The CCP Has a Playbook for Taking Over Countries. Here’s Why They’ll Target Greenland | Alex Gray
Alex Gray warns the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is using a proven playbook—seen in the Solomon Islands—to exploit Greenland’s push for independence by 2030, deploying submarines and infiltrating civil society via groups like Code Pink. Control of Greenland’s critical Arctic choke point could threaten U.S. security, making a Pacific-style military compact urgent. Meanwhile, Canada’s 1% defense spending, ties to Beijing under Trudeau and Carney, and potential "vassal state" alignment risk destabilizing North American security, forcing the U.S. to balance patience with hard demands. Gray argues securing Greenland and Arctic borders is essential to shield the hemisphere from CCP coercion, echoing a broader strategy of power over norms. [Automatically generated summary]
Sowing Discord: United Front Work Department00:04:05
What people have misunderstood is that this is somehow a President Donald Trump issue, and it's not.
Presidents from 1867, the Andrew Johnson administration was the first administration to try and acquire Greenland.
It's the strategic sea lanes, the Greenland-Iceland-UK gap.
The Chinese are moving submarines regularly up to the North Pole, and as the Arctic ice melts, that passage between Greenland and the Arctic in northern Canada is going to be an incredibly important strategic location.
In this episode, I sit down with Alex Gray, who previously served as National Security Council Chief of Staff and Deputy Assistant to the President during the first Trump administration.
What happens when Greenland inevitably becomes independent?
And that's where we get to what I call the Solomon Islands scenario.
Now, he's a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and co-founder of American Global Strategies.
We will wake up and we will have, just like in the Solomons, we will have people's armed police or Chinese militia running rampant in Greenland.
And that is a lot bigger threat to us than anything that's happening in the Pacific Islands.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Kellek.
Alex Gray, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Thanks for having me.
We're going to talk about all things Greenland and the U.S. relationship and the Danish relationship and what should happen from a national security perspective.
Before we go there, I want to talk about something that Under Secretary of State Sarah Rogers said in a recent post.
She said, Partisan hacks spent years peddling phony Russia collusion hoax while turning a blind eye to the sprawling web of far-left activist organizations who push the agendas of the Chinese Communist Party.
So here you are sitting in the seat.
You've made the Chinese Communist Party a study for a while.
What's your reaction to Sarah Rogers' comments?
It's about time.
It's about time someone at that level in our government says what I think people have known, both people like you who study this on the outside and people who served in government, know that it's the United Front Work Department.
The United Front Work Department of the Chinese Communist Party makes it its business, whether it's the United States or Australia, other Western allies, to infiltrate civil society, infiltrate key institutions with the goal of sowing discord.
That's what they support far extreme elements of both sides of the political spectrum, but particularly the left.
And they do everything they can to sow chaos with the goal of undermining societies and undermining governing structures so they can accomplish their political ends.
And I think Mrs. Rogers made it very, it's valid, and I just wish it had been said earlier.
Organizations like Code Pink and People's Forum were, so she made kind of a point of mentioning them.
And these are organizations that are involved, I think, unambiguously with fomenting some chaos or protests.
Tell me more about how this works.
So look what the Soviets did in the Cold War.
It's a playbook really hasn't changed that much.
They called it active measures.
You know, the Soviets made a very professional effort to sow discord in the United States.
And the Chinese have inherited those lessons.
And in many ways, they've refined them and they've made them more sophisticated and more effective.
And the goal is to use organizations that are partisan, that are extreme, that sow disunity and disharmony within American society to create wedges that make us vulnerable to the CCP's division.
And the more divided we are, the harder it is for us to resist the CCP's ultimate political objective, which is global hegemony.
And the American people are the last bulwark against CCP hegemony.
China's Strategic Influence00:07:47
If they can divide us, confuse us, keep us at each other's throats, they will have an easier path towards their ultimate goal.
Well, so actually, this is a perfect foray into talking about Greenland in a way.
So why is this such a big issue right now?
And maybe actually, let me backtrack a little bit.
Why is it a big issue at all?
Sure.
So to start with, why does it matter?
Why is it a big issue?
I think what people have misunderstood is that this is somehow a President Donald Trump issue, and it's not.
President Trump has just been extremely focused on it for reasons we can talk about and that make good sound strategic sense.
