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U.S. failing Canada in China dispute: diplomat

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U.S. failing Canada in China dispute: diplomat
By Robin Booker
April 25, 2019
21_3-col_RHB_041219_Capitol2.jpg

David MacNaughton, Canada’s ambassador to the United States, says he has asked the U.S. government for help in Canada’s dispute with China, but to no avail. | Robin Booker photo

Canada suffers Chinese wrath after detaining Huawei executive at U.S. request, including a refusal to buy canola

The Canadian ambassador to the United States says he has asked the U.S. for help with the diplomatic spat between China and Canada, but it appears the U.S. doesn’t want to get involved.

“We’ve heard so many times, ‘thank you very much for what you’re doing, is there anything we can do to help?’ and my answer has been very clear as to what they can do to help and the answer is ‘oh, OK, we’ll get back to you,’ ” said David MacNaughton.

“We do expect the United States, in that we are such a strong ally of yours, we do expect you to be a strong ally of ours, particularly when the actions that are being taken against us are in retribution for things we did at your behest.”

Speaking to members of North American Agricultural Journalists during the group’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C., MacNaughton said he couldn’t comment on how the U.S. could help because the subject is too sensitive.

“They know exactly what they could do to help,” he said.

China has detained two Canadians, condemned another to death and is no longer importing canola in retaliation for the detention of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou by Canadian officials on behalf of the U.S.

MacNaughton said the U.S. should be doing more to help Canada deal with China.

“I don’t think it’s unreasonable for us to expect the United States to deal with that situation the same way as if there were two of your citizens being detained in China,” he said.


When Canada negotiated the new North American trade deal with the U.S., it agreed to a provision the U.S tabled that enabled two of the signing countries to kick the third country out of the deal if they negotiated a free trade agreement with a “non-market economy,” meaning China.

MacNaughton said some Canadians thought this provision was an impingement of Canada’s sovereignty.

But MacNaughton said given the reality of the geopolitics at the moment, Canada had a clear choice who to align with.

“It doesn’t mean we can’t trade with China, MacNaughton said.

“But we have a clear choice of who is our strongest ally, who are you going to stand behind when the going gets tough? That would be the United States, which is what we’ve done and continue to do.”

He said the personal relationships between the governments of the two countries are as strong as they have ever been, but it is challenging because U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration views disruption as key to its negotiation style.

“It is a mystery to me how on the one hand we are in a position where on a regular basis where they are coming to us and saying, can you help us with Venezuela? Can you help us with the Iran sanctions? Can you, as we are, lead the NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) mission in Latvia, and on and on. And that at the same time take a position somehow or another, even after the negotiations ended up with what the president describes as the best trade deal in history, that these tariffs remain in place. It is completely inconsistent. It is that kind of thing that is causing real irritation and befuddlement in Canada.”

Last June, Trump imposed steel and aluminum tariffs on Canadian imports under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act on the grounds of national security.

The 232 tariffs are still in place.

https://www.producer.com/2019/04/u-s-failing-canada-in-china-dispute-diplomat/
 
. . . . .
U.S. failing Canada in China dispute: diplomat
By Robin Booker
April 25, 2019
21_3-col_RHB_041219_Capitol2.jpg

David MacNaughton, Canada’s ambassador to the United States, says he has asked the U.S. government for help in Canada’s dispute with China, but to no avail. | Robin Booker photo

Canada suffers Chinese wrath after detaining Huawei executive at U.S. request, including a refusal to buy canola

The Canadian ambassador to the United States says he has asked the U.S. for help with the diplomatic spat between China and Canada, but it appears the U.S. doesn’t want to get involved.

“We’ve heard so many times, ‘thank you very much for what you’re doing, is there anything we can do to help?’ and my answer has been very clear as to what they can do to help and the answer is ‘oh, OK, we’ll get back to you,’ ” said David MacNaughton.

“We do expect the United States, in that we are such a strong ally of yours, we do expect you to be a strong ally of ours, particularly when the actions that are being taken against us are in retribution for things we did at your behest.”

Speaking to members of North American Agricultural Journalists during the group’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C., MacNaughton said he couldn’t comment on how the U.S. could help because the subject is too sensitive.

“They know exactly what they could do to help,” he said.

China has detained two Canadians, condemned another to death and is no longer importing canola in retaliation for the detention of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou by Canadian officials on behalf of the U.S.

MacNaughton said the U.S. should be doing more to help Canada deal with China.

“I don’t think it’s unreasonable for us to expect the United States to deal with that situation the same way as if there were two of your citizens being detained in China,” he said.


