh Ll. Canada and the United States (1929) online
  • Lennox, Patrick. At Home and Abroad: The Canada-U.S. Relationship and Canada's Place in the World (University of British Columbia Press; 2010) 192 pages; the post–World War II period.
  • Little, John Michael. "Canada Discovered: Continentalist Perceptions of the Roosevelt Administration, 1939–1945", PhD dissertation. Dissertation Abstracts International, 1978, Vol. 38 Issue 9, p5696-5697
  • Lumsden, Ian, ed. The Americanization of Canada, ed. for the University League for Social Reform (U of Toronto Press, 1970). ISBN 0-8020-6111-7
  • McInnis, Edgard W. The Unguarded Frontier: A History of American-Canadian Relations (1942) online; well-regarded older study
  • MacKenzie, Scott A. "But There Was No War: The Impossibility of a United States Invasion of Canada after the Civil War" American Review of Canadian Studies (2017): online
  • McKercher, Asa. Camelot and Canada: Canadian-American Relations in the Kennedy Era (Oxford UP, 2016). xii, 298 pp. 1960-1963.
  • Molloy, Patricia. Canada/US and Other Unfriendly Relations: Before and After 9/11 (Palgrave Macmillan; 2012) 192 pages; essays on various "myths"
  • Mount, Graeme S. and Edelgard Mahant. Invisible and Inaudible in Washington: American Policies toward Canada during the Cold War (1999)
  • Mount, Graeme S. and Edelgard Mahant. ''An Introduction to Canadian-American Relations (2nd ed.1989)
  • Myers, Phillip E. Dissolving Tensions: Rapprochement and Resolution in British-American-Canadian Relations in the Treaty of Washington Era, 1865–1914 (Kent State UP, 2015). x, 326 pp.
  • Pacheco, Daniela Pereira. "Politics on Twitter: a comparison between Donald Trump and Justin Trudeau". (ICSCP 2020). online[dead link]
  • Paltiel, Jeremy. "Canada's middle-power ambivalence: The palimpsest of US power under the Chinese shadow". in America's Allies and the Decline of US Hegemony (Routledge, 2019) pp. 126–140.
  • Pederson, William D. ed. A Companion to Franklin D. Roosevelt (2011) pp 517–41, covers FDR's policies
  • Stagg, J.C.A. (2012). The War of 1812: Conflict for a Continent. Cambridge Essential Histories. ISBN 978-0-521-72686-3.
  • Stoett, Peter J. "Fairweather Friends? Canada–United States Environmental Relations in the Days of Trump and the Era of Climate Change". in Canada–US Relations (Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2019) pp. 105–123.
  • Stuart, Reginald C. Dispersed Relations: Americans and Canadians in Upper North America (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Tagg, James. "'And, We Burned down the White House, Too': American History, Canadian Undergraduates, and Nationalism", The History Teacher, 37#3 (May 2004), pp. 309–334 in JSTOR
  • Tansill, C. C. Canadian-American Relations, 1875–1911 (1943)
  • Thompson, John Herd, and Stephen J. Randall. Canada and the United States: Ambivalent Allies (4th ed. McGill-Queen's UP, 2008), 387pp
  • Wrong, Hume, and John W. Holmes. "The Canada–United States Relationship 1927/1951". International Journal 31#3 (1976): 529–45. The Canada–United States Relationship 1927/1951 online

Trade and tariffs edit

  • Ciuriak, Dan, How U.S. Trade Policy Has Changed Under President Donald Trump – Perceptions From Canada (SSRN, March 29, 2019). online or How U.S. Trade Policy Has Changed Under President Donald Trump – Perceptions From Canada
  • Georges, Patrick. "Canada's Trade Policy Options under Donald Trump: NAFTA's rules of origin, Canada US security perimeter, and Canada's geographical trade diversification opportunities". (Working Paper #1707E Department of Economics, University of Ottawa, 2017). online
  • Grey, Earl. The Commercial Policy of the British Colonies and the McKinley Tariff (London: Macmillan, 1892). online
  • Lawder, Robert H. Commerce between the United States & Canada, Observations on Reciprocity and the McKinley Tariff (Toronto: Monetary Times Printing, 1892). online
  • Muirhead, Bruce. "From Special Relationship to Third Option: Canada, the U.S., and the Nixon Shock", American Review of Canadian Studies, Vol. 34, 2004
  • Palen, Marc-William. "Protection, federation and union: The global impact of the McKinley tariff upon the British Empire, 1890–94". Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 38.3 (2010): 395–418 online[dead link].
  • Rioux, Hubert. "Canada First vs. America First: Economic Nationalism and the Evolution of Canada–US Trade Relations". European Review of International Studies 6.3 (2019): 30–56. online

Primary sources edit

  • Gallagher, Connell. "The Senator George D. Aiken Papers: Sources for the Study of Canadian-American Relations, 1930–1974". Archivaria 1#21 (1985) pp. 176–79 online.
  • Arthur E. Blanchette (1994). Canadian foreign policy, 1977–1992: selected speeches and documents. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. ISBN 978-0-88629-243-0.
  • Arthur E. Blanchette (2000). Canadian foreign policy, 1945–2000: major documents and speeches. Dundurn Press Ltd. ISBN 978-0-919614-89-5.
  • Riddell, Walter A. ed. Documents on Canadian Foreign Policy, 1917–1939 Oxford University Press, 1962 806 pages of documents

External links edit

  • History of Canada – U.S. relations
  • U.S. Embassy & Consulates in Canada
  • Canadian Association of New York
  • Canada and the United States, by Stephen Azzi and J.L. Granatstein August 13, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  • Canadian-American Relations, by John English August 9, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  • A New North American Neighborhood: The Alaskan Boundary Question and Canadian American Relations, 1898–1913 Manuscript at Dartmouth College Library

canada, united, states, relations, relations, between, canada, united, states, extensive, countries, consider, themselves, among, closest, allies, canada, united, statesdiplomatic, missionembassy, canada, washington, embassy, united, states, ottawaenvoycanadia. Relations between Canada and the United States are extensive The two countries consider themselves among the closest of allies 1 2 Canada United States relationsCanada United StatesDiplomatic missionEmbassy of Canada Washington D C Embassy of the United States OttawaEnvoyCanadian Ambassador to the United States Kirsten HillmanAmerican Ambassador to Canada David L CohenBoth countries are culturally a part of the Anglosphere and compose a part of the broader Western World 3 Starting with the American Revolution when Loyalists were resettled in Canada a vocal element in Canada has warned against American dominance or annexation The War of 1812 saw invasions across the border in both directions but the war ended with unchanged borders 4 The border was demilitarized as was the Great Lakes region The British ceased aiding Native American attacks on the United States and the United States never again attempted to invade Canada Apart from minor unsuccessful raids it has remained peaceful 5 As Britain decided to disengage fears of an American takeover played a role in the Canadian Confederation 1867 and Canada s rejection of free trade 1911 Military collaboration was close during World War II and continued throughout the Cold War bilaterally through NORAD and multilaterally through NATO A high volume of trade and migration continues between the two nations as well as a heavy overlapping of popular and elite culture a dynamic that has generated closer ties especially after the signing of the Canada United States Free Trade Agreement in 1988 and the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994 Canada and the United States share the longest border 8 891 km 5 525 mi between any two nations in the world 6 7 and also have significant military interoperability 8 Recent difficulties have included repeated trade disputes environmental concerns Canadian concern for the future of oil exports the issue of illegal immigration and the threat of terrorism Trade has continued to expand especially following the 1988 FTA the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA and the 2020 United States Mexico Canada Agreement USMCA which has progressively merged the two economies 9 10 Co operation on many fronts such as the ease of the flow of goods services and people across borders are to be even more extended as well as the establishment of joint border inspection agencies relocation of U S food inspectors agents to Canadian plants and vice versa greater sharing of intelligence and harmonizing regulations on everything from food to manufactured goods thus further increasing the American Canadian assemblage 11 Both Americans and Canadians have generally ranked each other as one of their respective favorite nations 12 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Colonial wars 1 2 American Revolutionary War 1 3 War of 1812 1 4 Post War of 1812 and mid 19th century 1 5 American Civil War 1 5 1 Alabama claims 1 6 Late 19th century 1 7 Early 20th century 1 7 1 Alaska boundary 1 7 2 Free trade rejected 1 7 3 World War I 1 7 4 Post First World War 1 8 Second World War 1 8 1 Newfoundland 1 9 Cold War 1 9 1 Vietnam War resisters 1 9 2 Nixon Shock 1971 1 10 1990s 1 11 Migration history 2 Relations between political executives 2 1 W L Mackenzie King and Franklin D Roosevelt October 1935 April 1945 2 2 Louis St Laurent and Harry S Truman November 1948 January 1953 2 3 John G Diefenbaker and Dwight Eisenhower June 1957 January 1961 2 4 John G Diefenbaker and John F Kennedy January 1961 April 1963 2 5 Lester B Pearson and Lyndon B Johnson November 1963 April 1968 2 6 Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan September 1984 January 1989 2 7 Jean Chretien and Bill Clinton November 1993 January 2001 2 8 Jean Chretien and George W Bush January 2001 December 2003 2 9 Stephen Harper and George W Bush February 2006 January 2009 2 10 Stephen Harper and Barack Obama January 2009 November 2015 2 10 1 Canada United States Regulatory Cooperation Council RCC 2011 2 11 Justin Trudeau and Barack Obama November 2015 January 2017 2 12 Justin Trudeau and Donald Trump January 2017 January 2021 2 13 Justin Trudeau and Joe Biden January 2021 present 3 Military and security 3 1 Iran hostage crisis 3 2 War in Afghanistan 3 3 2003 Invasion of Iraq 3 4 Responding to ISIS Daesh 3 5 Illicit drugs 4 Trade 5 Environmental issues 5 1 Newfoundland fisheries dispute 6 Common memberships 6 1 Territorial disputes 6 1 1 Northwest Passage 6 2 Views of presidents and prime ministers 7 Public opinion 7 1 Anti Americanism 7 2 Canadian public opinion on U S presidents 8 Resident diplomatic missions 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Cited sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Trade and tariffs 11 2 Primary sources 12 External linksHistory editColonial wars edit Main article French and Indian Wars nbsp Map of European colonies in North America c 1750 Territorial claims by European powers were fought over during the French and Indian Wars Before the British conquest of French Canada in 1760 there had been a series of wars between the British and the French that were fought out in the colonies as well as in Europe and the high seas In general the British heavily relied on American colonial militia units while the French heavily relied on their First Nation allies The Iroquois Nation were important allies of the British 14 Much of the fighting involved ambushes and small scale warfare in the villages along the border between New England and Quebec The New England colonies had a much larger population than Quebec so major invasions came from south to north The First Nation allies only loosely controlled by the French repeatedly raided New England villages to kidnap women and children and torture and kill the men 15 Those who survived were brought up as Francophone Catholics The tension along the border was exacerbated by religion the French Catholics and English Protestants had a deep mutual distrust 16 There was a naval dimension as well involving privateers attacking enemy merchant ships 17 England seized Quebec from 1629 to 1632 and Acadia in 1613 and again from 1654 to 1670 These territories were returned to France by the peace treaties The major wars were to use American names King William s War 1689 1697 Queen Anne s War 1702 1713 King George s War 1744 1748 and the French and Indian War 1755 1763 In Canada as in Europe this era is known as the Seven Years War New England soldiers and sailors were critical to the successful British campaign to capture the French fortress of Louisbourg in 1745 18 and after it had been returned by treaty to capture it again in 1758 19 American Revolutionary War edit Main article American Revolutionary War nbsp The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec December 31 1775 by John Trumbull depicting the failed American invasion of northeastern Quebec At the outset of the American Revolutionary War the American revolutionaries hoped the French Canadians in Quebec and the Colonists in Nova Scotia would join their rebellion and they were pre approved for joining the United States in the Articles of Confederation When northeastern Quebec was invaded thousands joined the American cause and formed regiments that fought during the war however most remained neutral and some joined the British effort Britain advised the French Canadians that the British Empire already enshrined their rights in the Quebec Act which the American colonies had viewed as one of the Intolerable Acts The American invasion was a fiasco and Britain tightened its grip on its northern possessions in 1777 a major British invasion into New York led to the surrender of the entire British army at Saratoga and led France to enter the war as an ally of the U S The French Canadians largely ignored France s appeals for solidarity 20 The American forces had much better success in southwestern Quebec owing to the leadership of Virginia militia leader George Rogers Clark In 1778 200 men under Clark supplied and supported mainly by Virginia came down the Ohio River near Louisville Kentucky marched across southern Illinois and then captured Kaskaskia without loss of life From there part of his men took Vincennes but was soon lost to British Lieutenant Colonel Henry Hamilton the commander at Fort Detroit It was later retaken by Clark in the Siege of Fort Vincennes in February 1779 Roughly half of Clark s militia in the theater were Canadien volunteers sympathetic to the American cause 21 In the end America won its independence and the Treaty of Paris compelled Britain to cede parts of southwestern Canada to them Following America s independence Canada became a refuge for about an estimated 70 000 or 15 of Loyalists who either wanted to leave the U S or were compelled by Patriot reprisals to do so Among the original Loyalists there were 3 500 free African Americans Most went to Nova Scotia and in 1792 1 200 migrated to Sierra Leone About 2 000 black slaves were brought in by Loyalist owners they remained slaves in Canada until the Empire abolished slavery in 1833 Around 85 of the loyalists remained in the new United States and became American citizens 22 War of 1812 edit Main article War of 1812 The Treaty of