But presidents from 1867, the Andrew Johnson administration was the first administration to try and acquire Greenland.
Woodrow Wilson tried to acquire it in the First World War.
Franklin Roosevelt sent troops to occupy it in the Second World War.
Harry Truman tried to buy it.
Dwight Eisenhower considered buying it.
This is a long-standing, important piece of American strategic thought.
And what I always tell people is, you start in 1867 and work to today.
The strategic logic of why Greenland matters to us has not changed because geography doesn't change.
The only thing that's changed is the American president and the adversary that we're trying to counter.
So in the beginning of this history, it was Great Britain.
We were worried about Britain gaining control of Greenland and then threatening us and post-Civil War.
Then in World War I, obviously, we worried about German U-boat bases being built in Greenland.
In World War II, Denmark was occupied.
The colonial master in Greenland was occupied.
We were very concerned, and they actually did land, German raider parties landed in Greenland, set up radar stations, and they were actively planning to build U-boat bases to menace U.S. shipping that was doing Lin-Lease convoys to the Soviet Union.
And then, of course, the Soviets in the Cold War, this led to the famous 1951 treaty that we signed with Denmark, which was still in effect today, which gives us bases and pretty extensive military access to Greenland.
The bottom line, when you think about why have we done this?
Why does this all matter?
Why is this across competitions, across adversaries?
Greenland is a thousand miles or so, as the crow flies, from Maine.
If you fly from Greenland to Maine, it's very close.
More importantly than that, it's the strategic sea lanes, the Greenland-Iceland-UK gap.
This is where the Soviet submarines would come down from northern Russia during the Cold War, stay off the eastern coast of the United States, and threaten us from a nuclear perspective.
Now, the Wall Street Journal reported just a couple weeks ago that the Chinese are moving submarines regularly up to the North Pole.
And as the Arctic ice melts, that passage between Greenland and the Arctic and northern Canada is going to be an incredibly important strategic location.
All this to say, whoever controls Greenland or exerts coercive influence over Greenland is going to have a pivotal role in the security of the Arctic, in the North Atlantic, and in the passage between all of these critical geographies.
And that's why it's so important, as it was in 1867.
That's why it's so important today to make sure that no outside power has the ability to keep Greenland pointed, a dagger pointed at the United States.
We have to keep an outside power from having that influence.
Outside power means an adversarial power or any power.
I would say an adversary power.
I've always said I don't worry that much as long as the Kingdom of Denmark includes Greenland.
As long as it's part of Denmark, I'll give you a real-world example.
In 2018, the Chinese tried to buy an airfield in Greenland.
And we worked very closely with Denmark.
And under the existing rules and laws, Denmark was able to exercise veto power and actually stop the Chinese from purchasing that airfield.
So as long as it's part of the Kingdom of Denmark, I think American security concerns can relatively be contained.
I think that Denmark has been woefully inadequate in many ways in securing the Arctic and fulfilling its obligations for Arctic security.
They're working on rectifying that.
I hope they continue to do so.
For me, the longer-term concern is what happens when Greenland inevitably becomes independent.
And that's where we get to what I call the Solomon Islands scenario.
And this is where I think we have to be extremely vigilant because we will wake up and we will have, just like in the Solomons, we will have people's armed police or Chinese militia running rampant in Greenland.
And that is a lot bigger threat to us than anything that's happening in the Pacific Islands.
Interesting.
So I'm very familiar actually with the Solomon Islands situation.
Cleo Pascal is a regular guest on this show, and she's kind of my go-to expert on the region, along with Grant Newsham, actually, is also right.
Now, maybe just explain to me what happened with the Solomons.
I think this is very illustrative.
So Solomon Islands, archipelago in Southeast Asia, very strategically important.
Thousands of American Marines died there in 1942-43 at the Battle of Guadalcanal.
Hugely important sea lane connecting Southeast Asia and Australia.
It recognized Taiwan for decades.
And when I was at the National Security Council in President Trump's first term, I had responsibility at one point for all the islands of Oceania.
So I had a front-row seat to watching the Chinese United Front operation that was dedicated to winning an election and then making sure that the winners of that election were dedicated to switching diplomatic recognition from China to the PRC.
