Foreign affairs
The most significant outcome of World War II for Canada in its foreign relations was the relative decline of Britain and the emergence of the United States as the world’s foremost economic and military power. Canada’s relations with Britain remained close but less extensive than in the past, whereas those with the United States became closer. The creation of the Permanent Joint Board on Defense in 1940 was a significant indicator of that shift. For the first time in its history, Canada coordinated its defense planning with the United States.
Canada’s shift in orientation from Britain to the United States did not come all at once and did not progress without hitches. In early 1948, for example, King balked at concluding a free trade agreement with the Americans, but Britain’s growing economic, political, and military weakness and the rise of the United States to superpower status led King to forge closer ties with the United States. Canadian leaders, who shared to a considerable degree the U.S. view of the postwar world, struggled to reconcile the goals of safeguarding Canadian sovereignty and integrating Canada into the U.S. economic, diplomatic, and military spheres of influence.
Multilateral commitments
One answer to the problem of U.S. domination was to avoid bilateral arrangements with the Americans where possible and to involve Canada in multilateral organizations (e.g., the Commonwealth or United Nations), where U.S. influence would be somewhat diffused. Most Canadians welcomed the UN, which the Canadian government took a vigorous part in creating. But King, mindful of his own lifetime battle to remove Canada from the trammels of British imperialism, was dubious of a world to be dominated by the Great Powers. King’s advisers, wanting to find some way for Canada to play a significant role in the world, advanced the concept of the “middle power”—that is, a state strong economically though perhaps not militarily. The idea in practice meant that Canada should concern itself primarily with economic policy in world affairs and with aid to developing countries. Canada decided to use its considerable knowledge of nuclear fission not for military purposes but exclusively for peaceful and economic ones.
Although the Cold War was born in Europe, Canada was involved from the start. In September 1945 Igor Gouzenko, a Soviet cipher clerk who defected to Canada, revealed extensive Soviet spying operations in Canada and the United States. These revelations, combined with Soviet intransigence at the UN and Soviet aggressiveness in central and eastern Europe—particularly the communist coup in Czechoslovakia and the Berlin blockade—convinced Canadian leaders of the malevolent nature of Soviet communism.
As the Cold War intensified, there was significant support for the establishment of a regional agreement for the defense of western Europe against Soviet pressure or attack. Devoted supporters of the UN in Canada as elsewhere were dismayed, regarding that such regional agreements militated against the global purposes of the general organization. However, the Canadian government believed that the Soviet veto rendered the UN ineffective as a collective security organization and thus supported the U.S. proposal for an alliance of North Atlantic powers. Yet Canada insisted that the alliance should not be purely military, and Pearson, who was then minister of external affairs, pressed strongly for adopting that principle. It was accepted in Article 2 of the North Atlantic Treaty in 1949, sometimes referred to as the “Canadian article,” though with little notable effect. As a member of NATO, Canada for the first time in its history assumed serious peacetime military commitments, maintaining an infantry brigade and air squadrons and contributing ships to NATO’s naval forces. Canada’s other major Cold War military commitment was to the North American Air (later Aerospace) Defense Command (NORAD), a joint U.S.-Canadian organization established in 1958 that pooled Canadian and U.S. radar and fighter resources to detect and intercept a Soviet nuclear attack; though NORAD headquarters was located in the United States, the deputy commander of NORAD was a Canadian.
Just as NATO was a test of Canada’s seriousness in entering world affairs, so, too, was the Korean War (1950–53), which tested Canada’s relationship with the United States. Although some Canadians were reluctant to join the effort to assist South Korea in resisting the North Korean invasion, Saint Laurent’s government decided to commit Canadian military and naval contingents to serve with the U.S. and UN forces in what was called a “police action.”
Small numbers of Canadian military personnel served on two UN missions in the late 1940s (in Palestine and along the India-Pakistan border), but Canada’s real involvement with peacekeeping began in 1956 during the Suez Crisis. As external affairs minister, Pearson proposed to the UN General Assembly that a UN peacekeeping force be established to occupy areas of the Suez Canal that had been seized by Anglo-French forces and to patrol the Egypt-Israel border following an Israeli withdrawal from the areas its troops had occupied after its attack on Egypt. The UN General Assembly accepted the proposal, thus creating the first true UN peacekeeping force. Canada offered a substantial contribution, sending a contingent of troops and supplies to Egypt.
In 1957 Pearson was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace for his initiative, and since then Canada has played a continuing role in peacekeeping operations both inside and outside the UN. Canada’s major peacekeeping commitments have included the Sinai (1956 and 1973), the Congo (1960), Cyprus (1964), Iran and Iraq (1988), Croatia (1992), Somalia (1992), and Bosnia and Herzegovina (1993). On two other occasions during the 1990s, Canada and its allies took a more aggressive approach, in what was termed “peacemaking” rather than peacekeeping. During the Persian Gulf War (1990–91), Canada sent warships to join the international fleet gathered to reverse Iraq’s invasion and occupation of Kuwait, and Canadian ground troops subsequently participated in the allied strike force. Later, Canadian forces participated in NATO air strikes against Yugoslavia that were intended to counter Serbia’s policies against ethnic Albanians living in the Yugoslav province of Kosovo. Yugoslav forces later withdrew from the area under UN supervision, again with Canadian involvement. Canada supported the United States when the latter spearheaded the 2001 invasion and subsequent occupation of Afghanistan by sending a contingent of troops in 2002. However, it did not participate in the U.S.-led Iraq War that invaded and occupied that country, instead resuming its military involvement in Afghanistan.