Paris which ended the war called for British forces to vacate all their forts south of the Great Lakes border Britain refused to do so citing failure of the United States to provide financial restitution for Loyalists who had lost property in the war The Jay Treaty in 1795 with Great Britain resolved that lingering issue and the British departed the forts Thomas Jefferson saw the nearby British presence as a threat to the United States and so he opposed the Jay Treaty and it became one of the major political issues in the United States at the time 23 Thousands of Americans immigrated to Upper Canada Ontario from 1785 to 1812 to obtain cheaper land and better tax rates prevalent in that province despite expectations that they would be loyal to the U S if a war broke out in the event they were largely non political 24 nbsp nbsp The United States Declaration of War against the British left and Issac Brock s proclamation issued in response to it in Upper Canada right Tensions mounted again after 1805 erupting into the War of 1812 when the United States declared war on Britain The Americans were angered by British harassment of U S ships on the high seas and seizure of 6 000 sailors from American ships severe restrictions against neutral American trade with France and British support for hostile Native American tribes in Ohio and territories the U S had gained in 1783 American honor was an implicit issue While the Americans could not hope to defeat the Royal Navy and control the seas they could call on an army much larger than the British garrison in Canada and so a land invasion of Canada was proposed as the most advantageous means of attacking the British Empire Americans on the western frontier also hoped an invasion would bring an end to British support of Native American resistance to American expansion typified by Tecumseh s coalition of tribes 25 Americans may also have wanted to acquire Canada 26 27 28 29 30 Once war broke out the American strategy was to seize Canada There was some hope that settlers in western Canada most of them recent immigrants from the U S would welcome the chance to overthrow their British rulers However the American invasions were defeated primarily by British regulars with support from Native Americans and Upper Canada militia Aided by the large Royal Navy a series of British raids on the American coast were highly successful culminating with an attack on Washington that resulted in the British burning of the White House the Capitol and other public buildings At the end of the war Britain s American Indian allies had largely been defeated and the Americans controlled a strip of Western Ontario centered on Fort Malden However Britain held much of Maine and with the support of their remaining American Indian allies huge areas of the Old Northwest including Wisconsin and much of Michigan and Illinois With the surrender of Napoleon in 1814 Britain ended naval policies that angered Americans with the defeat of the Indian tribes the threat to American expansion was ended The upshot was both the United States and Canada asserted their sovereignty Canada remained under British rule and London and Washington had nothing more to fight over The war was ended by the Treaty of Ghent which took effect in February 1815 31 A series of postwar agreements further stabilized peaceful relations along the Canada US border Canada reduced American immigration for fear of undue American influence and built up the Anglican Church of Canada as a counterweight to the largely American Methodist and Baptist churches 32 In later years Anglophone Canadians especially in Ontario viewed the War of 1812 as a heroic and successful resistance against invasion and as a victory that defined them as a people The myth that the Canadian militia had defeated the invasion almost single handed known logically as the militia myth became highly prevalent after the war having been propounded by John Strachan Anglican Bishop of York Post War of 1812 and mid 19th century edit In the aftermath of the War of 1812 pro British conservatives led by Anglican Bishop John Strachan took control in Ontario Upper Canada and promoted the Anglican religion as opposed to the more republican Methodist and Baptist churches A small interlocking elite known as the Family Compact took full political control Democracy as practiced in the US was ridiculed The policies had the desired effect of deterring immigration from the United States Revolts in favor of democracy in Ontario and Quebec Lower Canada in 1837 were suppressed many of the leaders fled to the US 33 The American policy was to largely ignore the rebellions 34 and indeed ignore Canada generally in favor of westward expansion of the American Frontier The Webster Ashburton Treaty formalized the U S Canada border in Maine averting the Aroostook War During the Manifest Destiny era the Fifty Four Forty or Fight agenda called for U S annexation of what became Western Canada the U S and Britain instead agreed to a boundary of the 49th parallel As harsher fugitive slave laws were passed Canada became a destination for slaves escaping on the Underground Railroad American Civil War edit Main article Canada in the American Civil War nbsp Confederate soldiers force a bank teller to pledge allegiance to the Confederate States of America while conducting the raid at St Albans Vermont The Confederate soldiers launched their raid from the Province of Canada During the American Civil War the British Empire was neutral About 40 000 Canadians volunteered for the Union Army many already lived in the U S and a few for the Confederate Army 35 However hundreds of Americans who were called up in the draft fled to Canada 36 Several events caused strained relations between the British Empire and the United States over the former s unofficial role in supporting the Confederacy Blockade runners loaded with arms came from Britain and made use of Canadian ports in the Maritimes to break through the Union blockade to deliver the weaponry to the Confederacy in exchange for cotton Attacks were made on American merchant shipping by British built Confederate warships such as CSS Alabama 37 On December 7 1863 pro Confederate Canadian sympathizers hijacked an American steamer and killed a crew member off the coast of Cape Cod Massachusetts then used the steamer originally intended as a blockade runner to flee back to the Maritimes where they were later able to escape justice for murder and piracy Confederate Secret Service agents also used Canada as a base to attack American border towns such as St Albans Vermont on October 19 1864 where they killed an American citizen robbed three banks of over US 200 000 then escaped to Canada where they were arrested but then released by a Canadian court to widespread American anger Many Americans suspected falsely that the Canadian government knew of the raid ahead of time 38 American Secretary of State William H Seward let the British government know that it is impossible to consider those proceedings as either legal just or friendly towards the United States 39 Alabama claims edit Main article Alabama Claims Americans were angry at Britain s perceived support for the Confederacy during the American Civil War Some leaders demanded a huge payment on the premise that British involvement had lengthened the war by two years 37 a claim confirmed by post Civil War historians and scholars 40 41 Senator Charles Sumner the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee originally wanted to ask for 2 billion in war reparations or alternatively the ceding of all of Canada to the United States 42 43 When American Secretary of State William H Seward negotiated the Alaska Purchase with Russia in 1867 he intended it as the first step in a comprehensive plan to gain control of the entire northwest Pacific Coast Seward was a firm believer in Manifest Destiny primarily for its commercial advantages to the U S Seward expected British Columbia to seek annexation to the U S and thought Britain might accept this in exchange for the Alabama claims Soon other elements endorsed annexation Their plan was to annex British Columbia Red River Colony Manitoba and Nova Scotia in exchange for dropping the damage claims The idea reached a peak in the spring and summer of 1870 with American expansionists Canadian separatists and Pro American Englishmen seemingly combining forces The plan was dropped for multiple reasons London continued to stall American commercial and financial groups pressed Washington for a quick settlement of the dispute on a cash basis growing Canadian nationalist sentiment in British Columbia called for staying inside the British Empire Congress became preoccupied with Reconstruction and most Americans showed little interest in territorial expansion The Alabama Claims dispute went to international arbitration In one of the first major cases of arbitration the tribunal in 1872 rejected the American claims for damages relating to the British blockade running but ordered Britain to pay 15 5 million only for damages caused by British built Confederate ships 37 Britain paid and the episode ended in peaceful relations 44 45 Late 19th century edit Main article Canadian Confederation Canada became a self governing dominion in 1867 in internal affairs while Britain retained control of diplomacy and of defence policy Prior to Confederation there was an Oregon boundary dispute in which the Americans claimed the 54th degree latitude The Oregon Treaty of 1846 largely resolved the issue splitting the disputed territory the northern half became British Columbia and the southern half eventually formed the states of Washington and Oregon nbsp The Battle of Eccles Hill in 1870 The American based Fenian Brotherhood launched several raids into Canada in 1866 and 1870 71 Strained relations with America continued however due to a series of small scale armed incursions called the Fenian raids conducted by Irish American Civil War veterans across the border from 1866 to 1871 in an attempt to trade Canada for Irish independence 46 The American government angry at Canadian tolerance of Confederate raiders during the American Civil War of 1861 1865 moved very slowly to disarm the Fenians 47 The Fenian raids were small scale attacks carried out by the Fenian Brotherhood an Irish Republican organization based among Irish Catholics in the United States Targets included British Army forts customs posts and other locations near the border The raids were small unsuccessful episodes in 1866 and again from 1870 to 1871 They aimed to bring pressure on Great Britain to withdraw from Ireland None of these raids achieved their aims and all were quickly defeated by local Canadian forces 48 The British government in charge of diplomatic relations protested cautiously as Anglo American relations were tense Much of the tension was relieved as the Fenians faded away and in 1872 by the settlement of the Alabama Claims when Britain paid the U S 15 5 million for war losses caused by warships built in Britain and sold to the Confederacy Disputes over ocean boundaries on Georges Bank and over fishing whaling and sealing rights in the Pacific were settled by international arbitration setting an important precedent 49 Early 20th century edit Alaska boundary edit Main article Alaska boundary dispute nbsp Border claims made during the Alaska boundary dispute The border dispute was settled by arbitration in 1903 with the modern boundary marked by a yellow line A short lived controversy was the Alaska boundary dispute settled in favor of the United States in 1903 The issue was unimportant until the Klondike Gold Rush brought tens of thousands of men to Canada s Yukon and they had to arrive through American ports Canada needed its port and claimed that it had a legal right to a port near the present American town of Haines Alaska It would provide an all Canadian route to the rich goldfields The dispute was settled by arbitration and the British delegate voted with the Americans to the astonishment and disgust of Canadians who suddenly realized that Britain considered its relations with the United States paramount compared to those with Canada The arbitration validated the status quo but made Canada angry at London 50 51 1907 saw a minor controversy over USS Nashville sailing into the Great Lakes via Canada without Canadian permission To head off future embarrassments in 1909 the two sides signed the International Boundary Waters Treaty and the International Joint Commission was established to manage the Great Lakes and keep them disarmed It was amended in World War II to allow the building and training of warships 52 Free trade rejected edit Main article Reciprocity Canadian politics nbsp A 1911 Conservative campaign poster warns that the big American companies trusts will hog all the benefits of reciprocity as proposed by Liberals leaving little left over for Canadian interestsAnti Americanism reached a shrill peak in 1911 in Canada 53 The Liberal government in 1911 negotiated a Reciprocity treaty with the U S that would lower trade barriers Canadian manufacturing interests were alarmed that free trade would allow the bigger and more efficient American factories to take their markets The Conservatives made it a central campaign issue in the 1911 election warning that it would be a sell out to the United States with economic annexation a special danger 54 The Conservative slogan was No truck or trade with the Yankees as they appealed to Canadian nationalism and nostalgia for the British Empire to win a major victory 55 56 World War I editBritish Canadians were annoyed in 1914 16 when the United States insisted on neutrality and seemed to profit heavily while Canada was sacrificing its wealth and its youth However when the US finally declared war on Germany in April 1917 there was swift cooperation and friendly coordination as one historian reports Official co operation between Canada and the United States the pooling of grain fuel power and transportation resources the underwriting of a Canadian loan by bankers of New York produced a good effect on the public mind Canadian recruiting detachments were welcomed in the United States while a reciprocal agreement was ratified to facilitate the return of draft evaders A Canadian War Mission was established at Washington and in many other ways the activities of the two countries were coordinated for efficiency Immigration regulations were relaxed and thousands of American farmhands crossed the border to assist in harvesting Canadian crops Officially and publicly at least the two nations were on better terms than ever before in their history and on the American side this attitude extended through almost all classes of society 57 Post First World War edit Canada demanded and received permission from London to send its own delegation to the Versailles Peace Talks in 1919 with the proviso that it sign the treaty under the British Empire Canada subsequently took responsibility for its own foreign and military affairs in the 1920s Its first ambassador to the United States Vincent Massey was named in 1927 The United States first