And as soon as that recognition was switched, the first thing that happened was the Chinese roll in and they start offering projects, Belton Road, they start buying dual-use facilities.
They buy ports.
They're taking over airfields.
Next thing you know, we're hearing conversations about potentially having PLAN naval access to ports in the Solomons, airfields on outlying islands that are potentially the PLAF is going to be operating out of.
This is a well-worn Chinese playbook.
Fast forward a little bit in this saga, and the authoritarian leader, Manasseh Sogovare, the authoritarian leader of the Solomon Islands, realizes that he needs help keeping his own people under control.
Who's better at keeping their own people under control than the Chinese Communist Party?
So he asked the CCP to literally violate his own country's sovereignty and send the People's Armed Police to come into Honiara, the capital of Solomons, and start enforcing Solomon Islands law against the people of his own country.
And you now have people's armed police officers locking up Solomon Island citizens who criticize the Chinese Communist Party.
This is an extraordinary threat to our Australian friends, who, by the way, up until this happened, they would insist they had it all under control, nothing to see here.
Journalism's New Role00:03:06
This is going to be totally fine.
Keep your Yankee nose out of it.
And next thing you know, you have the People's Armed Police running around in Honiara, a critical strategic choke point in the region.
That's what I call the Solomon Islands scenario.
And that's exactly what I think will happen to a Greenland that becomes independent without a larger American security role to ensure that we don't have this type of what I would call colonization.
Alex, one quick sec.
We're going to take a quick break, and folks, we're going to be right back.
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And we're back with Alex Gray, Senior Fellow at the Atlantic Council.
Laurie, and this the Greenland independence scenario is not some new idea.
Right.
But before we go there, so you were at the NSC when all this was happening.
Why didn't you guys do anything?
We did as much as I think we should have done more.
We fought at the NSC under the leadership of Matt Poddinger.
We fought very hard to try and get our own government, frankly, the State Department particularly, to care about this.
And the State Department has long, as you know, felt that we are wasting our time trying to stand up for China for Taiwan's remaining diplomatic allies.
And so it was essentially the Trump NSC versus the State Department, and the State Department won.
I'll never forget Matt Pottinger and I actually flew to the Solomon Islands and we went and we laid wreaths with the Taiwanese deputy foreign minister at the Guadalcanal Memorial in a last-ditch attempt to try and keep Solomons from flipping.
So the White House did everything we could, but unfortunately our State Department friends did not want to fight.
Wow.
I mean, it is, it's amazing how quickly this can sort of flip.
And, you know, there were also these heroes like Daniel Sudani, the premier of Malaita Province, who now actually recently passed away.
But, you know, after, again, all of this flip suffered extreme, you know, persecution, which eventually at least connected with his death, I think.
Path Toward Independence00:08:55
Very illustrative.
Yeah.
Now, the idea for independence for Greenland is not a new idea.
And again, like, just given the news cycle right now and everything people might think it is.
Yeah.
Explain that to me.
Yeah.
So I'm from the state of Oklahoma and grew up in a place where Native American Indigenous history is very real.
And so this is something that, you know, anyone from where I'm from in the United States, we understand the history of mistreatment of First Nations or Indigenous people.
The Greenland-Denmark relationship is very much like that, and in some ways, even worse.
Greenland has been a colony of Denmark for almost 300 years.
And there are, if you look at the history of that colonization, it was brutal.
It was extremely oppressive, particularly to women.
There are some horrible instances that have become very politically fraught issues in Denmark and Greenland with forced sterilization of native Greenlandic women.
So there's a very complicated and a very painful history here that a lot of American Indigenous people would understand and relate to.
This led in the late 1970s to the first real push for Greenland to start getting greater autonomy from Denmark.
And in 1979, they began the path toward home rule.
And so they were able to start having elections and having local self-government on most domestic matters.
Fast forward to 2009, and there is another piece of legislation passed that sets up a procedure for even greater self-government.
And it establishes a formal mechanism where Greenland can seek independence through a referendum and then through a legislation in the Danish parliament that would also have to be ratified.
But this sets up a formal constitutional mechanism for a complete separation.
In the meantime, foreign policy and defense remains the purview of Denmark with increasing authority for foreign policy delegated to Greenland.
