British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle greatly enhanced the prestige of the humble crime novel with his fictional alter ego Sherlock Holmes. One of Holmes’ brightest ideas was about something that wasn’t present. In “Silver Blaze”, a dog didn’t bark.
In a sensitive case, what went unheard, what didn’t happen turned out to be the crucial evidence. Similarly, relations between Canada and the United States remain quietly strong, despite media attention to the current disruptions.
The pandemic has created many problems. Canadian truckers are protesting COVID-19 restrictions, disrupting trade in general. In response, anxious Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launched draconian reprisals, including forced arrests.
Overall, relations between Canada and the United States are far from conflict-free. President Donald Trump has criticized the Canadian dairy industry for encouraging protectionism, which is no accident in Wisconsin. Timber production is another source of contention.
Trump exaggerates easily. Nevertheless, he expressed long-standing differences. It is also very relevant that farmers represent powerful protectionist lobbies in most countries.
People also read…
Yet our cooperative structures and practices remain intact. The Alliance with Canada was established during the enormous global struggle of the Second World War. Our partnership reflects the enduring “special relationship” between Britain and the United States forged by Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Our history has not always been collaborative. The Great Lakes were a primary naval battle arena during the War of 1812. Canada provided refuge and sustenance to Confederate saboteurs and spies during our Civil War. That negative history has been overcome so fully speaks to the strength of contemporary ties.
President John F. Kennedy summed up the relationship between Canada and the United States when he addressed Parliament in Ottawa in early 1961: “Geography has made us neighbours. History has made us friends. The economy has made us partners. And necessity has made us allies.
Canadian government professionals have traditionally encouraged cooperation with Britain and the United States, although they are strongly represented on the staff of the United Nations, NATO and other global intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations.
Ditchley Park near Oxford is a hugely influential conference center born out of the Anglo-American-Canadian Tripartite Alliance of World War II. When the topic of a meeting is the UN, crisis response, humanitarian assistance, international law or related topics, Canada is invariably extremely well represented among the attendees.
Roosevelt and Churchill held a summit aboard warships off Newfoundland, Canada in August 1941, several months before the attack on Pearl Harbor. The result was the Atlantic Charter, the founding of the United Nations.
A vital by-product was British, Canadian and American scientific cooperation during and after the war. Throughout the war, the Allies planned in detail the structure of the UN. The former helped achieve victory; the latter promotes stability.
At the end of Kennedy’s visit to Canada in 1961, National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy accidentally left behind a briefcase containing a memo where the President had scribbled a note about dealings with “the SOB”, making apparently referring to the combative nationalist Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. Diefenbaker, furious, threatened embarrassing public revenge.
Kennedy pleaded bad calligraphy, saying he actually wrote “OAS,” the Organization of American States. At his next press conference, he went out of his way to praise Bundy.
Diefenbaker barked loudly, like Trump, but so stood out. In general, Canadian leaders maintained positive ties with the United States, including Diefenbaker’s successors, Lester Pearson and Pierre Trudeau.
Pierre’s son, Justin, unfortunately panicked because of the truckers’ protest. During World War II, the Prime Minister of Canada, WL Mackenzie King, avoided such displays. Churchill and Roosevelt too.
Arthur I. Cyr is the author of “After the Cold War” (NYU and Palgrave/Macmillan). Contact him at [email protected]
Slideshow: Today in History, February 26
1815: Napoleon Bonaparte
On February 26, 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile on the island of Elba and returned to France with the aim of regaining power.
Anonymous
1919: Woodrow Wilson

In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson signed an act of Congress establishing Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona.
Anonymous
1929: Calvin Coolidge

In 1929, President Calvin Coolidge signed a measure establishing Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.
PA
1952: Winston Churchill

In 1952 Prime Minister Winston Churchill announced that Britain had developed its own atomic bomb.
Anonymous
1962: John Glenn

In 1962, after becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, astronaut John Glenn told a joint meeting of Congress: “Exploration and the pursuit of knowledge have always paid off in the long run. “.
Staff
1970: National Public Radio

In 1970, the National Public Radio was incorporated.
Charles Dharapak
1987: Tower Commission

In 1987, the Tower Commission, which had investigated the Iran-Contra affair, released its report, which blamed President Ronald Reagan for failing to vet his national security personnel.
RON EDMONDS
1993: World Trade Center

In 1993, a truck bomb built by terrorists exploded in the parking lot of the World Trade Center in New York, killing six people and injuring more than 1,000 others.
Betsy Herzog
1995: Nick Leson

In 1995 Barings PLC, Britain’s oldest investment bank, collapsed after Nick Leeson, a 28-year-old securities trader, lost more than $1.4 billion betting on the Tokyo stock prices.
BBC TV
2005: Henry A. Grunwald

Ten years ago: Henry A. Grunwald, former editor of Time magazine and U.S. Ambassador to Austria, died in New York City at age 82.
Barbara Crownover
2005: Hosni Mubarak

Ten years ago: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak ordered that his country’s constitution be amended to allow presidential candidates in the next elections in the fall.
STR
2005: Japanese rocket H-2A

Ten years ago: Fifteen months after Japan’s last liftoff ended in a spectacular fireball, an orange and white H-2A rocket blasted off from a remote southern island, carrying a weather and navigation satellite in orbit.
PA
2010: David Paterson

Five years ago: New York Governor David Paterson announced he would not stand for re-election in a criminal investigation into the handling of a domestic violence complaint against a senior official. (Investigators found no evidence of witness tampering.)
Evan Agostini
2010: Vancouver Olympics

Five years ago: At the Vancouver Olympics, the Americans achieved 34 medals including a silver and a bronze in short track speed skating.
Amy Sancetta
2012: Trayvon Martin

In 2012, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was shot dead in Sanford, Florida during an altercation with neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman, who said he acted in self-defense. (Zimmerman was later acquitted of second degree murder.)
Jacob Langston
2014: Barack Obama

A year ago: President Barack Obama, speaking in St. Paul, Minnesota, said he would ask Congress for $300 billion to upgrade aging roads and railroads.
Jim Mone
2014: Jan Brewer

A year ago: Republican Arizona Governor Jan Brewer vetoed a bill pushed by social conservatives that would have allowed people with sincere religious beliefs to refuse to serve gay people.
Ross D. Franklin
Arthur I. Cyr is the author of “After the Cold War” (NYU and Palgrave/Macmillan). Contact him at [email protected]