ambassador to Canada was William Phillips Canada became an active member of the British Commonwealth the League of Nations and the World Court none of which included the U S In July 1923 as part of his Pacific Northwest tour and a week before his death US President Warren Harding visited Vancouver making him the first head of state of the United States to visit confederated Canada The then Premier of British Columbia John Oliver and then mayor of Vancouver Charles Tisdall hosted a lunch in his honor at the Hotel Vancouver Over 50 000 people heard Harding speak in Stanley Park A monument to Harding designed by Charles Marega was unveiled in Stanley Park in 1925 58 Relations with the United States were cordial until 1930 when Canada vehemently protested the new Smoot Hawley Tariff Act by which the U S raised tariffs taxes on products imported from Canada Canada retaliated with higher tariffs of its own against American products and moved toward more trade within the British Commonwealth U S Canadian trade fell 75 as the Great Depression dragged both countries down 59 60 Down to the 1920s the war and naval departments of both nations designed hypothetical war game scenarios on paper with the other as an enemy These were routine training exercises the departments were never told to get ready for a real war In 1921 Canada developed Defence Scheme No 1 for an attack on American cities and for forestalling an invasion by the United States until British reinforcements arrived Through the later 1920s and 1930s the United States Army War College developed a plan for a war with the British Empire waged largely on North American territory in War Plan Red 61 Herbert Hoover meeting in 1927 with British Ambassador Sir Esme Howard agreed on the absurdity of contemplating the possibility of war between the United States and the British Empire 62 nbsp Franklin D Roosevelt speaking at Queen s University at Kingston Roosevelt spoke on the US relations with Canada while there In 1938 as the roots of World War II were set in motion U S President Franklin Roosevelt gave a public speech at Queen s University in Kingston Ontario declaring that the United States would not sit idly by if another power tried to dominate Canada Diplomats saw it as a clear warning to Germany not to attack Canada 63 Second World War edit The two nations cooperated closely in World War II 64 as both nations saw new levels of prosperity and a determination to defeat the Axis powers Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King and President Franklin D Roosevelt were determined not to repeat the mistakes of their predecessors 65 They met in August 1940 at Ogdensburg issuing a declaration calling for close cooperation and formed the Permanent Joint Board on Defense PJBD King sought to raise Canada s international visibility by hosting the August 1943 Quadrant conference in Quebec on military and political strategy he was a gracious host but was kept out of the important meetings by Winston Churchill and Roosevelt Canada allowed the construction of the Alaska Highway and participated in the building of the atomic bomb 49 000 Americans joined the RCAF Canadian or RAF British air forces through the Clayton Knight Committee which had Roosevelt s permission to recruit in the U S in 1940 42 66 American attempts in the mid 1930s to integrate British Columbia into a united West Coast military command had aroused Canadian opposition Fearing a Japanese invasion of Canada s vulnerable British Columbia Coast American officials urged the creation of a united military command for an eastern Pacific Ocean theater of war Canadian leaders feared American imperialism and the loss of autonomy more than a Japanese invasion In 1941 Canadians successfully argued within the PJBD for mutual cooperation rather than the unified command for the West Coast 67 Newfoundland edit The United States built large military bases in Newfoundland during World War II At the time it was a British crown colony having lost dominion status The American spending ended the depression and brought new prosperity Newfoundland s business community sought closer ties with the United States as expressed by the Economic Union Party Ottawa took notice and wanted Newfoundland to join Canada which it did after hotly contested referendums There was little demand in the United States for the acquisition of Newfoundland so the United States did not protest the British decision not to allow an American option on the Newfoundland referendum 68 Cold War edit nbsp A NATO summit in Paris May 1955 Both Canada and the United States are founding members of the military alliance Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King working closely with his Foreign Minister Louis St Laurent handled foreign relations 1945 48 in a cautious fashion Canada donated money to the United Kingdom to help it rebuild was elected to the UN Security Council and helped design NATO However Mackenzie King rejected free trade with the United States 69 and decided not to play a role in the Berlin airlift 70 Canada had been actively involved in the League of Nations primarily because it could act separately from Britain It played a modest role in the postwar formation of the United Nations as well as the International Monetary Fund It played a somewhat larger role in 1947 in designing the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 71 After the mid 20th century onwards Canada and the United States became extremely close partners Canada was a close ally of the United States during the Cold War Vietnam War resisters edit Further information Vietnam War resisters in Canada While Canada openly accepted draft evaders and later deserters from the United States there was never a serious international dispute due to Canada s actions while Sweden s acceptance was heavily criticized by the United States The issue of accepting American exiles became a local political debate in Canada that focused on Canada s sovereignty in its immigration law The United States did not become involved because American politicians viewed Canada as a geographically close ally not worth disturbing 72 Nixon Shock 1971 edit Main articles Nixon shock and Third Option nbsp Richard Nixon addresses a joint session of the Parliament of Canada 1972The United States had become Canada s largest market and after the war the Canadian economy became dependent on smooth trade flows with the United States so much that in 1971 when the United States enacted the Nixon Shock economic policies including a 10 tariff on all imports it put the Canadian government into a panic Washington refused to exempt Canada from its 1971 New Economic Policy so Trudeau saw a solution in closer economic ties with Europe Trudeau proposed a Third Option policy of diversifying Canada s trade and downgrading the importance of the American market In a 1972 speech in Ottawa Nixon declared the special relationship between Canada and the United States dead 73 Relations deteriorated on many points in the Nixon years 1969 74 including trade disputes defense agreements energy fishing the environment cultural imperialism and foreign policy They changed for the better when Trudeau and President Jimmy Carter 1977 1981 found a better rapport The late 1970s saw a more sympathetic American attitude toward Canadian political and economic needs the pardoning of draft evaders who had moved to Canada and the passing of old such as the Watergate scandal and the Vietnam War Canada more than ever welcomed American investments during the stagflation that hurt both nations 74 1990s edit nbsp American Canadian and Mexican dignitaries initialing the draft North American Free Trade Agreement in October 1992The main issues in Canada U S relations in the 1990s focused on the North American Free Trade Agreement which was signed in 1994 It created a common market that by 2014 was worth 19 trillion encompassed 470 million people and had created millions of jobs 75 Wilson says Few dispute that NAFTA has produced large and measurable gains for Canadian consumers workers and businesses However he adds NAFTA has fallen well short of expectations 76 Migration history edit Main article American immigration to Canada From the 1750s to the 21st century there has been an extensive mingling of the Canadian and American populations with large movements in both directions 77 New England Yankees settled large parts of Nova Scotia before 1775 and were neutral during the American Revolution 78 At the end of the American Revolution about 75 000 United Empire Loyalists moved out of the new United States to Nova Scotia New Brunswick and the lands of Quebec east and south of Montreal From 1790 to 1812 many farmers moved from New York and New England into Upper Canada mostly to Niagara and the north shore of Lake Ontario In the mid and late 19th century gold rushes attracted American prospectors mostly to British Columbia after the Cariboo Gold Rush Fraser Canyon Gold Rush and later to the Yukon Territory In the early 20th century the opening of land blocks in the Prairie Provinces attracted many farmers from the American Midwest Many Mennonites immigrated from Pennsylvania and formed their own colonies In the 1890s some Mormons went north to form communities in Alberta after the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints rejected plural marriage 79 The 1960s saw the arrival of about 50 000 draft dodgers who opposed the Vietnam War 80 nbsp Loyalists landing in present day New Brunswick Large movements of population occurred in both directions from the late 18th to 20th century Canada was a way station through which immigrants from other lands stopped for a while ultimately heading to the U S In 1851 1951 7 1 million people arrived in Canada mostly from Continental Europe and 6 6 million left Canada most of them to the U S 81 After 1850 the pace of industrialization and urbanization was much faster in the United States drawing a wide range of immigrants from the North By 1870 1 6 of all the people born in Canada had moved to the United States with the highest concentrations in New England which was the destination of Francophone emigrants from Quebec and Anglophone emigrants from the Maritimes It was common for people to move back and forth across the border such as seasonal lumberjacks entrepreneurs looking for larger markets and families looking for jobs in the textile mills that paid much higher wages than in Canada 82 The southward migration slacked off after 1890 as Canadian industry began a growth spurt By then the American frontier was closing and thousands of farmers looking for fresh land moved from the United States north into the Prairie Provinces The net result of the flows was that in 1901 there were 128 000 American born residents in Canada 3 5 of the Canadian population and 1 18 million Canadian born residents in the United States 1 6 of the U S population 83 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries about 900 000 French Canadians moved to the U S with 395 000 residents there in 1900 Two thirds went to mill towns in New England where they formed distinctive ethnic communities By the late 20th century most had abandoned the French language see New England French but most kept the Catholic religion 84 81 About twice as many English Canadians came to the U S but they did not form distinctive ethnic settlements 85 Relations between political executives editThe executive of each country is represented differently The President of the United States serves as both the head of state and head of government and his administration is the executive while the Prime Minister of Canada is head of government only and his or her government or ministry directs the executive W L Mackenzie King and Franklin D Roosevelt October 1935 April 1945 edit nbsp Mackenzie King Franklin D Roosevelt and Winston Churchill at the First Quebec Conference in 1943 In 1940 W L Mackenzie King and Franklin D Roosevelt signed a defense pact known as the Ogdensburg Agreement King hosted conferences for Churchill and Roosevelt but did not participate in the talks Louis St Laurent and Harry S Truman November 1948 January 1953 edit Prime Minister Laurent and President Truman were both anti communist during the early years of the Cold War John G Diefenbaker and Dwight Eisenhower June 1957 January 1961 edit President Dwight Eisenhower 1952 1961 took pains to foster good relations with Progressive Conservative John Diefenbaker 1957 1963 That led to approval of plans to join together in NORAD an integrated air defence system in mid 1957 Relations with President John Kennedy were much less cordial Diefenbaker opposed apartheid in the South Africa and helped force it out of the Commonwealth of Nations His indecision on whether to accept Bomarc nuclear missiles from the United States led to his government s downfall 86 John G Diefenbaker and John F Kennedy January 1961 April 1963 edit Diefenbaker and President John F Kennedy did not get along well personally This was evident in Diefenbaker s response to the Cuban Missile Crisis where he was slow to support the United States However Diefenbaker s Minister of Defence went behind Diefenbaker s back and did send Canada s military to high alert given Canada s legal treaty obligations and in order to try and appease Kennedy 87 Lester B Pearson and Lyndon B Johnson November 1963 April 1968 edit In 1965 Prime Minister Lester B Pearson gave a speech in Philadelphia criticizing American involvement in the Vietnam War 88 This infuriated Lyndon B Johnson who gave him a harsh talk saying You don t come here and piss on my rug 89 Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan September 1984 January 1989 edit nbsp Ronald Reagan left and Brian Mulroney in Venice Italy June 11 1987Relations between Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan were famously close 90 This relationship resulted in negotiations for the Canada United States Free Trade Agreement and the U S Canada Air Quality Agreement to reduce acid rain causing emissions both major policy goals of Mulroney that would be finalized under the presidency of George H W Bush Mulroney delivered eulogies at the funerals of both Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush Jean Chretien and Bill Clinton November 1993 January 2001 edit nbsp Jean Chretien shakes hands with Bill Clinton during the APEC summit meeting in November 1993Although Jean Chretien was wary of appearing too close to President Bill Clinton citation needed both men had a passion for golf During a news conference with Prime Minister Chretien in April 1997 President Clinton quipped I don t know if any two world leaders have played golf together more than we have but we meant to break a record 91 Their governments had many small trade quarrels over the Canadian content of American magazines softwood lumber and so on but on the whole were quite friendly Both leaders had run on reforming or abolishing NAFTA but the agreement went ahead with the addition of environmental and labor side agreements Crucially the Clinton administration lent rhetorical support to Canadian unity during the 1995 