So there's certain collaborations, certain things that Greenland has to consult Copenhagen on, but they have their own foreign minister.
They can have their own representation in certain instances.
So increasingly over the last 45 years, there has been this gradual path toward independence.
In 2024, Greenland put out its first ever national security strategy.
And in that strategy, they said, by the 2030s, we aim to be on the path toward full independence from Denmark.
This is not speculative.
This is not just me saying it.
This is, in the own words of the Greenlandic government, they are headed in the next decade towards independence.
The current kerfuffle that started when President Trump raised this long-standing U.S. strategic concern has altered Greenlandic politics significantly.
And people have tried to reposition themselves because of the kind of antibodies in the system that have arisen because of the way this debate has been perceived and played out.
But the reality is the underlying currents, the dislike of Danish colonialism, the long-standing desire to get increasing self-government, this evolutionary process with legal mechanisms, constitutional mechanisms, none of that is going away.
And so what I think is going to happen is in five years, 10 years, you will see a referendum initiated, legislation initiated, and this gradual path toward complete independence will happen.
And what we cannot allow to happen is like in Solomon's, where these major political changes happen, and we're just sitting there on our hands, not preparing for the day after.
And we don't want to be like the Australians who say, everything's fine, there's nothing to see here.
And we wake up and there's a Chinese people's armed police presence in Nuuk.
Which is the capital of Greenland.
Okay.
Recently, I talked with a former, I think it was chief editor of one of the major Danish daily newspapers.
Okay.
And the guy was very agitated talking to me.
Was kind of trying to explain to him why I think the Americans, being Canadian, the Americans, you know, would are interested in playing a role in Greenland and having kind of the strategic relationship and everything.
And he said, yeah, they're forcing us, you know, through like with a gun to our heads.
This is what he's telling me.
If you could kind of disambiguate this a little bit.
Sure.
I have no desire to coerce Greenland.
What I want to have is a relationship with Greenland that is based on a respect for their sovereignty, but which takes into account our security interests.
And I think the best example, it's not like I don't have to make up a real world example.
Three of them exist.
The Marshall Islands, Palau, and the Federated States of Micronesia.
Sovereign states, UN members, long, complicated colonial histories, and they are now fully independent, their own foreign policies.
Oftentimes they do things we don't like, but we have what are called compacts of free association with them.
And these give us several important things.
Unrestricted military access, so we can use their land, their air, their sea without any restrictions.
And then the most important thing is what's called the right of denial.
If a Chinese ship, Chinese aircraft wants to come into one of those three states, the U.S. government can say, under the terms of the compact, no, 100% no, that ship cannot dock.
And under that treaty, the state of Palau, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, they have to turn the Chinese away.
That's the type of, that's the type of influence we need to have to guarantee our security in Greenland.
That's the type of relationship that has to be set up to wait on the other end of an independent Greenland.
And so, and also in this context, I'll just add a little bit of color, but the U.S. provides some financial support.
It provides the postal service.
People from these places can serve in the U.S. military, apparently disproportionately serve in the U.S. military because they understand the value.
So it's a very, there is a very much a reciprocal relationship here.
It's by choice.
And, you know, just as a funny, fun fact, you know, a few years back when this compact was up for renewal, the treaty, right?
For some reason, this had been dropped out of the national security bill, one of the NDAAs.
And, you know, I had multiple guests on the show saying, hey, guys, we need to spend $100 million here to avoid having to spend $100 billion later.
That kind of discussion.
So my point is just simply, it can be, we can drop the ball so easily around some very basic and incredibly important strategic relationships.
Look, democracies have a horrible track record of doing hard things when they're relatively easy.
It's a lot easier for democracies to do hard things when it's harder.
And Australia and the Solomons is, I think, just the perfect example where Australian troops alongside American Marines died in huge numbers.
It was actually an Australian colony for many, many years.
It's so strategically important.
The Australians have sent troops in as recently as 20 years ago.
Well, they were also supposed to be the ones providing the security.
They said they were.
And they dropped the ball.
I love our Australian friends, but they dropped the ball.
And that's because it's so hard as a democracy to get out there and convince the public, convince your bureaucracy that you should do these difficult things that don't look like they're urgent because nothing's happening at the moment.
And then there's a crisis and then you're on your heels and you're responding from a position of weakness.