When Canada negotiated the new North American trade deal with the U.S., it agreed to a provision the U.S tabled that enabled two of the signing countries to kick the third country out of the deal if they negotiated a free trade agreement with a “non-market economy,” meaning China.

MacNaughton said some Canadians thought this provision was an impingement of Canada’s sovereignty.

But MacNaughton said given the reality of the geopolitics at the moment, Canada had a clear choice who to align with.

“It doesn’t mean we can’t trade with China, MacNaughton said.

“But we have a clear choice of who is our strongest ally, who are you going to stand behind when the going gets tough? That would be the United States, which is what we’ve done and continue to do.”

He said the personal relationships between the governments of the two countries are as strong as they have ever been, but it is challenging because U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration views disruption as key to its negotiation style.

“It is a mystery to me how on the one hand we are in a position where on a regular basis where they are coming to us and saying, can you help us with Venezuela? Can you help us with the Iran sanctions? Can you, as we are, lead the NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) mission in Latvia, and on and on. And that at the same time take a position somehow or another, even after the negotiations ended up with what the president describes as the best trade deal in history, that these tariffs remain in place. It is completely inconsistent. It is that kind of thing that is causing real irritation and befuddlement in Canada.”

Last June, Trump imposed steel and aluminum tariffs on Canadian imports under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act on the grounds of national security.

The 232 tariffs are still in place.

https://www.producer.com/2019/04/u-s-failing-canada-in-china-dispute-diplomat/


Trudeau is an idiot ... A useful IDOT for the USSA.
 
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“We do expect the United States, in that we are such a strong ally of yours, we do expect you to be a strong ally of ours, particularly when the actions that are being taken against us are in retribution for things we did at your behest.

I thought Canada was independent.

In real life, poodles have no right to complain. They can wail the tail and whine softly. Nothing more.
 
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Serve these canadian cucks right. This what they deserve for being America's bitch.

Btw , we Pakistanis have been through it but yet our politicians and military leaders still take the bait.
 
. . . .
Nice, the weak and shameless country of slaves canada deserve all the bad things they are experiencing right now.
 
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Trade dispute with China leaves Canola farmers unsure what to plant
Published Saturday, April 27, 2019 10:00PM EDT
image.jpg

As planting season begins on the Prairies, canola farmers say a trade dispute with China has left them worried about the future.

“In the last 10 years, there’s been a lot of optimism,” Manitoba canola farmer Colin Crockatttold CTV News. “There definitely isn’t in these last few months.”

Chinese companies have stopped buying canola seeds from Canadian producers, citing quality issues. Experts say the move is revenge against Canada for the December arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou.

Canola prices have dropped since the dispute began, and farmers say they are aren’t sure whether to bother planting the crop this spring. China used to buy about 40 per cent of Canada’s canola.

“China has been a 4.7-million-ton seed customer of ours and now that they’ve stopped buying Canadian canola,” Rick White, CEO of the Canadian Canola Growers Association, told CTV News. “The question now is, where do we ship that canola?”

The trade dispute began in early March when Winnipeg-based Richardson International Ltd.’s permit to export canola was revoked. Shipments from Regina-based Viterra Inc. were blocked later that month.

Both the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and the Canola Council of Canada (CCC) disagree with concerns raised by China’s customs agency, and have called for a scientific solution to the issue. China has yet to accept a Canadian delegation to investigate the issue.

“China has every right to take action related to plant health for products entering their country, but they also have an obligation to explain the scientific basis for their actions,” said Jim Everson, president of the CCC, in a press release.

“So far, we’ve seen little sign that China wants to engage in a science-based discussion, and therefore we need the Government of Canada to consider all available options.”


Canola farmers have been lobbying the government to increase the Advanced Payment Program, designed for farmers to take an advance on their crops in the event of a market disruption, from $400,000 to $800,000 in light of ongoing uncertainty.

But farmers are also looking for new ways to diversify the market.

“We’re looking at and asking the government to seriously consider increasing the renewable content of the diesel fuel market here in Canada,” said White.

“Canola can be used as a renewable fuel, and moving up from a two per cent blend that we have right now, to five per cent, would mean that would utilize about 1.3 million tons of canola.”

In a survey released earlier this week, Statistics Canada said it expects 21.3 million acres of canola will be seeded in 2019, down 6.6 per cent from last year, thanks to the trade dispute

Bill Campbell, president of Keystone Agricultural Producers, told CTV News that he too is concerned. “We are committed to those acres once we plant them,” he said.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/trade...canola-farmers-unsure-what-to-plant-1.4398418
 
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