May 6, 2026
In seeking distance from USA, Canada must be careful not to exchange democratic partnership for strategic vulnerability.
For generations, Canada’s prosperity, security, and geopolitical stability rested largely on its alliance with the United States and the broader democratic West. Today, however, Ottawa appears increasingly willing to deepen strategic ties with authoritarian China in the name of economic diversification and geopolitical “balance.”
Diversification itself is not the problem.
Dependence is.
History repeatedly shows that smaller nations which become too economically or strategically tied to larger powers often discover, too late, that economic partnerships can evolve into political leverage, strategic vulnerability and diminished sovereignty.
Canada now stands at precisely such a crossroads.
Diversification Is Not the Problem
Recent policy discussions and agreements suggest the federal government under Prime Minister Mark Carney is pursuing what it describes as a “new strategic partnership” with China across multiple sectors, including energy, finance, trade, culture, infrastructure and public security cooperation.
Supporters argue that Canada must reduce its overwhelming economic reliance on the United States, especially amid growing uncertainty surrounding American domestic politics and trade policy. They point to the fact that roughly two-thirds of Canadian exports still flow south of the border and warn that excessive dependence on one market creates long-term economic risk.
That concern is legitimate.
No serious nation should place all its economic eggs in one basket.
But diversification should never become strategic blindness.
As of early 2026, while the U.S. remains Canada's dominant trading partner, the share of Canadian exports flowing south of the border has experienced a gradual decline, dropping below the traditional 75% mark.
Key 2025–2026 Export Trends:
- Declining US Share: The proportion of Canadian merchandise exports destined for the U.S. dropped to 71.7% in 2025, down from 75.9% in 2024.
- 2026 Shift: In early 2026, this share dipped further, reaching approximately 68% in January and 66.7% by March, driven by lower U.S. demand and increased exports to other regions.
- Diversification Drivers: While non-U.S. exports saw growth, this has often been driven by volatile commodity prices (such as elevated gold exports to the UK and UK-related markets) rather than consistent, long-term diversification.
- Trade Environment: The 2025–2026 period has been marked by increased trade friction, including the elimination of the $800 USD de minimis threshold, adding costs for smaller Canadian exporters.
Despite these trends, the United States remains, by a very wide margin, Canada's top export destination.
China Is Not Just Another Trading Partner
China is not simply another trading partner. It is an authoritarian one-party state with openly declared geopolitical ambitions, extensive state control over major industries, and a documented history of using economic leverage, technology access, market dependency, and political influence as instruments of state power.
Canada itself has already experienced many of these realities firsthand.
Over the past decade, Canadians witnessed:
- the Huawei controversy and concerns over telecommunications infrastructure;
- allegations of foreign interference in Canadian elections;
- intimidation allegations involving Canadian lawmakers and diaspora communities;
- the detention of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor following the arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou;
- growing concerns surrounding espionage, cyber security, and intellectual property theft.
These were not abstract geopolitical theories.
They were direct warnings.
Canada Has Already Seen the Warning Signs
Despite those experiences, Ottawa now appears eager to accelerate cooperation with Beijing across a wide range of sectors.
The proposed Canada-China strategic partnership reportedly includes:
- expanded trade cooperation;
- energy collaboration;
- financial integration mechanisms;
- increased cultural and educational exchanges;
- enhanced bilateral investment frameworks;
- and renewed public security cooperation.
One agreement even includes extending the Chinese Yuan–Canadian Dollar bilateral currency swap arrangement between the People’s Bank of China and the Bank of Canada.
Canadians should not view such developments casually.
Economic agreements are never purely economic.
They create dependencies, incentives, influence networks, and political pressures that often outlive the governments that sign them.
Economic Agreements Are Never Purely Economic
This becomes especially important when dealing with authoritarian states, i.e. China, whose strategic objectives are not always aligned with democratic norms, transparency, or Western security interests.
To be clear, this is not an argument for hostility toward China or the Chinese people.
China is one of the world’s great civilizations and an undeniable global economic power. Constructive trade and diplomatic engagement are both reasonable and necessary in the modern world.
But there is a profound difference between engagement and strategic overexposure.
Canada must ask itself difficult but necessary questions:
- At what point does diversification become dependency?
- How much foreign involvement in critical infrastructure is acceptable?
- Can economic partnerships remain purely commercial when the counterpart is an authoritarian state?
- What safeguards exist to prevent strategic leverage over Canadian industries, energy systems, or political institutions?
- Can Canada realistically weaken its historic alignment with the United States while still relying upon the American security umbrella through NORAD and NATO?
These are not partisan questions.
They are national questions.
The Strategic Risks of Dependency
The danger here is not simply economic.
It is civilizational and strategic.
Canada has historically benefited from belonging to a democratic alliance system, with the USA, built around shared legal traditions, open institutions, free expression, accountable government, and relatively transparent market economies.
That system is imperfect, often deeply imperfect, but it remains fundamentally different from authoritarian governance models where state power and economic power operate as one.
Some voices now suggest Canada should move toward a more “multipolar” alignment, positioning itself between competing global powers rather than remaining firmly anchored to its traditional democratic allies.
That may sound sophisticated in theory.
In practice, smaller nations attempting to balance between rival superpowers often discover that ambiguity invites pressure from both sides while protecting them from neither.
The Illusion of “Balancing” Between Superpowers
History offers many examples.
During the Cold War, countries that drifted too deeply into the orbit of larger powers frequently sacrificed portions of their sovereignty, economic flexibility, or domestic political independence in exchange for short-term protection or financial advantage.
Canada must not repeat such mistakes in modern form.
The issue is not whether Canada should trade with China.
Of course it should.
The issue is whether Canadian policymakers fully understand the long-term strategic implications of expanding dependence on a regime that openly pursues geopolitical influence through trade, infrastructure, finance, technology, and state-directed investment.
A Democratic Nation Must Protect Its Sovereignty
A mature foreign policy requires balance.
Canada should diversify trade relationships while simultaneously strengthening democratic resilience, protecting strategic industries, safeguarding critical infrastructure, and reinforcing national sovereignty.
That means:
- rigorous foreign investment screening;
- stronger protection of intellectual property;
- transparency regarding foreign influence operations;
- limits on strategic infrastructure exposure;
- enhanced cyber security safeguards;
- and a clear-eyed understanding that economic partnerships do not erase geopolitical realities.
Most importantly, Canadians deserve an open national debate on these issues.
Not closed-door policy discussions among political insiders, corporate interests, and bureaucratic networks insulated from public scrutiny.
Canadians Deserve an Open Debate
The future direction of Canada’s geopolitical alignment is too important to be managed quietly behind institutional walls.
It affects:
- national security,
- democratic integrity,
- economic independence,
- energy policy,
- technological sovereignty,
- and Canada’s place in the world for decades to come.
Canadians should be fully informed about:
- the benefits,
- the risks,
- the trade-offs,
- and the long-term consequences of any strategic realignment involving China.
Open democratic societies require transparency, scrutiny, and informed public debate — especially when national sovereignty and strategic independence may be affected.
The Real Question Facing Canada
The real issue facing Canada is not whether the country should engage with China.
It already does, and will continue to do so.
The real question is whether Canada can maintain economic pragmatism without sacrificing strategic independence, democratic resilience, and long-standing alliance credibility.
A sovereign nation must never confuse trade with trust, nor short-term economic opportunity with long-term national security.
Democracies survive not merely through prosperity, but through vigilance, institutional strength, and the careful protection of their independence.
Canada’s future should be built on balanced partnerships, transparent governance, and loyalty first and foremost to its own citizens — not to the ambitions of any foreign power, east or west.