My position in this whole Greenland debate has been we have 150 years of strategic thought behind why Greenland matters.
We have examples like Solomon's and elsewhere of what happens when we don't get ahead of these things.
And we have templates like in the freely associated states of how we can solve this issue in a respectful, mutually beneficial way.
Let's not wait.
Canadians as Chinese Vassal?00:15:59
We have all the pieces here.
Let's put it all together.
And when the Greenlanders decide they want to be independent, it's a really binary choice.
They're going to have a great power waiting for them on the other side of independence.
Do you want it to be Washington or do you want it to be Beijing?
It's a very simple, binary choice.
And we have all the tools to prevent this from being Honiara.
If we can never, I mean, the idea of it being Beijing, you know, you've already explained a bit of what that might look like, right?
But I think it actually goes a lot further in my mind, right?
Like, I mean, it's a route that's a lot closer to China, frankly, than through than across the Pacific.
Right.
Well, yeah, it's it's also I mean, you follow this every day.
The Chinese, if they make a decision that something is strategically valuable, whether it's a naval base on the coast of West Africa, whether it's building icebreakers to go to Antarctica, whether it's hydrographic survey vessels off the coast of Chile, a surveillance station in Cuba, I mean, go down and down the list.
They don't have to get funding from Congress.
They don't have to convince a bunch of senators that this is worthy of an appropriation.
They just do it.
I'm not arguing that we should have that system by any means, but I'm just saying, you know, they will seize the opportunity because they have the ability and the resources and the command system that allows them to nimbly, for the most part, respond to strategic opportunity.
It's much harder for us institutionally to see a vulnerability and to fill the gap than it is for the Chinese to step in.
And that's why I think what I'm trying to do is get people to think about this now before there's a crisis.
And I think this is what President Trump is trying to do.
He wants us to think about this before it's a crisis so we never have to be like the Australians and the Solomons and panic and worry that a couple hours from Brisbane, there's going to be a Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force base because we didn't handle it in time.
You know, so I'm Canadian, as many of our viewers know.
And actually I'm very concerned about Canada from all sorts of reasons, but especially these recent kind of forays into a strategic relationship.
And it's very confusing in some ways because I kind of understand, for example, this 51st state idea, which is an anathema, by the way, for Canadians.
We hate the idea of the U.S. exerting some sort of coercive power against Canada.
But the economies are so closely tied.
They're so closely tied that they're tied as many economies of states relative to the federal government or states with each other are in America.
So it's, you know, there's some kind of analogy there to be had.
And, you know, the geography is, you know, it's a similar part of the world as Greenland, right?
What would be the concerns for the U.S. of this sort of deepening relationship of Canada with the Chinese Communist Party?
Well, look, Canada is increasingly becoming a major strategic weak spot for the United States for a number of reasons.
Number one, they spend about 1%.
I've heard people argue that in reality, it's less than 1% of GDP on defense.
And they have shown, under multiple prime ministers, no interest in doing anything about it.
I would almost say, to some extent, that's just baked into the cake at this point.
But it's even worse than that, because that limited percent of GDP they're spending on defense, the Canadians are not allocating in a way that's actually helpful to the Western Alliance, to NATO, and to the United States.
So the Canadians are still trying to maintain a rapid reaction brigade that can deploy to Europe.
Why on earth are the Canadians, who are spending so little of their limited resources on defense, still trying to do a Cold War-style armored deployment to Europe?
They, at the same time, they have an icebreaker fleet that is minuscule.
Stephen Harper in the mid-2000s tried to build an icebreaker fleet and it did not come to fruition the way it should have.
You look at the militia, essentially, the mostly First Nations militia that is guarding the northernmost flank of Canada.
These are local guides armed with Lee-infield rifles, the early warning sensors and airborne defense that should be up in an area that's going to be increasingly part of strategic competition.
In many places, there are hundreds, if not thousands of miles of the Canadian wilderness that's just totally open and unguarded.
So, what I'm saying is, Canada's, particularly under the Trudeau government, but Carney, I think, is trying to do a little bit better, but he has his own problems, as you said, with his kind of strategic focus on China.
The lack of preparedness that the Trudeau government engaged in for a decade has truly harmed U.S. core security interests.
