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Ep 477 - Canada: The World is a Hard Place Guest:  John Rapley

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Content provided by Stuart McNish, Veteran Canadian Newsman, Stuart McNish, and Veteran Canadian Newsman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Stuart McNish, Veteran Canadian Newsman, Stuart McNish, and Veteran Canadian Newsman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Ep 477 - Canada: The World is a Hard Place

Guest: John Rapley

By Stuart McNish

In the diplomatic spat between India and Canada, a rising India shows Canada that money is power, says John Rapley, a political economist at the University of Cambridge. He goes on to say that Canada is finding the world a hard place, and points out that it comes as a shock to Canada, namely because of its sense of itself.

Canada has historically been dominant – one of the world's biggest economies, a founding member of the world's most powerful military alliance, and a rich country whose aid programs gave it considerable leverage over developing countries. But as Ottawa squares off with New Delhi over the recent alleged assassination of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil, Rapley says, “It is being left largely to fight its own battle.”

In other words, Canada has stranded itself diplomatically at a time when the U.S. and U.K. have been building the so-called “quad” with Australia, India and Japan, as a safeguard to rising tensions with China. It gets worse, Rapley says. “Not only does Canada now occupy a less significant geopolitical space, but the country is a notorious shirk, or as an ally, with a recently leaked Pentagon paper revealing that Canada's NATO partners no longer consider us as a serious member of the alliance.”

We invited John Rapley to join us for a Conversation That Matters about Canada's shrinking reputation internationally.

You can see the interview here https://www.conversationsthatmatter.ca/

Learn More about our guests career at careersthatmatter.ca

  continue reading

101 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 388547852 series 2363524
Content provided by Stuart McNish, Veteran Canadian Newsman, Stuart McNish, and Veteran Canadian Newsman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Stuart McNish, Veteran Canadian Newsman, Stuart McNish, and Veteran Canadian Newsman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Ep 477 - Canada: The World is a Hard Place

Guest: John Rapley

By Stuart McNish

In the diplomatic spat between India and Canada, a rising India shows Canada that money is power, says John Rapley, a political economist at the University of Cambridge. He goes on to say that Canada is finding the world a hard place, and points out that it comes as a shock to Canada, namely because of its sense of itself.

Canada has historically been dominant – one of the world's biggest economies, a founding member of the world's most powerful military alliance, and a rich country whose aid programs gave it considerable leverage over developing countries. But as Ottawa squares off with New Delhi over the recent alleged assassination of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil, Rapley says, “It is being left largely to fight its own battle.”

In other words, Canada has stranded itself diplomatically at a time when the U.S. and U.K. have been building the so-called “quad” with Australia, India and Japan, as a safeguard to rising tensions with China. It gets worse, Rapley says. “Not only does Canada now occupy a less significant geopolitical space, but the country is a notorious shirk, or as an ally, with a recently leaked Pentagon paper revealing that Canada's NATO partners no longer consider us as a serious member of the alliance.”

We invited John Rapley to join us for a Conversation That Matters about Canada's shrinking reputation internationally.

You can see the interview here https://www.conversationsthatmatter.ca/

Learn More about our guests career at careersthatmatter.ca

  continue reading

101 episodes

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