referendum in Quebec on separation from Canada 92 Jean Chretien and George W Bush January 2001 December 2003 edit nbsp Jean Chretien shakes hands with George W Bush during a meeting in September 2002Relations between Chretien and George W Bush were strained throughout their overlapping times in office Canada offered its full assistance to the U S as the September 11 attacks were unfolding One tangible show of support was Operation Yellow Ribbon in which more than 200 U S bound flights were diverted to Canada after the U S shut down their airspace Later however Chretien publicly mused that U S foreign policy might be part of the root causes of terrorism Some Americans criticized his smug moralism and Chretien s public refusal to support the 2003 Iraq war was met with negative responses in the United States especially among conservatives 93 Stephen Harper and George W Bush February 2006 January 2009 edit Stephen Harper and George W Bush were thought to share warm personal relations and also close ties between their administrations Because Bush was so unpopular among liberals in Canada particularly in the media this was underplayed by the Harper government 94 Shortly after being congratulated by Bush for his victory in February 2006 Harper rebuked U S ambassador to Canada David Wilkins for criticizing the Conservatives plans to assert Canada s sovereignty over the Arctic Ocean waters with military force 95 Stephen Harper and Barack Obama January 2009 November 2015 edit nbsp Barack Obama meeting with Stephen Harper in Ottawa February 2009President Barack Obama s first international trip was to Canada on February 19 2009 thereby sending a strong message of peace and cooperation 96 With the exception of Canadian lobbying against Buy American provisions in the U S stimulus package relations between the two administrations were smooth They also held friendly bets on hockey games during the Winter Olympic season In the 2010 Winter Olympics hosted by Canada in Vancouver Canada defeated the US in both gold medal matches entitling Stephen Harper to receive a case of Molson Canadian beer from Barack Obama in reverse if Canada had lost Harper would have provided a case of Yuengling beer to Obama 97 During the 2014 Winter Olympics alongside U S Secretary of State John Kerry amp Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird Stephen Harper was given a case of Samuel Adams beer by Obama for the Canadian gold medal victory over the US in women s hockey and the semi final victory over the US in men s hockey 98 Canada United States Regulatory Cooperation Council RCC 2011 edit On February 4 2011 Harper and Obama issued a Declaration on a Shared Vision for Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness 99 100 and announced the creation of the Canada United States Regulatory Cooperation Council RCC to increase regulatory transparency and coordination between the two countries 101 Health Canada and the United States Food and Drug Administration FDA under the RCC mandate undertook the first of its kind initiative by selecting as its first area of alignment common cold indications for certain over the counter antihistamine ingredients GC January 10 2013 102 On December 7 2011 Harper flew to Washington met with Obama and signed an agreement to implement the joint action plans that had been developed since the initial meeting in February The plans called on both countries to spend more on border infrastructure share more information on people who cross the border and acknowledge more of each other s safety and security inspection on third country traffic An editorial in The Globe and Mail praised the agreement for giving Canada the ability to track whether failed refugee claimants have left Canada via the U S and for eliminating duplicated baggage screenings on connecting flights 103 The agreement is not a legally binding treaty and relies on the political will and ability of the executives of both governments to implement the terms of the agreement These types of executive agreements are routine on both sides of the Canada U S border Justin Trudeau and Barack Obama November 2015 January 2017 edit nbsp President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau March 2016President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first met formally at the APEC summit meeting in Manila Philippines in November 2015 nearly a week after the latter was sworn into the office Both leaders expressed eagerness for increased cooperation and coordination between the two countries during the course of Trudeau s government with Trudeau promising an enhanced Canada U S partnership 104 On November 6 2015 Obama announced the U S State Department s rejection of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline the fourth phase of the Keystone oil pipeline system running between Canada and the United States to which Trudeau expressed disappointment but said that the rejection would not damage Canada U S relations and would instead provide a fresh start to strengthening ties through cooperation and coordination saying that the Canada U S relationship is much bigger than any one project 105 Obama has since praised Trudeau s efforts to prioritize the reduction of climate change calling it extraordinarily helpful to establish a worldwide consensus on addressing the issue 106 Although Trudeau has told Obama his plans to withdraw Canada s McDonnell Douglas CF 18 Hornet jets assisting in the American led intervention against ISIL Trudeau said that Canada will still do more than its part in combating the terrorist group by increasing the number of Canadian special forces members training and fighting on ground in Iraq and Syria 107 Trudeau visited the White House for an official visit and state dinner on March 10 2016 108 Trudeau and Obama were reported to have shared warm personal relations during the visit making humorous remarks about which country was better at hockey and which country had better beer 109 Obama complimented Trudeau s 2015 election campaign for its message of hope and change and positive and optimistic vision Obama and Trudeau also held productive discussions on climate change and relations between the two countries and Trudeau invited Obama to speak in the Canadian parliament in Ottawa later in the year 110 Justin Trudeau and Donald Trump January 2017 January 2021 edit nbsp President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau June 2019Following the victory of Donald Trump in the 2016 U S presidential election Trudeau congratulated him and invited him to visit Canada at the earliest opportunity 111 Prime Minister Trudeau and President Trump formally met for the first time at the White House on February 13 2017 nearly a month after Trump was sworn into the office Trump has ruffled relations with Canada with tariffs on softwood lumber 112 Diafiltered Milk was brought up by Trump as an area that needed negotiating 113 In 2018 Trump and Trudeau negotiated the United States Mexico Canada Agreement USMCA a free trade agreement concluded between Canada Mexico and the United States that succeeded the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA 114 The agreement has been characterized as NAFTA 2 0 115 116 117 or New NAFTA 118 119 since many provisions from NAFTA were incorporated and its changes were seen as largely incremental On July 1 2020 the USMCA entered into force in all member states In June 2018 after Trudeau explained that Canadians would not be pushed around by the Trump tariffs on Canada s aluminum and steel Trump labelled Trudeau as dishonest and meek and accused Trudeau of making false statements although it is unclear which statements Trump was referring to Trump s adviser on trade Peter Navarro said that there was a special place in hell for Trudeau as he employed bad faith diplomacy with President Donald J Trump and then tries to stab him in the back on the way out the door that comes right from Air Force One 120 121 Days later Trump said that Trudeau s comments are going to cost a lot of money for the people of Canada 122 In June 2019 the U S State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said the US view Canada s claim that the waters of the Northwest Passage are internal waters of Canada as inconsistent with international law 123 Justin Trudeau and Joe Biden January 2021 present edit nbsp President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau March 2023Following the victory of Joe Biden in the 2020 U S presidential election Trudeau congratulated him on his successful victory indicating a significant improvement in Canada U S relationships which had been strained in the years prior during the Presidency of Donald Trump On January 22 2021 Biden and Trudeau held their first phone call Trudeau was the first foreign leader to receive a phone call from Biden as President 124 On February 23 2021 Biden and Trudeau held their first bilateral meeting Although virtual the bilateral meeting was Biden s first as President The two leaders discussed COVID 19 economic recovery climate change and refugees and migration among other subjects 125 Military and security edit nbsp North American Aerospace Defense Command NORAD long headquartered in the Cheyenne Mountain Complex in Colorado exemplifies military co operation between Canada and the U S The Canadian military like forces of other NATO countries fought alongside the United States in most major conflicts since World War II including the Korean War the Gulf War the Kosovo War and most recently the war in Afghanistan The main exceptions to this were the Canadian government s opposition to the Vietnam War and the Iraq War which caused some brief diplomatic tensions Despite these issues military relations have remained close American defense arrangements with Canada are more extensive than with any other country 126 The Permanent Joint Board of Defense established in 1940 provides policy level consultation on bilateral defense matters The United States and Canada share North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO mutual security commitments In addition American and Canadian military forces have cooperated since 1958 on continental air defense within the framework of the North American Aerospace Defense Command NORAD Canadian forces have provided indirect support for the American invasion of Iraq that began in 2003 127 Moreover interoperability with the American armed forces has been a guiding principle of Canadian military force structuring and doctrine since the end of the Cold War Canadian navy frigates for instance integrate seamlessly into American carrier battle groups 128 In commemoration of the 200th Anniversary of the War of 1812 ambassadors from Canada and the US and naval officers from both countries gathered at the Pritzker Military Library on August 17 2012 for a panel discussion on Canada US relations with emphasis on national security related matters Also as part of the commemoration the navies of both countries sailed together throughout the Great Lakes region 129 According to Canadian and U S officials a U S fighter jet shot down an unidentified object over Canada on 23 February 2023 on the orders of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau The operation was coordinated by the North American Aerospace Defense Command NORAD a joint U S Canadian air defense organization Prime Minister Trudeau said investigators were looking for debris This decision was made following the conversation between Biden and Trudeau 130 The foreign policies of the countries have been closely aligned yet ultimately independent since the Cold War 131 There is also debate on whether the Northwest Passage is in international waters or under Canadian sovereignty 132 133 134 135 136 137 Iran hostage crisis edit Main article Canadian Caper During the 1979 revolution protesters invaded the US embassy and took many hostages Six Americans evaded capture and were sheltered by the British and Canadian diplomatic missions After a US military operation to get them out of Iran failed 138 Canadian diplomat Ken Taylor Secretary of State for External Affairs Flora MacDonald and Prime Minister Joe Clark decided to smuggle the six Americans out of Iran on an international flight by using Canadian passports An Order in Council was made to issue multiple official copies of Canadian passports with fake identities to the American diplomats in the Canadian sanctuary The passports contained forged Iranian visas prepared by the US Central Intelligence Agency 139 War in Afghanistan edit Main article Canada s role in the invasion of Afghanistan nbsp American and Canadian ISAF soldiers gather to commemorate the 65th anniversary of 1st Special Service Force in Bagram Afghanistan The 1st Special Service Force was an American Canadian unit during World War II Canada s elite JTF2 unit joined American special forces in Afghanistan shortly after the al Qaeda attacks on September 11 2001 Canadian forces joined the multinational coalition in Operation Anaconda in January 2002 On April 18 2002 an American pilot bombed Canadian forces involved in a training exercise killing four and wounding eight Canadians A joint American Canadian inquiry determined the cause of the incident to be pilot error in which the pilot interpreted ground fire as an attack the pilot ignored orders that he felt were second guessing his field tactical decision 140 141 Canadian forces assumed a six month command rotation of the International Security Assistance Force in 2003 in 2005 Canadians assumed operational command of the multi national Brigade in Kandahar with 2 300 troops and supervises the Provincial Reconstruction Team in Kandahar where al Qaida forces are most active Canada has also deployed naval forces in the Persian Gulf since 1991 in support of the UN Gulf Multinational Interdiction Force 142 The Canadian Embassy in Washington D C maintains a public relations website named CanadianAlly com which is intended to give American citizens a better sense of the scope of Canada s role in North American and Global Security and the War on Terror The New Democratic Party and some recent Liberal leadership candidates have expressed opposition to Canada s expanded role in the Afghan conflict on the ground that it is inconsistent with Canada s historic role since the Second World War of peacekeeping operations 143 2003 Invasion of Iraq edit See also Canada and the Iraq War and Canada and Iraq War resisters According to contemporary polls 71 of Canadians were opposed to the 2003 invasion of Iraq 144 Many Canadians and the former Liberal Cabinet headed by Paul Martin as well as many Americans such as Bill Clinton and Barack Obama 145 made a policy distinction between conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq unlike the Bush Doctrine which linked these together in a Global war on terror Responding to ISIS Daesh edit Main article International military intervention against ISIL nbsp Canadian Minister of Defence Harjit Sajjan meets with US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter at NATO headquarters in 2016Canada has been involved in international responses to the threats