ALLAN SAID: Claude, what is the long-term effect of a middle power expansion... possibly with Mark Carney as the head?
Claude responded: Hello, Allan.
This is a rich and timely question. Carney's middle-power strategy is already actively unfolding, so there's real substance to analyze... not just speculation.
Here's a structured look at the long-term effects:
The Strategic Foundation
At Davos in January 2026, Carney declared the end of the rules-based international order, framing it as "a rupture, not a transition," and called on middle powers to build strategic autonomy, diversify partnerships, and reduce vulnerability to economic coercion from great powers.
This approach... emphasizing cooperation with middle powers through what he calls "variable geometry," meaning specific coalitions formed around specific issues... is largely a modernized version of traditional Pearsonian internationalism, a long-standing pillar of Liberal foreign policy. World Economic ForumNAOC
Near-Term Actions Already Underway
Carney's tour of India, Australia, and Japan was the first real test of that vision in practice — each country being a major Indo-Pacific democracy facing the same core dilemma Canada does: how to maintain ties with the U.S. while building greater resilience and strategic agency in a volatile world. Asia Pacific
With India specifically, Canada launched negotiations toward a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, with an ambitious target of completion by end of 2026, alongside agreements covering critical minerals, digital trade, and energy cooperation. Asia Pacific
Long-Term Effects — The Real Picture
1. Structural Trade Diversification If sustained, this repositions Canada away from dangerous over-dependence on the U.S. market. The critical minerals angle is particularly strategic... Canada becomes a necessary partner for democratic industrial powers rather than a peripheral one.
2. Geopolitical Leverage Carney's argument is that diversification internationally is not just economic prudence... it's what earns a country the right to take principled foreign policy stands, because it reduces vulnerability to retaliation.
Long-term, this could give Canada genuine moral and political authority it has often lacked. World Economic Forum
3. Institutional Leadership The Carney vision includes helping rebuild the WTO without U.S. participation, stepping up support for UN specialized agencies, and taking an active role in shaping the World Bank, IMF, and regional development banks.
This positions Canada as a builder of the post-American-hegemony order... a significant historic role. Policy Options
4. Defence Realignment Carney launched a review of Canada's F-35 contract shortly after taking office, with calls to either break it or pursue a mixed fleet including European fourth-generation fighters... a symbolic as well as practical signal of strategic reorientation away from reflexive alignment with U.S. defence procurement. NAOC
The Core Risk
Canada's economy and security remain so deeply dependent on the U.S. that rupturing that relationship is not yet a viable option.
The long-term danger is that middle-power expansion becomes a posture rather than a transformation... impressive diplomatic optics that don't translate into durable structural change before the political window closes. Policy Options
The success of the strategy ultimately depends on whether trade agreements and coalitions forged now survive future Canadian governments less committed to the vision!




.png)