We expect the Canadians to contribute to at least keeping our shared continent safe.
And they have done the opposite.
They have made it more vulnerable, and they have put more of the burden because of their lack of preparedness.
They put more of the burden of securing the hemisphere on us when we should be allocating our resources, in many cases, to the Indo-Pacific, the main theater of potential competition.
So, I think Canada's lack of preparedness is a real threat to our shared security.
And you add on top of that the way Mark Carney has sought to have some sort of deepened relationship with Canada, with China.
The problem with that is you could conceivably, if he does this, if he does his fantastical middle power, his Davo speech thing, if he does that, you now have a potential Chinese vassal state that is bordering, that shares the longest border with the United States.
Why is the middle power a potential Chinese vassal state?
Break that down for me.
Because the Chinese don't acknowledge anything but vassal states.
The Chinese conception of interstate relations is enemy and vassal state.
There is no middle ground.
And so, if Mark Carney's vision of these middle powers gathering together in some sort of harmony, non-aligned movement, they're just going to not pick sides and get along with everybody and sing kumbaya.
Well, the reality of what that means from a Chinese strategic perspective is they're offering themselves up on a platter to be devoured by the CCP for their strategic ends.
That's what's going to happen.
And the United States cannot afford or allow the country with whom we share our longest border to be a Chinese vassal state.
So between his lack of preparedness militarily, particularly in the hemisphere, and then this absurd Chinese overture, Kearney is creating a strategically unsustainable situation for the United States.
The U.S. kind of has no choice but to provide the security.
I've always thought about this as a kind of a curiosity because that is a, let's see, it's an unfortunate incentive structure, if you will.
Okay.
So, well, maybe if you understand, seem to understand exactly what I'm thinking.
Maybe you can explain it better than I would.
Well, it's the ultimate free rider problem.
Right.
Because we can't say that this massive landmass bordering us, we don't like Trudeau.
We don't like Kearney.
So we'll just let them leave them to their own devices and let them become a Chinese vassal state.
That's not feasible.
And for the same reason that whether we liked Justin Trudeau's father in the Cold War or not, we had to play ball with him to a certain degree because the Soviets posed, just like China, an existential threat, and we couldn't allow our northern neighbor to become a Soviet vassal.
So we have always had this geostrategic need to keep Canada integrated with us economically, militarily, politically.
The challenge that, you know, as we see in so many parts of the world, the challenge we're facing with our relationship with Canada is that Canada is increasingly going to be called on to do more in the Arctic, elsewhere, because that's the direction of geopolitics.
But the United States is increasingly from a voter perspective, a domestic political perspective, we're just expecting more of our allies.
So Canada is being asked to do more geopolitically.
They're expected to do more domestically in the United States.
They're showing no inclination to do it.
And they're bandwagoning essentially with the Chinese for various reasons.
That is creating a, I would say, going back at least to the 19th century, the biggest potential rupture in U.S.-Canadian relations.
All of these forces are coming together at a really ill-opportune time.
Right.
And I mean, something, you know, I don't know exactly how this happened, but some aspect of the Canadian identity is not being American.
And I know this because I grew up there, you know, most spent a lot of my life there.
And it was absolutely, there was this kind of like, don't, you know, you were traveling with your kids, you know, as a student and you didn't want to be called American.
Don't call me American.
I'm Canadian.
What are you talking about?
And I think that this actually has a strong political valence.
Yeah.
Right.
And so, you know, people have criticized the president for facilitating the particular election outcome that they may or may not have liked, right?
Or and so forth.
But that's just the reality.
The reality is that we as Canadians, you know, it's the big power beside us that gets to dictate a heck of a lot about our reality.
And we just don't like having being dictated to so much.
Well, look, think about the reaction.
This isn't just true of Canada.
It's true of the international system.
When Stephen Miller said that power is the ultimate arbiter of the international system, people in Washington think tanks were rending their garments and they were just absolutely bereft that he would say such an impolitic thing because this is the crowd that likes to talk about the liberal international order and rules-based norms and all this stuff.
Well, the reality is the system has always been undergirded by power.
And that's who are the permanent members of the UN Security Council?
They're the victors of World War II.
The system has always been geared towards relative power in the international system.
And Stephen just said something that he said the quiet part out loud, essentially.
The issue with the Canadians is up to a certain point, we are going to just have to, whether we like Mark Carney or Justin Trudeau or whoever the prime minister is, we're going to have to tolerate a certain amount of annoyance for our own security reasons.
And we're going to have to put up with some chaff in the relationship for the purpose of protecting the Arctic, keeping our northern border secure, all the obvious things.
I do worry that we will reach a certain point where if Canada continues to be such a laggard on defense, they continue to poke the, say, poke the eagle, so to speak, and they want to get closer and closer to communist China, you will reach a point where there are a large number of Americans and a large number of American politicians who will start raising really difficult questions.
I personally, I'd rather deal with the geopolitics and secure the homeland, secure the hemisphere, and deal with an unpleasant government, whether we like their politics or not.
But I think you will increasingly have a hard time, like you're having with NATO, in balancing some of these issues, just looking at the direction of travel in Canadian politics.
In some ways, it's a similar relationship that the U.S. has with NATO countries, but it's just more important because it's more proximate and the relative integration, especially economically, is very deep.
I agree with that.
And I think the Arctic is going to make that even more true.
And as the ice melts and you see increasing commercial shipping traffic, you see Russian and Chinese naval vessels plying the northern reaches of the Arctic on a very regular basis.
Even now you're seeing it.
Imagine what it'll be like in 10, 20 years.
We just can't afford a misaligned Canadian government.
A Canadian government, we may find their politics obnoxious.
We may not like the performative nature of Mark Carney's speech in Davos.
That all may be true.
But at a certain point, this is about geography.
This is about core American interests.
And there's really no point in securing Venezuela and securing Cuba if our northern neighbor is vulnerable to becoming a Chinese vassal.
So I think my prediction for the U.S.-Canadian relationship over the next couple of years, we're going to have to tolerate a lot of atmospherics that probably grate at a lot of many Americans.
But the bigger picture here is we cannot allow our northern flank to be compromised.
That could sound almost like a threat to some people.
Well, I think we have to tolerate it.
I mean, I think we have to tolerate a certain level of kind of misaligned Canadian politics while at the same time being very direct with them.
That, you know, we just can't.
I don't think it is an option for the security of the United States to let Canada become fully compromised the way I think Mark Carney would allow it to if he was left to his own devices.
I don't think that that's acceptable to U.S. security interests.
So we're going to have to work with Ottawa in a thoughtful way, but in a way that, you know, I think at certain times we're probably going to have to bite our tongue about things they do that we don't like.
But we're also going to have to be extremely aggressive about saying you cannot continue to underinvest in defense and then also focus your limited defense resources on buying things that don't help secure our joint continent.
So I think it's going to be a mixture of tolerating things we don't like with being more assertive about things that are just really red lines for our interests.
Okay.
Well, so this has been an absolutely fascinating discussion for me.
And I wasn't even expecting we would talk about Canada, but it became the obvious, kind of the obvious question.
Do you have a final thought as we finish, perhaps integrating all of this?
I think what if you read the president's national security strategy, I think he was very clear that I like to use the Russian nesting doll analogy.
Defending the Homeland Securely00:01:27
You know, defend the homeland, defend the hemisphere, and then project power into the Indo-Pacific.
And they're all of a piece.
You can't defend your homeland without having a secure hemisphere.
And that means from the Arctic to the Antarctic, from the Aleutians to Greenland, everything in between, you have to keep what the national security strategy calls extra-hemispheric powers, Russia, China, Iran, from dominating or exerting coercive influence in our hemisphere.
And that requires what we talked about in Greenland.
It requires this complicated dance with what I think is going to be an increasingly difficult Canadian political system.
It requires working with Mexico in ways that, you know, with left-wing governments in Mexico, that's very challenging.
So it requires all of these different muscle movements while at the same time, keeping our eye on the ultimate challenge, the ultimate threat, which is the Chinese Communist Party.
And if we don't have a secure homeland and a secure hemisphere, we cannot successfully project power to the Indo-Pacific to deter, and if God help us if it ever came to that, but if necessary, to succeed in a conflict with the CCP.
We have to secure the homeland and the hemisphere and then project outward into the Indo-Pacific.
Well, Alex Gray, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you all for joining Alex Gray and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.