from Daesh ISIS ISIL in Syria and Iraq and is a member of the Global Coalition to Counter Daesh In October 2016 Foreign Affairs Minister Dion and National Defence Minister Sajjan met the U S special envoy for this coalition The Americans thanked Canada for the role of Canadian Armed Forces CAF in providing training and assistance to Iraqi security forces as well as the CAF s role in improving essential capacity building capabilities with regional forces 146 Illicit drugs edit Main articles Drug policy of the United States and Drug policy of Canada In 2003 the American government became concerned when members of the Canadian government announced plans to decriminalize marijuana David Murray an assistant to U S Drug Czar John P Walters said in a CBC interview that We would have to respond We would be forced to respond 147 However the election of the Conservative Party in early 2006 halted the liberalization of marijuana laws until the Liberal Party of Canada legalised recreational cannabis use in 2018 148 A 2007 joint report by American and Canadian officials on cross border drug smuggling indicated that despite their best efforts drug trafficking still occurs in significant quantities in both directions across the border The principal illicit substances smuggled across our shared border are MDMA Ecstasy cocaine and marijuana 149 The report indicated that Canada was a major producer of Ecstasy and marijuana for the U S market while the U S was a transit country for cocaine entering Canada Trade editMain article Canada United States trade relations nbsp Timber being floated along the Fraser River in Vancouver Trade disputes over softwood lumber exist between the two countries Canada and the United States have the world s second largest trading relationship with huge quantities of goods and people flowing across the border each year Since the 1987 Canada United States Free Trade Agreement there have been no tariffs on most goods passed between the two countries In the course of the softwood lumber dispute the U S has placed tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber because of what it argues is an unfair Canadian government subsidy a claim that Canada disputes The dispute has cycled through several agreements and arbitration cases Other notable disputes include the Canadian Wheat Board and Canadian cultural protectionism in cultural industries such as magazines radio and television Canadians have been criticized about such things as the ban on beef since a case of Mad Cow disease was discovered in 2003 in cows from the United States and a few subsequent cases and the high American agricultural subsidies Concerns in Canada also run high over aspects of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA such as Chapter 11 150 Environmental issues edit nbsp Richard Nixon and Pierre Trudeau at the signing ceremony for the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement in 1972A principal instrument of this cooperation is the International Joint Commission IJC established as part of the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 to resolve differences and promote international cooperation on boundary waters The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement of 1972 is another historic example of joint cooperation in controlling trans border water pollution 151 However there have been some disputes Most recently the Devil s Lake Outlet a project instituted by North Dakota has angered Manitobans who fear that their water may soon become polluted as a result of this project Beginning in 1986 the Canadian government of Brian Mulroney began pressing the Reagan administration for an Acid Rain Treaty in order to do something about U S industrial air pollution causing acid rain in Canada The Reagan administration was hesitant and questioned the science behind Mulroney s claims However Mulroney was able to prevail The product was the signing and ratification of the Air Quality Agreement of 1991 by the first Bush administration Under that treaty the two governments consult semi annually on trans border air pollution which has demonstrably reduced acid rain and they have since signed an annex to the treaty dealing with ground level ozone in 2000 152 153 154 155 Despite this trans border air pollution remains an issue particularly in the Great Lakes St Lawrence watershed during the summer The main source of this trans border pollution results from coal fired power stations most of them located in the Midwestern United States 156 As part of the negotiations to create NAFTA Canada and the U S signed along with Mexico the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation that created the Commission for Environmental Cooperation that monitors environmental issues across the continent publishing the North American Environmental Atlas as one aspect of its monitoring duties 157 Currently neither of the countries governments support the Kyoto Protocol which set out time scheduled curbing of greenhouse gas emissions Unlike the United States Canada has ratified the agreement Yet after ratification due to internal political conflict within Canada the Canadian government does not enforce the Kyoto Protocol and has received criticism from environmental groups and from other governments for its climate change positions In January 2011 the Canadian minister of the environment Peter Kent explicitly stated that the policy of his government with regards to greenhouse gas emissions reductions is to wait for the United States to act first and then try to harmonize with that action a position that has been condemned by environmentalists and Canadian nationalists and as well as scientists and government think tanks 158 159 With large freshwater supplies in Canada and long term concern about water scarcity in parts of the United States water export availability or restriction has been identified as an issue of possible future contention between the countries 160 Newfoundland fisheries dispute edit The United States and Britain had a long standing dispute about the rights of Americans fishing in the waters near Newfoundland 161 Before 1776 there was no question that American fishermen mostly from Massachusetts had rights to use the waters off Newfoundland In the peace treaty negotiations of 1783 the Americans insisted on a statement of these rights However France an American ally disputed the American position because France had its own specified rights in the area and wanted them to be exclusive 162 The Treaty of Paris 1783 gave the Americans not rights but rather liberties to fish within the territorial waters of British North America and to dry fish on certain coasts After the War of 1812 the Convention of 1818 between the United States and Britain specified exactly what liberties were involved 163 Canadian and Newfoundland fishermen contested these liberties in the 1830s and 1840s The Canadian American Reciprocity Treaty of 1854 and the Treaty of Washington of 1871 spelled out the liberties in more detail However the Treaty of Washington expired in 1885 and there was a continuous round of disputes over jurisdictions and liberties Britain and the United States sent the issue to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague in 1909 It produced a compromise settlement that permanently ended the problems 164 165 Common memberships editCanada and the United States both hold membership in a number of multinational organizations including Arctic Council Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Canadian Hockey League CHL CONCACAF FIBA FIFA Food and Agriculture Organization G7 G 10 G 20 major economies International Chamber of Commerce International Development Association International Ice Hockey Federation IIHF International Monetary Fund IMF International Olympic Committee IOC Interpol Major League Baseball MLB Major League Soccer MLS National Basketball Association NBA National Hockey League NHL National Lacrosse League NLL North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA North American Aerospace Defense Command NORAD North American Numbering Plan North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO Organization of American States Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America UKUSA Community United Nations UN UNESCO World Bowling World Health Organization WHO World Trade Organization WTO World Bank World Rugby Territorial disputes edit See also List of areas disputed by Canada and the United States nbsp A buoy on Machias Seal Island The waters around the island is one of several maritime territorial disputes between the two countries The two countries have had a number of territorial disputes throughout their histories Current maritime territorial disputes between the two countries include the Beaufort Sea Dixon Entrance Strait of Juan de Fuca San Juan Islands Machias Seal Island and North Rock Additionally the United States is one of several countries that contends the Northwest Passage is international waters whereas the Canadian government asserts it forms Canadian Internal Waters The Inside Passage is also disputed as international waters by the United States Historical boundary disputes include the Aroostook War at the Maine New Brunswick border the Oregon boundary dispute at the present day British Columbia Washington border and the Alaska Boundary Dispute at the Alaska British Columbia border The Maine New Brunswick boundary dispute was resolved through the Webster Ashburton Treaty in 1842 the Oregon boundary dispute through the Oregon Treaty of 1846 and the Alaska boundary dispute through arbitration in 1903 Northwest Passage edit nbsp Popular routes on the Northwest PassageA long simmering dispute between Canada and the U S involves the issue of Canadian sovereignty over the Northwest Passage the sea passages in the Arctic Canada s assertion that the Northwest Passage represents internal territorial waters has been challenged by other countries especially the U S which argue that these waters constitute an international strait international waters Canadians were alarmed when Americans drove the reinforced oil tanker Manhattan through the Northwest Passage in 1969 followed by the icebreaker Polar Sea in 1985 which actually resulted in a minor diplomatic incident In 1970 the Canadian parliament enacted the Arctic Waters Pollution Prevention Act which asserts Canadian regulatory control over pollution within a 100 mile zone In response the United States in 1970 stated We cannot accept the assertion of a Canadian claim that the Arctic waters are internal waters of Canada Such acceptance would jeopardize the freedom of navigation essential for United States naval activities worldwide A compromise of sorts was reached in 1988 by an agreement on Arctic Cooperation which pledges that voyages of American icebreakers will be undertaken with the consent of the Government of Canada However the agreement did not alter either country s basic legal position Paul Cellucci the American ambassador to Canada in 2005 suggested to Washington that it should recognize the straits as belonging to Canada His advice was rejected and Harper took opposite positions The U S opposes Harper s proposed plan to deploy military icebreakers in the Arctic to detect interlopers and assert Canadian sovereignty over those waters 166 167 Views of presidents and prime ministers edit Presidents and prime ministers typically make formal or informal statements that indicate the diplomatic policy of their administration Diplomats and journalists at the time and historians since dissect the nuances and tone to detect the warmth or coolness of the relationship Prime Minister John A Macdonald speaking at the beginning of the 1891 election fought mostly over Canadian free trade with the United States arguing against closer trade relations with the U S stated As for myself my course is clear A British subject I was born a British subject I will die With my utmost effort with my latest breath will I oppose the veiled treason which attempts by sordid means and mercenary proffers to lure our people from their allegiance February 3 1891 168 Canada s first Prime Minister also said It has been said that the United States Government is a failure I don t go so far On the contrary I consider it a marvelous exhibition of human wisdom It was as perfect as human wisdom could make it and under it the American States greatly prospered until very recently but being the work of men it had its defects and it is for us to take advantage by experience and endeavor to see if we cannot arrive by careful study at such a plan as will avoid the mistakes of our neighbors In the first place we know that every individual state was an individual sovereignty that each had its own army and navy and political organization and when they formed themselves into a confederation they only gave the central authority certain specific rights appertaining to sovereign powers The dangers that have risen from this system we will avoid if we can agree upon forming a strong central government a great Central Legislature a constitution for a Union which will have all the rights of sovereignty except those that are given to the local governments Then we shall have taken a great step in advance of the American Republic September 12 1864 Prime Minister John Sparrow Thompson angry at failed trade talks in 1888 privately complained to his wife Lady Thompson that These Yankee politicians are the lowest race of thieves in existence 169 After the World War II years of close military and economic cooperation President Harry S Truman said in 1947 that Canada and the United States have reached the point where we can no longer think of each other as foreign countries 170 President John F Kennedy told Parliament in Ottawa in May 1961 that Geography has made us neighbors History has made us friends Economics has made us partners And necessity has made us allies Those whom nature hath so joined together let no man put asunder 171 President Lyndon Johnson helped open Expo 67 with an upbeat theme saying that We of the United States consider ourselves blessed We have much to give thanks for But the gift of providence we cherish most is that we were given as our neighbours on this wonderful continent the people and the nation of Canada Remarks at Expo 67 Montreal May 25 1967 172 nbsp Trudeau Washington Press Club speech source source Trudeau s famous sleeping with an elephant quotation Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau famously said that being America s neighbour is like sleeping with an elephant No matter how friendly and even tempered the beast if one can call it that one is affected by every twitch and grunt 173 174 Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau sharply at odds with the U S over Cold War policy warned at a press conference in 1971 that the overwhelming American presence posed a danger to our national identity from a cultural economic and perhaps even military point of view 175 President Richard Nixon in a speech to Parliament in 1972 was angry at Trudeau declared that the special relationship between Canada and the United