Pubdate: Tue, 06 May 2003
Source: Herald Sun (Australia)
Copyright: 2003 News Limited
Contact:  http://www.heraldsun.com.au/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/187
Author: Robert Lusetich

CANADA'S US TIES HIT A REEFER

THE long-standing alliance between the US and Canada, strained at best
in recent months, is officially going to pot.

Canada, which was a vocal opponent of the US war against Iraq -
resulting in President George W. Bush cancelling today's scheduled
meeting with Prime Minister Jean Chretien because it clashed with the
weekend visit by John Howard to his Texas ranch - is now infuriating
the US with plans to decriminalise marijuana. "You expect your friends
to stop the movement of poison to your neighbourhood," said the Bush
administration's drugs czar, John Walters, who fears drugs will seep
through the border shared by the two countries.

It is just the latest example of Canadians not doing anything right in
US eyes, from Mike Weir (a left-hander to boot) winning America's most
prestigious golf tournament, the Masters, to the suspicion by some
Americans that Canadians are spreading SARS south of the border.

And it all has the Canucks - whose gross domestic product relies
heavily on trade with their southern neighbour - worried.

The man who is favoured to replace the maverick Mr Chretien next year,
Paul Martin, has called for a cabinet-level committee to try to repair
relations with the US.

"Our bilateral relations must be conducted on a far more sophisticated
basis than (they have) been to date," he said.

Another leading Canadian politician, the Canadian Alliance party's
Jason Kenney, accused Mr Chretien of "mismanaging our most important
bilateral relationship".

"Relations between Canada and the US are at their lowest level in
years and there is no doubt the White House is sending a signal (in
failing to reschedule Mr Chretien's meeting with Mr Bush)."

Although there were existing tensions on trade issues, the bad blood
between the long-standing allies boiled over in the lead-up to the
invasion of Iraq. A Canadian cabinet minister said Mr Bush was "not a
statesman", senior Chretien aide Francois Ducros called the US
President "a moron" and Liberal MP Carolyn Parrish referred to the
"damned Americans".

"I hate those bastards," she said.

"Those remarks did not go by unnoticed," said Thomas D'aquino,
president of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives, whose
organisation worried about the economic impact of upsetting the US.

The US ambassador to Canada, Paul Cellucci, warned of the strain on
relations and said there was "disappointment . . . and concern" in
Washington about Ottawa's positions.

But in truth, insiders say, Mr Bush has long loathed Mr Chretien, a
liberal - and great friend of Bill Clinton's - who publicly supported
Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election.

"Chretien crossed diplomatic lines in showing support for Gore," said
Chris Sands, an expert on US-Canada relations at the Centre for
Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"Before September 11, Bush found Chretien a pain in the neck, but they
were both professional enough to keep it under control. Since 9/11, it
has got steadily worse."

Canadian firms have also noted that their telephones aren't ringing
off the hook as contracts go out to rebuild Iraq.

The SARS scare in Toronto - where 23 people so far have died of the
respiratory disease - hasn't helped either.

Cruise ships in the US stopped accepting Torontonians and tour buses
from Canada's biggest city were being turned away by casinos at
Niagara Falls.

"If you visit Canada," Niagara Falls, New York, mayor Irene Elia told
her residents, "you should wash your hands frequently."
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake