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Mr. Carney’s Narrow Path

Mr. Carney’s Narrow Path

Mark Carney’s Davos speech drew a standing ovation from an audience of heads of state, business leaders, and global elites. It was an ambitious speech: carefully constructed, intellectually confident, and rhetorically effective. But it was also revealing of the tensions and contradictions embedded in Mr. Carney’s own worldview.

Mark Carney addressing the World Economic Forum in Davos

From the outset, he framed his argument around a blunt premise: that responsible leaders must see the world as it is, not as they would like it to be. And yet, it is precisely here that the tension begins. Because seeing the world clearly does not inevitably lead to a single conclusion or a unitary vision.

Mark Carney’s speech laid out a stark vision of the post-war world order: The rules-based international order is fraying; rivalry among great powers is intensifying; multilateral institutions on which middle powers have long relied are weakening. Drawing on Václav Havel’s sign in the window metaphor, he condemned the rituals and false assurances of a system that many states continue to praise publicly while privately acknowledging that it no longer functions as advertised.

The diagnosis itself is neither false nor naïve. Few serious observers would argue today that the postwar international order was a model of enlightened governance or moral consistency. It was unequal, often hypocritical, and applied unevenly. But it did possess a critical virtue: it maintained a strategic balance.

For the West, this imperfect order long served as a practical framework for defending values deemed fundamental — the primacy of law, restraint in the use of force, predictability in trade, and the legitimacy of common institutions. These values were not always respected but violating them carried costs.

It is precisely this system of constraints and counterweights that Donald Trump is helping dismantle. Not by exposing the system’s hypocrisy but by openly rejecting its limits, norms, and guardrails. By replacing the language of rules with the language of raw power, he is shattering a tacit pact that, for all its flaws, has continued to govern international behaviour for the last 80 years.

This is where Mr. Carney’s analysis becomes more problematic.

By dismissing the rules-based order as a “fiction” and urging states to stop “living a lie,” he risks conflating a legitimate critique of state hypocrisy with the abandonment of the fragile equilibrium that hypocrisy itself helped sustain. Under the banner of realism, he calls for a rapid reconfiguration of alliances, an enhanced reliance on bilateral and plurilateral deals, a sharp expansion of military capacity and an assertive pursuit of strategic autonomy.

Each of these moves can be defended on its own. Taken together, however, they point toward a more openly transactional world — precisely the outcome Mr. Carney claims to want to avoid.

The contrast with several European leaders is instructive. The pragmatism of Emmanuel Macron or Friedrich Merz is shaped by a far more immediate reality: Russian nuclear missiles aimed at their capitals and a hot war being fought on their doorstep. They, too, see the world as it is — not as they would like it to be. But confronted with direct existential risks, they draw a different conclusion: not to discard the rules-based order, but to reinforce it and adapt it to the new circumstances precisely because its erosion carries costs they cannot afford to ignore.

Mr. Carney’s realism is also shaped by Canada’s own historical experience —  that of a country that has not seen a foreign war fought on its territory for more than two centuries. That distance confers analytical freedom, but it also creates a blind spot. What may appear from Ottawa as clear-eyed realism can look elsewhere like an unacceptable strategic gamble.

This is the narrow path Mr. Carney must now navigate.

In rejecting nostalgia and preaching realism, he must take care not to become Donald Trump’s unwitting partner in dismantling the postwar international order, contributing through technocratic adaptation to what Trump pursues through disruption and contempt.

Threading this needle will require prudence and the recognition that certain fictions, however imperfect, have at times prevented far more brutal realities from taking hold.

When Applause Comes Before Principles

When Applause Comes Before Principles

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre responded to the U.S. capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro in markedly different tones.

Mr. Carney welcomed the operation, then called for respect for international law, sovereignty and democratic self-determination. Mr. Poilievre offered unqualified praise for President Donald Trump.

The distinction matters. But so does what unites the two responses.

Both reflect a dangerous and increasingly familiar tendency: the normalization of behaviour that weakens the normative guardrails meant to constrain the conduct of states and governments.

In Mr. Carney’s case, applause for the capture and rendition of a foreign head of state came first, followed by pious invocations of the rules-based international order. In Mr. Poilievre’s, enthusiasm displaced restraint entirely.

The difference is real. The common ground is more troubling.

When breaches of international norms are greeted with approval and only later qualified with caveats, the caveats lose their force. Ordering matters. Principles invoked after the fact rarely survive first contact with power.

For Canada, it is against that backdrop that the U.S. operation in Venezuela must be assessed.

In the hours following Nicolás Maduro’s capture, President Trump and members of his administration framed the action as justice in motion — a law-enforcement operation designed to bring a fugitive to account, not the overthrow of a head of state.

The language was familiar and reassuring, drawing on two enduring elements of American political mythology: the belief that the United States is uniquely entrusted with the defence of law and liberty, and the conviction that American power carries moral purpose beyond its borders.

The mask slipped almost immediately.

Within hours of the capture, President Trump indicated that the United States was already working with Venezuela’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, describing conversations in which she offered to “do whatever you need,” and adding pointedly that she “doesn’t really have a choice.”

In the same exchange with reporters, Trump dismissed Venezuela’s leading democratic opposition figure, María Corina Machado, as lacking the support or respect required to govern.

Soon after, the president dispensed with even the pretence of moral justification, openly acknowledging that American involvement in Venezuela was about oil.

What had been framed as justice delivered in defence of law and liberty was revealed instead as the pursuit of strategic and economic advantage.

The transactional character of this moment — and the lesson it carries for Canada — is underscored by the conditions under which Venezuela’s democratic opposition must now operate.

María Corina Machado, an internationally recognized advocate for democratic change and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, publicly praised President Trump following her award.

Yet within hours of Maduro’s capture, Machado and her movement were summarily dismissed by the same president whose favour they had carefully sought. The speed and ease with which that dismissal occurred is instructive.

That is the deeper lesson for Canada. In a transactional order, fealty buys access, not assurance. Praise secures attention, not commitment. When power is exercised without restraint, yesterday’s ally can become today’s adversary, and yesterday’s cause can be readily abandoned.

For Canada and for our partners across the Western alliance, this latest act of imperial power, predicated on the thinnest of rationales, must be viewed with alarm.

What is at stake is the continued erosion of the institutional, political and moral guardrails that have underpinned the international order

As former foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy warned, silence in the face of norm-breaking does not preserve stability. It invites vulnerability. Canada’s former ambassador to Venezuela made the same point: abandoning rules-based action has consequences.

Deference may secure short-term, transactional returns. It offers no protection over the longer term. A world in which justice, freedom and democracy become infinitely adaptable justifications rather than bedrock principles is one in which sovereignty is more exposed, not more secure.

For Canada, vigilance does not mean panic or posturing. It means resisting the temptation to applaud first and qualify later — and recognizing that the defence of institutional, legal and moral norms may be the only real bulwark against the erosion of our own sovereignty.