States was dead It is time for us to recognize he stated that we have very separate identities that we have significant differences and that nobody s interests are furthered when these realities are obscured 176 In late 2001 President George W Bush did not mention Canada during a speech in which he thanked a list of countries who had assisted in responding to the events of September 11 although Canada had provided military financial and other support 177 Ten years later David Frum one of President Bush s speechwriters stated that it was an unintentional omission 178 Prime Minister Stephen Harper in a statement congratulating Barack Obama on his inauguration stated that The United States remains Canada s most important ally closest friend and largest trading partner and I look forward to working with President Obama and his administration as we build on this special relationship 179 President Barack Obama speaking in Ottawa at his first official international visit on February 19 2009 said I love this country We could not have a better friend and ally 180 Public opinion editToday there remain cross border cultural ties 181 182 183 and according to Gallup s annual public opinion polls Canada has consistently been Americans favorite nation with 96 of Americans viewing Canada favorably in 2012 184 185 As of spring 2013 64 of Canadians had a favorable view of the U S and 81 expressed confidence in then US President Obama to do the right thing in international matters According to the same poll 30 viewed the U S negatively 186 In addition according to Spring 2017 Global Attitudes Survey 43 of Canadians view the U S positively while 51 hold a negative view 187 More recently however a poll in January 2018 showed Canadians approval of U S leadership dropped by over 40 percentage points under President Donald Trump in line with the view of residents of many other U S allied and neutral countries 188 Since then Canadian opinion of the U S has improved significantly following an international rebound in the U S image abroad following the transition as President of the United States from Donald Trump to Joe Biden with 61 of Canadians having a favorable opinion of the United States in 2021 189 Anti Americanism edit Further information Anti Americanism Canada Since the arrival of the Loyalists as refugees from the American Revolution in the 1780s historians have identified a constant theme of Canadian fear of the United States and of Americanization or a cultural takeover In the War of 1812 for example the enthusiastic response by French militia to defend Lower Canada reflected according to Heidler and Heidler 2004 the fear of Americanization 190 Scholars have traced this attitude over time in Ontario and Quebec 191 nbsp A Canadian political cartoon from 1869 of a Young Canada kicking out Uncle Sam from Dominion House while John Bull watches in the backgroundCanadian intellectuals who wrote about the U S in the first half of the 20th century identified America as the world center of modernity and deplored it Anti American Canadians who admired the British Empire explained that Canada had narrowly escaped American conquest with its rejection of tradition its worship of progress and technology and its mass culture they explained that Canada was much better because of its commitment to orderly government and societal harmony There were a few ardent defenders of the nation to the south notably liberal and socialist intellectuals such as F R Scott and Jean Charles Harvey 1891 1967 192 Looking at television Collins 1990 finds that it is in Anglophone Canada that fear of cultural Americanization is most powerful for there the attractions of the U S are strongest 193 Meren 2009 argues that after 1945 the emergence of Quebec nationalism and the desire to preserve French Canadian cultural heritage led to growing anxiety regarding American cultural imperialism and Americanization 194 In 2006 surveys showed that 60 percent of Quebecois had a fear of Americanization while other surveys showed they preferred their current situation to that of the Americans in the realms of health care quality of life as seniors environmental quality poverty educational system racism and standard of living While agreeing that job opportunities are greater in America 89 percent disagreed with the notion that they would rather be in the United States and they were more likely to feel closer to English Canadians than to Americans 195 However there is evidence that the elites and Quebec are much less fearful of Americanization and much more open to economic integration than the general public 195 The history has been traced in detail by a leading Canadian historian J L Granatstein in Yankee Go Home Canadians and Anti Americanism 1997 Current studies report the phenomenon persists Two scholars report Anti Americanism is alive and well in Canada today strengthened by among other things disputes related to NAFTA American involvement in the Middle East and the ever increasing Americanization of Canadian culture 196 Jamie Glazov writes More than anything else Diefenbaker became the tragic victim of Canadian anti Americanism a sentiment the prime minister had fully embraced by 1962 He was unable to imagine himself or his foreign policy without enemies 197 Historian J M Bumsted says In its most extreme form Canadian suspicion of the United States has led to outbreaks of overt anti Americanism usually spilling over against American residents in Canada 198 John R Wennersten writes But at the heart of Canadian anti Americanism lies a cultural bitterness that takes an American expatriate unaware Canadians fear the American media s influence on their culture and talk critically about how Americans are exporting a culture of violence in its television programming and movies 199 However Kim Nossal points out that the Canadian variety is much milder than anti Americanism in some other countries 200 By contrast Americans show very little knowledge or interest one way or the other regarding Canadian affairs 201 Canadian historian Frank Underhill quoting Canadian playwright Merrill Denison summed it up Americans are benevolently ignorant about Canada whereas Canadians are malevolently informed about the United States 202 Canadian public opinion on U S presidents edit nbsp Anti Trump rally organized in Vancouver in January 2017United States President George W Bush was deeply disliked by a majority of Canadians according to the Arizona Daily Sun A 2004 poll found that more than two thirds of Canadians favoured Democrat John Kerry over Bush in the 2004 presidential election with Bush s lowest approval ratings in Canada being in the province of Quebec where just 11 of the population supported him 203 Canadian public opinion of Barack Obama was significantly more positive A 2012 poll found that 65 of Canadians would vote for Obama in the 2012 presidential election if they could while only 9 of Canadians would vote for his Republican opponent Mitt Romney The same study found that 61 of Canadians felt that the Obama administration had been good for America while only 12 felt it had been bad Similarly a Pew Research poll conducted in June 2016 found that 83 of Canadians were confident in Obama to do the right thing regarding world affairs 204 The study also found that a majority of members of all three major Canadian political parties supported Obama and also found that Obama had slightly higher approval ratings in Canada in 2012 than he did in 2008 John Ibbitson of The Globe and Mail stated in 2012 that Canadians generally supported Democratic presidents over Republican presidents citing how President Richard Nixon was never liked in Canada and that Canadians generally did not approve of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney s friendship with President Ronald Reagan 205 A November 2016 poll found 82 of Canadians preferred Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump 206 A January 2017 poll found that 66 of Canadians disapproved of Donald Trump with 23 approving of him and 11 being unsure The poll also found that only 18 of Canadians believed Trump s presidency would have a positive impact on Canada while 63 believed it would have a negative effect 207 A July 2019 poll found 79 of Canadians preferred Joe Biden or Bernie Sanders over Trump 208 A Pew Research poll released in June 2021 showed that Canadian opinion of American president Joe Biden is much more favorable than his predecessor Donald Trump with 77 approving of his leadership and having confidence in him to do the right thing 189 Resident diplomatic missions editResident diplomatic missions of Canada in the United StatesWashington D C Embassy 209 Atlanta Consulate General Boston Consulate General Chicago Consulate General Dallas Consulate General Denver Consulate General Detroit Consulate General Los Angeles Consulate General Miami Consulate General Minneapolis Consulate General New York City Consulate General San Francisco Consulate General Seattle Consulate General Houston Trade Office Palo Alto Trade Office San Diego Trade Office Resident diplomatic missions of the United States in CanadaOttawa Embassy 210 Calgary Consulate General Halifax Consulate General Montreal Consulate General Quebec City Consulate General Toronto Consulate General Vancouver Consulate General Winnipeg Consulate nbsp Embassy of Canada in Washington D C nbsp Trade office of Canada in Palo Alto nbsp Embassy of the United States in Ottawa nbsp Consulate General of the United States in Quebec City nbsp Consulate General of the United States in TorontoSee also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portalAmerican Canadians Canada United States border Canada United States sports rivalries Canadian Americans Canadian nationalism in which autonomy from and contrast with the United States is a major issue Comparison of Canadian and American economies Comparison of the Canadian and American healthcare systems Foreign relations of Canada Foreign relations of the United States History of homeland security in the United States North Atlantic triangle Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America United Kingdom United States relations List of ambassadors of Canada to the United States List of ambassadors of the United States to Canada CIA activities in CanadaReferences edit Canada Global Affairs November 24 2022 Canada s Indo Pacific Strategy GAC Retrieved October 21 2023 House The White February 24 2021 Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau of Canada in Joint Press Statements The White House Retrieved October 21 2023 The Anglosphere Past present and future The British Academy War of 1812 www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved October 25 2023 John Herd Thompson Canada and the United States ambivalent allies 2008 The Canada U S border by the numbers cbc ca CBC Radio Canada December 7 2011 Retrieved March 23 2016 The world s longest border Archived from the original on July 4 2015 Retrieved April 1 2008 Cudmore James Canadian military explored plan to fully integrate forces with U S Politics CBC News Cbc ca Retrieved January 4 2017 Hills Carla A NAFTA s Economic Upsides The View from the United States Foreign Affairs 93 2014 122 Michael Wilson NAFTA s Unfinished Business The View from Canada Foreign Affairs 2014 93 1 pp 128 Harper Obama to begin security talks CTV News Ctvnews ca February 3 2011 Retrieved August 27 2016 Poushter Jacob October 6 2015 Canadians Satisfied with U S Relationship Pew Research Center s Global Attitudes Project Retrieved October 21 2023 Brenan Megan March 21 2023 Canada Britain Favored Most in U S Russia N Korea Least Gallup Inc Retrieved October 21 2023 Thomas Morgan William 1926 The Five Nations and Queen Anne Mississippi Valley Historical Review 13 2 169 189 doi 10 2307 1891955 JSTOR 1891955 June Namias White Captives Gender and Ethnicity on the American Frontier 1993 Howard H Peckham The Colonial Wars 1965 Chard Donald F 1975 The Impact of French Privateering on New England 1689 1713 American Neptune 35 3 153 165 Shortt S E D 1972 Conflict and Identity in Massachusetts The Louisbourg Expedition of 1745 Social History Histoire Sociale 5 10 165 185 Johnston A J B 2008 D Day at Louisbourg Beaver 88 3 16 23 Mason Wade The French Canadians 1760 1945 1955 p 74 George W Geib 1987 The Old Northwest Under British Control 1763 1783 and Indiana A Part of the Old Northwest 1783 1800 Butler University pp 42 44 Thomas B Allen Tories Fighting for the King in America s First Civil War 2011 p xviii Bradford Perkins The First Rapprochement England and the United States 1795 1805 1955 Rawlyk George A 1994 The Canada Fire Radical Evangelicalism in British North America 1775 1812 McGill Queen s Press p 122 ISBN 9780773512214 Retrieved November 6 2015 Alan Taylor The Civil War of 1812 American Citizens British Subjects Irish Rebels amp Indian Allies 2010 Stagg 2012 pp 5 6 George F G Stanley 1983 p 32 full citation needed David Heidler Jeanne T Heidler The War of 1812 pg4 full citation needed Tucker 2011 p 236 Nugent 2008 p 73 75 Mark Zuehlke For Honour s Sake The War of 1812 and the Brokering of an Uneasy Peace 2007 is a Canadian perspective W L Morton The Kingdom of Canada 1969 ch 12 Dunning Tom 2009 The Canadian Rebellions of 1837 and 1838 as a Borderland War A Retrospective Ontario History 101 2 129 141 doi 10 7202 1065615ar Orrin Edward Tiffany The Relations of the United States to the Canadian Rebellion of 1837 1838 1905 excerpt and text search Robin W Winks The Creation of a Myth Canadian Enlistments in the Northern Armies during the American Civil War Canadian Historical Review 1958 39 1 24 40 Adam Mayers Dixie amp the Dominion Canada the Confederacy and the War for the Union 2003 a b c Alabama Claims 1862 1872 GlobalSecurity org Mayers Dixie amp the Dominion pp 105 116 Congressional series of United States public documents U S Government Printing Office 1870 p 71 David Keys June 24 2014 Historians reveal secrets of UK gun running which lengthened the American civil war by two years The Independent Paul Hendren April 1933 The Confederate Blockade Runners United States Naval Institute Sexton Jay 2005 Debtor Diplomacy Finance and American Foreign Relations in the Civil War Era 1837 1873 Oxford University Press p 206 ISBN 9780199281039 Retrieved November 6 2015 Theodore C Blegen A Plan for the Union of British North America and the United States 1866 Mississippi Valley Historical Review 4 4 1918 470 483 online Doris W Dashew The Story of An Illusion The Plan To Trade Alabama Claims For Canada Civil War History December 1969 Vol 15 Issue 4 pp 332 348 Shi David E 1978 Seward s Attempt to Annex British Columbia 1865 1869 Pacific Historical Review 47 2 217 238 doi 10 2307 3637972 JSTOR 3637972 Shain Yossi 1999 Marketing the American Creed Abroad Diasporas in the U S and Their Homelands Cambridge U P p 53 ISBN 9780521642255 Retrieved November 6 2015 David Sim Filibusters Fenians and a Contested Neutrality The Irish Question and US Diplomacy 1848 1871 American Nineteenth Century History 12 3 2011 265 287 Robert M Groceman Patriot War and the Fenian Raids Case Studies in Border Security on the US Canada Border in the Nineteenth Century US Army Command and General Staff College Fort Leavenworth United States 2017 online Kurlansky Mark 1998 Cod A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World Penguin p 117 ISBN 9781440672873 Retrieved November 6 2015 Munro John A 1965 English Canadianism and the Demand for Canadian Autonomy Ontario s Response to the Alaska Boundary Decision 1903 Ontario History 57 4 189 203 David G Haglund and Tudor Onea Victory without Triumph Theodore Roosevelt Honour and the Alaska Panhandle Boundary Dispute Diplomacy and Statecraft 19 1 2008 20 41 Tucker Spencer 2011 World War II at Sea An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 142 ISBN 9781598844573 Baker W M 1970 A Case Study of Anti Americanism in English Speaking Canada The Election Campaign of 1911 Canadian Historical Review 51 4 426 449 doi 10 3138 chr 051 04 04 S2CID 161614104 Clements Kendrick A 1973 Manifest Destiny and Canadian Reciprocity in 1911 Pacific Historical Review 42 1 32 52 doi 10 2307 3637741 JSTOR 3637741 Ellis Lewis E 1968 Reciprocity 1911 a study in Canadian American relations Greenwood Paolo E Coletta The Presidency of William Howard Taft 1973 pp 141 152 Hugh Ll Keenleyside Canada and the United States 1929 p 373 online Warren G Harding amp Stanley Park The History of Metropolitan Vancouver Vancouver ca 1 Archived September 16 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 11 2017 Richard N Kottman Herbert Hoover and the Smoot Hawley Tariff Canada A Case Study Journal of American History Vol 62 No 3 December 1975 pp 609 635 in JSTOR McDonald Judith et al 1997 Trade Wars Canada s Reaction to the Smoot Hawley Tariff 1997 Journal of Economic History 57 4 802 826 doi 10 1017 S0022050700019549 JSTOR 2951161 S2CID 154380335 Carlson Peter December 30 2005 Raiding the Icebox The Washington Post Bell Christopher M 1997 Thinking the Unthinkable British and American Naval Strategies for an Anglo American War 1918 1931 International History Review 19 4 789 808 doi 10 1080 07075332 1997 9640804 Arnold A Offner American Appeasement United States Foreign Policy and Germany 1933 1938 1969 p 256 Galen Roger Perras Franklin Roosevelt and the Origins of the Canadian American Security Alliance 1933 1945 1998 Richard Jensen Nationalism and Civic Duty in Wartime Comparing World Wars in Canada and America Canadian Issues Themes Canadiens December 2004 pp 6 10 Rachel Lea Heide Allies in Complicity The United States Canada and the Clayton Knight Committee s Clandestine Recruiting of Americans for the Royal Canadian Air Force 1940 1942 Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 2004 Vol 15 pp 207 230 Galen Roger Perras Who Will Defend British Columbia Unity of Command on the West Coast 1934 1942 Pacific Northwest Quarterly Spring 1997 Vol 88 Issue 2 pp 59 69 McNeil Earle Karl 1998 Cousins of a Kind The Newfoundland and Labrador Relationship with the United States American Review of Canadian Studies 28 4 387 411 doi 10 1080 02722019809481611 C P Stacey Canada and the Age of Conflict A History of Canadian External Policies Volume 2 1921 1948 The Mackenzie King Era 1982 pp 420 424 Hector Mackenzie Golden Decade s Reappraising Canada s International Relations in the 1940s and 1950s British Journal of Canadian Studies 23 2 2010 179 206 Don Munton and John Kirton eds Cases and Readings in Canadian Foreign Policy Since World War II 1992 pp 2 18 Stewart Luke 2018 Hell they re your problem not ours Draft Dodgers Military Deserters and Canada United States Relations in the Vietnam War Era Etudes Canadiennes Canadian Studies Open Edition 85 67 96 doi 10 4000 eccs 1479 S2CID 181777562 Bruce Muirhead From Special Relationship to Third Option Canada the U S and the Nixon Shock American Review of Canadian Studies Vol 34 2004 online edition Archived March 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine Lily Gardner Feldman Canada and the United States in the 1970s Rift and Reconciliation The World Today 34 12 1978 484 492 online Hills Carla A NAFTA s Economic Upsides The View from the United States Foreign Affairs 93 2014 122 online Wilson Michael NAFTA s Unfinished Business The View from Canada Foreign Affairs 93 2014 128 online Marcus Lee Hansen The Mingling of the Canadian and American Peoples Vol 1 Historical 1940 John Brebner The Neutral Yankees of Nova Scotia A Marginal Colony During the Revolutionary Years 1937 Marcus Lee Hansen The Mingling of the Canadian and American Peoples Vol 1 Historical 1940 David D Harvey Americans in Canada Migration and Settlement since 1840 1991 Renee Kasinsky Refugees from Militarism Draft Age Americans in Canada 1976 a b Barkan Elliott Robert 1980 French Canadians In Thernstrom Stephan Orlov Ann Handlin Oscar eds Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Harvard University Press p 392 ISBN 0674375122 OCLC 1038430174 John J Bukowczyk et al Permeable Border The Great Lakes Region as Transnational Region 1650 1990 University of Pittsburgh Press 2005 J Castell Hopkins The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs 1902 1903 p 327 Yves Roby The Franco Americans of New England 2004 Brookes Alan A 1980 Canadians British In Thernstrom Stephan Orlov Ann Handlin Oscar eds Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Harvard University Press p 191 ISBN 0674375122 OCLC 1038430174 Soloman Gabriel Foreign Policy of Canada A Study in Diefenbaker s Years 1987 Potter Mitch November 18 2013 JFK s war with Diefenbaker The Toronto Star Retrieved June 12 2018 Preston Andrew 2003 Balancing War and Peace Canadian Foreign Policy and the Vietnam War 1961 1965 Diplomatic History 27 73 111 doi 10 1111 1467 7709 00340 Brean Joseph November 17 2014 I ve been called worse things by better people A history of Canadian PMs not so diplomatic one liners National Post National Post Retrieved June 13 2018 Grande Peggy 2017 8 Rawhide s Ranch The president will see you now my stories and lessons from Ronald Reagan s final years First ed New York ISBN 9780316396455 OCLC 951764632 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The President s News Conference With Prime Minister Jean Chretien of Canada The American Presidency Project April 8 1997 Retrieved May 16 2018 Jehl Douglas February 24 1995 Clinton in Talk to Canadians Opposes Quebec Separation The New York Times Drache Daniel 2008 Big Picture Realities Canada and Mexico at the Crossroads Wilfrid Laurier U P p 115 ISBN 9781554582334 Retrieved November 6 2015 Prime ministers and presidents CBC News February 18 2009 Guest column Time Canada to negotiate the Northwest Passage CBC News Retrieved July 18 2017 Obama to visit Canada Feb 19 PMO confirms CTV News Ctv ca January 28 2009 Archived from the original on June 6 2009 Retrieved February 26 2011 Obama loses boozy bet with Harper The Globe and Mail Retrieved April 27 2016 Barack Obama follows through on Olympic beer bet canoe ca Archived from the original on February 25 2014 Retrieved April 27 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Joint Statement by President Obama and Prime Minister Harper of Canada on Regulatory Cooperation whitehouse gov February 4 2011 Retrieved February 26 2011 via National Archives PM and U S President Obama announce shared vision for perimeter security and economic competitiveness between Canada and the United States Office of the Prime Minister of Canada February 4 2011 Archived from the original on September 10 2013 Retrieved February 26 2011 United States Canada Regulatory Cooperation Council RCC Joint Action Plan Developing and implementing the Joint Action Plan Washington D C Office of the Prime Minister of Canada December 7 2011 Archived from the original on July 29 2013 Notice Regulatory Cooperation Council RCC Over the Counter OTC Products Common Monograph Working Group Selection of a Monograph for Alignment Canada s Action Plan Government of Canada January 10 2013 Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved February 15 2013 Canada U S border agreement a good thing The Globe and Mail Toronto September 6 2012 Jordan Roger November 20 2015 Trudeau promises Obama an enhanced Canada US partnership World Socialist Web Site International Committee of the Fourth International Retrieved January 2 2016 Harris Kathleen November 6 2015 Justin Trudeau disappointed with U S rejection of Keystone XL CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved January 2 2016 Hall Chris November 20 2015 Trudeau warmly embraced by Obama but don t expect concessions from U S CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved January 2 2016 Cullen Catherine November 17 2015 Justin Trudeau says Canada to increase number of training troops in Iraq CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved January 2 2016 Barack Obama and Justin Trudeau set a date for first meeting in Washington Toronto Star The Canadian Press December 28 2015 Retrieved January 2 2016 Obama welcomes Trudeau to White House About time eh thestar com March 10 2016 Retrieved April 27 2016 Obama on growing friendship with Trudeau What s not to like SWI swissinfo ch Archived from the original on March 18 2016 Retrieved April 27 2016 Harris Kathleen November 10 2016 Justin Trudeau invites Donald Trump to visit Canada during call that marks strong beginning CBC News Retrieved November 11 2016 It s Trudeau s move after Trump goes from tough talk to action with lumber duties Chris Hall CBC News Retrieved April 26 2017 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with United States President Donald Trump Prime Minister of Canada April 25 2017 Retrieved April 26 2017 Trump Signs Trade Deal With Canada and Mexico The New York Times January 29 2020 Long Heather The USMCA is finally done Here s what is in it Washington Post Lea Brittany De November 30 2018 NAFTA 2 0 What to know FOXBusiness Montes Juan February 13 2019 Strikes at Low Wage Plants Signal Revival of Labor Demands in Mexico Wall Street Journal via www wsj com Swanson Ana Tankersley Jim January 29 2020 Trump Just Signed the U S M C A Here s What s in the New NAFTA The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 2 2020 Under USMCA Canada rolls with new NAFTA FreightWaves July 1 2020 Retrieved July 2 2020 Very dishonest amp weak Trump lashes out at Trudeau following G7 summit thejournal ie Associated Press June 10 2018 Retrieved June 10 2018 Watkins Eli June 10 2018 Trump s top economic aide on Trudeau It was a betrayal CNN Retrieved June 13 2018 Dangerfield Katie Donald Trump slams Trudeau again says PM will cost Canadians a lot of money Global News Retrieved June 13 2018 The US is picking a fight with Canada over a thawing Arctic shipping route Quartz June 27 2019 Readout of President Joe Biden Call with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada The White House January 22 2021 Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau of Canada Before Virtual Bilateral Meeting The White House February 23 2021 Background note on Canada U S State Department Lennox Patrick 2009 At Home and Abroad The Canada US Relationship and Canada s Place in the World UBC Press p 107 ISBN 9780774859073 Retrieved November 6 2015 Canadian Peace Research Institute 2006 Peace Research Canadian Peace Research and Education Association Retrieved November 6 2015 vol 38 page 8 Webcast Panel Discussion Archived July 4 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ties That Bind at the Pritzker Military Library on August 17 2012 Romero Dennis Alba Monica February 12 2023 U S shoots down the unidentified object in Canadian airspace nbcnews See Congressional Research Service Canada U S Relations Congressional Research Service 2021 2021 Report by an agency of the U S Congress Updated February 10 2021 Canada and the Arctic The Issue of Northern Sovereignty Wilson Center www wilsoncenter org Retrieved September 7 2023 Pharand Donat 1989 Canada s Sovereignty Over the Northwest Passage Michigan Journal of International Law 10 2 says Teknoloji Alemi April 8 2020 The U S Canada Northwest Passage Dispute Brown Political Review Retrieved September 7 2023 Herrmann Thomas June 27 2019 Shipping Through the Northwest Passage A Policy Brief University of Washington Retrieved September 7 2023 Rothwell Donald R 1993 The Canadian U S Northwest Passage Dispute A Reassessment Cornell International Law Journal 26 2 Charron Andrea 2005 The Northwest Passage Is Canada s Sovereignty Floating Away International Journal 60 3 831 848 doi 10 2307 40204066 ISSN 0020 7020 JSTOR 40204066 A Classic Case of Deception Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on February 19 2013 Retrieved September 24 2022 Gervais Marty March 28 1981 Iran rescue Our bashful heroes Windsor Star p C8 Retrieved February 24 2013 U S friendly fire pilot won t face court martial CBC News July 6 2004 Retrieved January 28 2004 Pilots blamed for friendly fire deaths BBC News August 22 2002 Retrieved January 28 2007 CANADIAN NAVY TEAMS UP WITH U S CARRIER BATTLE GROUPS Department of National Defence September 25 2006 Archived from the original on April 5 2007 Retrieved January 28 2007 Cox Wayne S Charbonneau Bruno 2010 Locating Global Order American Power and Canadian Security After 9 11 UBC Press p 119 ISBN 9780774859660 Retrieved November 6 2015 Harper Tim March 22 2003 Canadians back Chretien on war poll finds Toronto Star Retrieved January 12 2009 Spector Norman November 20 2006 Clinton speaks on Afghanistan and Canada listens The Globe and Mail Retrieved January 28 2007 Ministers Dion and Sajjan meet U S special envoy for Global Coalition to Counter ISIL Global Affairs Canada October 6 2016 Archived from the original on October 10 2016 Retrieved October 10 2016 U S warns Canada against easing pot laws Cbc ca May 2 2003 Archived from the original on March 24 2009 Retrieved February 26 2011 Canada Health January 23 2020 Cannabis laws and regulations aem Retrieved March 13 2021 ETA Canada Visa Application Apply for Canadian E Visa Online Miller Eric 2002 The Outlier Sectors Areas of Non free Trade in the North American Free Trade Agreement BID INTAL p 19 ISBN 9789507381287 Retrieved November 6 2015 GMcKeating The Embassy of the U S A Ottawa United States Canada Relations Archived from the original on May 27 2010 Retrieved April 27 2016 Clean Air Markets August 12 2014 Retrieved April 27 2016 Environment and Climate Change Canada Air Canada United States Air Quality Agreement January 25 2005 Retrieved April 27 2016 Exclusive Interview Brian Mulroney remembers his friend Ronald Reagan News nationalpost com February 4 2011 Freed Kenneth Gerstenzang James April 6 1987 Mulroney Asks Reagan for Treaty on Acid Rain Los Angeles Times Cassedy Edward S Grossman Peter Z 1998 Introduction to Energy Resources Technology and Society Cambridge U P p 157 ISBN 9780521637671 Retrieved November 6 2015 COMMISSION FOR ENVIRONMENTAL COOPERATION Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved April 27 2016 Canada s environment policy to follow the U S Minister Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved April 27 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Resources Climate Prosperity Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved April 27 2016 Montgomery Marc October 1 2015 Canada has water the U S wants it RCI English Radio Canada International Retrieved April 4 2022 Michael Rheta Martin 1978 Dictionary of American History With the Complete Text of the Constitution of the United States Rowman amp Littlefield p 227 ISBN 9780822601241 Retrieved November 6 2015 Murphy Orville T 1965 The Comte De Vergennes The Newfoundland Fisheries And The Peace Negotiation Of 1783 A Reconsideration Canadian Historical Review 46 1 32 46 doi 10 3138 chr 046 01 02 S2CID 143808239 Golladay V Dennis 1973 The United States and British North American Fisheries 1815 1818 American Neptune 33 4 246 257 Alvin C Gluek Jr 1976 Programmed Diplomacy The Settlement of the North Atlantic Fisheries Question 1907 12 Acadiensis 6 1 43 70 Kurkpatrick Dorsey 2009 The Dawn of Conservation Diplomacy U S Canadian wildlife protection treaties in the progressive era University of Washington Press p 19ff ISBN 9780295989792 Retrieved November 6 2015 Matthew Carnaghan Allison Goody Canadian Arctic Sovereignty Archived March 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine Library of Parliament Political and Social Affairs Division January 26 2006 2006 news Cellucci Canada should control Northwest Passage CTV ca Archived from the original on February 22 2011 Retrieved February 26 2011 Histor ca Election of 1891 A Question of Loyalty Archived April 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine James Marsh Donald Creighton John A Macdonald The Old Chieftain 1955 p 497 Council on Foreign Relations Documents on American foreign relations 1957 Volume 9 p 558 John F Kennedy Address Before the Canadian Parliament in Ottawa The American Presidency Project The Embassy of the U S A Ottawa United States Canada Relations Canada usembassy gov Archived from the original on March 23 2009 Retrieved February 26 2011 From a speech by Trudeau to the National Press Club in Washington DC on March 25 1969 J L Granatstein and Robert Bothwell Pirouette Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy 1991 p 51 J L Granatstein and Robert Bothwell Pirouette Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy 1991 p 195 J L Granatstein and Robert Bothwell Pirouette Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy 1991 p 71 The Rhetoric of 9 11 President George W Bush Address to Joint Session of Congress and the American People 9 20 01 Retrieved April 27 2016 Frum David September 9 2011 David Frum Why Bush didn t mention Canada in his 9 20 speech National Post Retrieved October 12 2016 Statement by Prime Minister Stephen Harper Office of the Prime Minister of Canada January 20 2009 Archived from the original on January 13 2010 Retrieved January 21 2009 Obama declares love for Canada banishes Bush era Reuters February 19 2009 Waugh Basil July 7 2011 Canadians and Americans are more similar than assumed News ubc ca Canadians and Americans think a lot alike The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 8 2019 United North America Unitednorthamerica org Archived from the original on July 25 2016 Retrieved July 18 2016 In U S Canada Places First in Image Contest Iran Last Gallup com February 19 2010 Retrieved February 26 2011 published in 2010 Americans Give Record High Ratings to Several U S Allies Gallup See Jacob Poushter and Bruce Drake Americans views of Mexico Canada diverge as Obama attends Three Amigos summit Pew research Center February 19 2014 US Image Report PDF June 26 2017 Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2017 World s Approval of U S Leadership Drops to New Low Gallup January 18 2018 Retrieved August 18 2018 a b America s Image Abroad Rebounds with Transition from Trump to Biden June 10 2021 David Stephen Heidler and Jeanne T Heidler Encyclopedia of the War of 1812 2004 p 194 J L Granatstein Yankee Go Home Canadians and Anti Americanism 1997 Damien Claude Belanger Prejudice and Pride Canadian Intellectuals Confront the United States 1891 1945 University of Toronto Press 2011 pp 16 180 Richard Collins Culture Communication and National Identity The Case of Canadian Television U of Toronto Press 1990 p 25 David Meren Plus que jamais necessaires Cultural Relations Nationalism and the State in the Canada Quebec France Triangle 1945 1960 Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 2009 Vol 19 Issue 1 pp 279 305 a b Paula Ruth Gilbert Violence and the Female Imagination Quebec s Women Writers 2006 p 114 Groseclose Barbara S Wierich Jochen 2009 Internationalizing the History of American Art Views Penn State Press p 105 ISBN 978 0271032009 Retrieved November 6 2015 Glazov Jamie 2002 Canadian Policy Toward Khrushchev s Soviet Union McGill Queens p 138 ISBN 9780773522763 Retrieved November 6 2015 Bumsted J M 1999 Magocsi Paul ed Encyclopedia of Canada s Peoples University of Toronto Press p 197 ISBN 9780802029386 Retrieved November 6 2015 Wennersten John R 2008 Leaving America The New Expatriate Generation Greenwood p 44 ISBN 9780313345067 Retrieved November 6 2015 O Connor Brendon 2007 Anti Americanism Comparative perspectives Greenwood p 60 ISBN 9781846450266 Retrieved November 6 2015 Lipset Seymour Martin 1990 Continental Divide The Values and Institutions of the United States and Canada Routledge ISBN 9780415903097 Retrieved November 6 2015 La Bossiere Camille R 1994 Context North America Canadian U S Literary Relations U of Ottawa Press p 11 ISBN 9780776603605 Retrieved November 6 2015 Poll Deep anti Bush sentiment in Canada Arizona Daily Sun October 20 2004 Retrieved April 27 2016 Wike Richard Poushter Jacob Zainulbhai Hani June 29 2016 2 Obama s international image remains strong in Europe and Asia Pewglobal org Who do Canadians want to vote for Barack Obama The Globe and Mail Retrieved April 27 2016 Canadians rooting for Hillary Clinton to become president poll Global News November 6 2016 Majority of Canadians don t trust Trump Poll Toronto Sun Retrieved May 18 2017 Nearly 8 in 10 Canadians prefer Dems over Trump Sanders Biden most popular poll CTV News July 21 2019 Canada Global Affairs April 29 2021 Embassy of Canada to the United States in Washington D C GAC Embassy of the United States in Ottawa Cited sources edit Nugent Walter June 10 2008 Habits of Empire Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 26949 2 Further reading editFurther information History of Canadian foreign relations Relations with United States Anderson Greg Sands Christopher 2011 Forgotten Partnership Redux Canada U S Relations in the 21st Century Cambria Press ISBN 978 1 60497 762 2 Retrieved November 6 2015 permanent dead link Azzi Stephen Reconcilable Differences A History of Canada US Relations Oxford University Press 2014 Behiels Michael D and Reginald C Stuart eds Transnationalism Canada United States History into the Twenty First Century McGill Queen s University Press 2010 312 pp online 2012 review Bothwell Robert Your Country My Country A Unified History of the United States and Canada 2015 400 pages traces relations shared values and differences across the centuries Boyko John Cold fire Kennedy s northern front Alfred A Knopf Canada 2016 Congressional Research Service Canada U S Relations Congressional Research Service 2021 2021 Report by an agency of the U S Congress Updated February 10 2021 Clarkson Stephen Uncle Sam and Us Globalization Neoconservatism and the Canadian State University of Toronto Press 2002 Doran Charles F and James Patrick Sewell Anti Americanism in Canada Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol 497 Anti Americanism Origins and Context May 1988 pp 105 119 in JSTOR Dunning William Archibald The British Empire and the United States 1914 online celebratory study by leading American scholar Dyment David Doing the Continental A New Canadian American Relationship Dundurn Press 2010 Engler YvesThe Black Book of Canadian Foreign Policy Co published RED Publishing Fernwood Publishing April 2009 ISBN 978 1 55266 314 1 Granatstein J L Yankee Go Home Canadians and Anti Americanism 1997 Granatstein J L and Norman Hillmer For Better or for Worse Canada and the United States to the 1990s 1991 Gravelle Timothy B Partisanship Border Proximity and Canadian Attitudes toward North American Integration International Journal of Public Opinion Research 2014 26 4 pp 453 474 Gravelle Timothy B Love Thy Neighbo u r Political Attitudes Proximity and the Mutual Perceptions of the Canadian and American Publics Canadian Journal of Political Science 2014 47 1 pp 135 157 Greaves Wilfrid Democracy Donald Trump and the Canada US Security Environment NAADSN North American and Arctic Defense Security Network 2020 online Hacker Louis M March 1924 Western Land Hunger and the War of 1812 A Conjecture Mississippi Valley Historical Review X 4 365 395 doi 10 2307 1892931 JSTOR 1892931 Hale Geoffrey So Near Yet So Far The Public and Hidden Worlds of Canada US Relations University of British Columbia Press 2012 352 pages focus on 2001 2011 Hillmer Norman and Philippe Lagasse eds Justin Trudeau and Canadian foreign policy Springer 2018 online Holland Kenneth The Canada United States defence relationship a partnership for the twenty first century Canadian Foreign Policy Journal ahead of print 2015 1 6 online Holmes Ken The Canadian Cognitive Bias and its Influence on Canada US Relations International Social Science Review 2015 90 1 online Holmes John W Canadian External Policies since 1945 International Journal 18 2 1963 137 147 https doi org 10 1177 002070206301800201 online Holmes John W Impact of Domestic Political Factors on Canadian American Relations Canada International Organization Vol 28 No 4 Canada and the United States Transnational and Transgovernmental Relations Autumn 1974 pp 611 635 in JSTOR Innes Hugh ed Americanization Issues for the Seventies McGraw Hill Ryerson 1972 ISBN 0 07 092943 2 re 1970s Keenleyside Hugh Ll Canada and the United States 1929 online Lennox Patrick At Home and Abroad The Canada U S Relationship and Canada s Place in the World University of British Columbia Press 2010 192 pages the post World War II period Little John Michael Canada Discovered Continentalist Perceptions of the Roosevelt Administration 1939 1945 PhD dissertation Dissertation Abstracts International 1978 Vol 38 Issue 9 p5696 5697 Lumsden Ian ed The Americanization of Canada ed for the University League for Social Reform U of Toronto Press 1970 ISBN 0 8020 6111 7 McInnis Edgard W The Unguarded Frontier A History of American Canadian Relations 1942 online well regarded older study MacKenzie Scott A But There Was No War The Impossibility of a United States Invasion of Canada after the Civil War American Review of Canadian Studies 2017 online McKercher Asa Camelot and Canada Canadian American Relations in the Kennedy Era Oxford UP 2016 xii 298 pp 1960 1963 Molloy Patricia Canada US and Other Unfriendly Relations Before and After 9 11 Palgrave Macmillan 2012 192 pages essays on various myths Mount Graeme S and Edelgard Mahant Invisible and Inaudible in Washington American Policies toward Canada during the Cold War 1999 Mount Graeme S and Edelgard Mahant An Introduction to Canadian American Relations 2nd ed 1989 Myers Phillip E Dissolving Tensions Rapprochement and Resolution in British American Canadian Relations in the Treaty of Washington Era 1865 1914 Kent State UP 2015 x 326 pp Pacheco Daniela Pereira Politics on Twitter a comparison between Donald Trump and Justin Trudeau ICSCP 2020 online dead link Paltiel Jeremy Canada s middle power ambivalence The palimpsest of US power under the Chinese shadow in America s Allies and the Decline of US Hegemony Routledge 2019 pp 126 140 Pederson William D ed A Companion to Franklin D Roosevelt 2011 pp 517 41 covers FDR s policies Stagg J C A 2012 The War of 1812 Conflict for a Continent Cambridge Essential Histories ISBN 978 0 521 72686 3 Stoett Peter J Fairweather Friends Canada United States Environmental Relations in the Days of Trump and the Era of Climate Change in Canada US Relations Palgrave Macmillan Cham 2019 pp 105 123 Stuart Reginald C Dispersed Relations Americans and Canadians in Upper North America 2007 excerpt and text search Tagg James And We Burned down the White House Too American History Canadian Undergraduates and Nationalism The History Teacher 37 3 May 2004 pp 309 334 in JSTOR Tansill C C Canadian American Relations 1875 1911 1943 Thompson John Herd and Stephen J Randall Canada and the United States Ambivalent Allies 4th ed McGill Queen s UP 2008 387pp Wrong Hume and John W Holmes The Canada United States Relationship 1927 1951 International Journal 31 3 1976 529 45 The Canada United States Relationship 1927 1951 onlineTrade and tariffs edit Ciuriak Dan How U S Trade Policy Has Changed Under President Donald Trump Perceptions From Canada SSRN March 29 2019 online or How U S Trade Policy Has Changed Under President Donald Trump Perceptions From Canada Georges Patrick Canada s Trade Policy Options under Donald Trump NAFTA s rules of origin Canada US security perimeter and Canada s geographical trade diversification opportunities Working Paper 1707E Department of Economics University of Ottawa 2017 online Grey Earl The Commercial Policy of the British Colonies and the McKinley Tariff London Macmillan 1892 online Lawder Robert H Commerce between the United States amp Canada Observations on Reciprocity and the McKinley Tariff Toronto Monetary Times Printing 1892 online Muirhead Bruce From Special Relationship to Third Option Canada the U S and the Nixon Shock American Review of Canadian Studies Vol 34 2004 Palen Marc William Protection federation and union The global impact of the McKinley tariff upon the British Empire 1890 94 Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 38 3 2010 395 418 online dead link Rioux Hubert Canada First vs America First Economic Nationalism and the Evolution of Canada US Trade Relations European Review of International Studies 6 3 2019 30 56 onlinePrimary sources edit Gallagher Connell The Senator George D Aiken Papers Sources for the Study of Canadian American Relations 1930 1974 Archivaria 1 21 1985 pp 176 79 online Arthur E Blanchette 1994 Canadian foreign policy 1977 1992 selected speeches and documents McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 88629 243 0 Arthur E Blanchette 2000 Canadian foreign policy 1945 2000 major documents and speeches Dundurn Press Ltd ISBN 978 0 919614 89 5 Riddell Walter A ed Documents on Canadian Foreign Policy 1917 1939 Oxford University Press 1962 806 pages of documentsExternal links editHistory of Canada U S relations Canadian Embassy in Washington D C U S Embassy amp Consulates in Canada Canadian Association of New York Canada and the United States by Stephen Azzi and J L Granatstein Archived August 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine Canadian American Relations by John English Archived August 9 2017 at the Wayback Machine A New North American Neighborhood The Alaskan Boundary Question and Canadian American Relations 1898 1913 Manuscript at Dartmouth College Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canada United States relations amp oldid 1201898044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.