I have been asked to comment on a flippity flopish move by Prime Minister Carney re Iran: first saying, hey, we love them Americans bombing Iran to, hey now, maybe we should all be a bit more restrained. How to make sense of this? Hmmm. I think the first thing to consider is that the Davos Statement is not that clear and is certainly not that prescriptive in this moment. Second, domestic politics may play a role. Third, bad habits may have been in play. Let's contrast the statements:
Canada supports the United States acting to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and to prevent its regime from further threatening international peace and security.
We take this position with regret, because the current conflict is another example of the failure of the international order. Despite decades of United Nations Security Council resolutions, the tireless work of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and a succession of sanctions and diplomatic frameworks, Iran’s nuclear threat remains. And now the United States and Israel have acted without engaging the United Nations or consulting with allies, including Canada.
So where to from here? With a rapidly spreading conflict and growing threats to civilian life. Canada reaffirms that international law binds all belligerents. We condemn the strikes carried out by Iran on civilians and civilian infrastructure across the Middle East. We implore all parties, including the United States and Israel, to respect the rules of international engagement.
So, first, Carney's statement at Davos says that Canada can't always side with the US (as he likened the US-based world order to Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia) and that Canada needs to be pragmatic, not always principled. Okey dokey, what does that mean for this weekend? Whatever you want, really. The first statement complies with Davos as it is unprincipled, woot! Second statement complies as it is more critical of the US--not consulting with allies, needed to be reminded not to do war crimes.
On the other hand, the first statement looks sketchy as all get out because it was buying the US story immediately without waiting for any sense that the Trump administration had a plan, a justification, etc. Supporting a bad faith actor can only go .... badly. We should know that by now. I was pretty outraged by the initial statement because this is a badly justified war fought badly, and Carney should have understood that. Don't support dumb shit.*
Second, domestic politics: supporting an attack on Iran is popular among the Iranian diaspora and among many Jewish Canadians, so why not pander to them? Playing to ethnic groups does not always mean bad policy outcomes, but, well, disaporas rarely know best. They tend to be more extreme than those who remained behind (leaving is a selection effect kind of thing) and become more extreme as they don't have to pay the price for what they advocate. I used to study diasporas, so I apologize for brutally generalizing about behavior that is well, pretty general. While Jews hate Netanyahu, they hate Iran a lot, too. The polls in Israel are instructive on this score. Not sure how North American Jews feel as, yes, not all Jews think the same way on things, and the schism between Israeli Jews and North American Jews has widened since October 2023. Still, I can imagine political operatives around Carney saying quickly before people had time to think: hey, we have to support attacking this regime because our voters think it is icky (which, to be fair, it was/is).
Third, habits and bureaucratic routines may have dominated at first. Canada always sides with US, always has problems with Iran, so those in GAC and PM's Office went with the old scripts, not really thinking through how Davos and Trump and rank incompetence might suggest a different approach.
Why the change in heart? Maybe Carney noticed the other allies being a bit more circumspect. Maybe the schoolgirls and other reckless attacks and Hegseth's repeated assurances that he will war crime had an impact. Maybe the realization that the US is a bad faith actor run by morons who did no prep, and tying oneself to them is not great? Maybe the realization that Elbows Up includes not siding with the US automatically? I hope someone can get the inside scoop on why the flip flop. The new position isn't great either, but it is better than the first one.
Of course, this raises what Canada should have done. What a great time to distance from the US? This would have been an opportunity to show that the heart of Davos, not being so attached to the US, is what matters and matters in a crisis. Look at the accolades the Spanish are getting, look at the Brits initially refusing to let the US use Diego Garcia. If Trump wants to be transactional, then be transactional. Don't give loyalty unless you can get something for it.
* Yes, it is a bad war--the flailing for a decent justification is more than a clue. There was no need to attack Iran this weekend. We have lived with Iran being an obnoxious, awful regime for quite some time. Another day, week, month, year doesn't really change anything except to the Iranians who we are not really helping (killing moderates alternatives is just about the dumbest thing since the US disbanded the Iraqi military over night). Yes, Iran was in pursuit of nuclear weapons, but there had been diplomacy that had addressed that. These days, the Iranians get that they can't bargain with bad faith actor Trump. Maybe two weeks ago, but not now and not anytime soon. So, destroying the one reasonable pathway is very dumb. And then there is the execution of this war---no consultation with allies so people are stuck in the region. Friendly fire incidents galore. Dead school girls. Allies lacking protection from the obvious Iranian reaction.
Oh, and I realized as I talked to the media today: if you push Iran into a corner where the existence of the regime is at stake, why should they hold back anything? It makes no sense to save any instruments of power for a more desperate future. So, they launch missiles and drones in every direction, they may close the Strait of Hormuz, they may encourage terrorist attacks around the world.












