Chaos in the North: Canada Surrenders to China

Chaos in the North: Canada Surrenders to China
Carney and Xi

Canada’s sovereignty has been subverted from within by a seditious political class beholden to foreign interests. Under Prime Minister Mark Carney, what was once a covert infiltration by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has turned into blatant collaboration. Recent diplomatic maneuvers by Carney prioritize Beijing’s agenda over Canada’s national security, economic independence, and alliances with traditional allies like the United States. This is no mere policy shift; it is an appalling betrayal that undermines Canada’s borders, empowers its adversaries, sunders Canada’s relationship with the U.S., and exposes its citizens to the whims of a communist regime.

From security information-sharing agreements to trade deals that flood Canada’s markets with Chinese goods, the evidence is irrefutable: Canada’s federal elite has been co-opted by the CCP, they have traded the country’s sovereignty for their own financial and political benefit, and they have aligned themselves with a tyrannical geopolitical foe. The announcement of a new “strategic partnership” between Canada and the People’s Republic of China was formalized during Carney’s visit to Beijing. This pact, detailed in the official joint statement from the Prime Minister’s Office, includes memoranda of understanding (MOU) that commit Canadian law enforcement—including the RCMP—to collaborate with Chinese counterparts on combating narcotics, cybercrime, and money laundering.

This new arrangement is a geostrategic disaster. Former senior Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) official, Garry Clement, argues that “Cooperating with Beijing may promise short-term gains against crime. The long-term cost—measured in compromised methods, intimidated communities, and eroded sovereignty—could be far higher.”

Sharing security information with the CCP, as outlined in these MOUs and echoed on Beijing’s official websites, hands over sensitive data to a regime notorious for espionage, human rights abuses, and global subversion. This is not cooperation but capitulation. For years, right-of-centre voices—especially investigative journalist Sam Cooper—have warned about Chinese interference in Canadian elections, trade pressure, widespread espionage, and even the detention of Canadian citizens. Cooper substantiates his reporting with primary source documents including Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) reports highlighting Beijing’s meddling. Yet, instead of investigating and thwarting these threats, Carney’s government is now embedding them into policy.

This move directly contradicts Canada’s priorities: securing its borders against foreign influence, curtailing mass migration that often serves as a vector for espionage, and prioritizing alliances with trusted partners like the United States over adversaries. Compounding this security folly are the economic concessions: in exchange for China lowering tariffs on Canadian agricultural products like canola and seafood, Canada has agreed to slash its own 100% tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) to a mere 6.1% for up to 49,000 units annually—potentially rising to 70,000 in five years.

This “preliminary agreement-in-principle” not only floods the market with subsidized Chinese EVs, threatening domestic jobs in Ontario’s auto sector, but also invites Chinese investment in Canada’s supply chains, further entrenching Beijing’s economic leverage. As Michael Kovrig, a former Canadian diplomat detained by China for nearly three years, astutely noted, Carney’s trip was “never just a courtesy call”—it was a deliberate pivot toward Beijing amid U.S. trade pressures, risking deeper entanglement with a hostile communist regime that uses economic ties as weapons.

Canada should be focused on leveraging its vast natural resources—oil, gas, agriculture products, and critical minerals—through projects like pipelines, not kowtowing to Beijing. The recent approval of a new Pacific oil pipeline was a step in the right direction, but it’s overshadowed by this broader sellout, which moves away from Canada’s reliable U.S. partner (who purchases the vast majority of Canada’s exports) toward an unreliable foe. Canada is hedging against U.S. protectionism by cozying up to China, including pledges for closer energy ties despite years of strained relations.

Geopolitically, this betrayal extends to the Arctic, where Canada’s inaction has left the north vulnerable, which is something President Trump will not tolerate. The CCP’s ambitions in the north are no secret, with Beijing eyeing resource-rich territories and shipping routes. Yet, Carney’s response? Aligning with China on “global governance” and climate issues, while contemplating sending Canadian troops to Greenland—not to counter Chinese threats, but to placate NATO allies amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s push to acquire the island for strategic reasons.

The elite press aggressively denounce Trump’s tariffs on European nations refusing to sell Greenland, but they stem from legitimate concerns about Arctic security against China and Russia.

Canada, as America’s northern neighbor, should be fortifying the Arctic in lockstep with the U.S., not flirting with Beijing. Steve Bannon’s stark warning in the Daily Mail rings true: Canada is becoming the “next Ukraine,” unable to defend its borders and inviting Chinese exploitation under the guise of partnership.

Liberal appointee Senator Yuen Pau Woo, a subversive Chinese loyalist if ever there was one, dismissed the wish for a renewed alliance with the United States to secure Canada’s shared continent as

“51st state thinking” and “Sinophobia”. Woo’s statement that Carney must “watch his back” against “China haters” revealed where his loyalties truly lie. The capture of elected officials by the Chinese is not new; it is the culmination of decades of infiltration, as presciently warned by investigative journalist Sam Cooper and whistleblowers like Brian McAdam. In the 1990s, McAdam uncovered how Chinese intelligence and Triad organized crime networks compromised Canadian immigration by embedding agents in politics and business. These networks are tied to firms like Power Corporation, which now benefit from Carney’s EV deals.

One writer in the right-of-centre Toronto Sun likened Canada’s new relationship with China to surrender. He went on to say that Carney “just gave away the whole nation to a cruel, repressive, totalitarian regime without so much as a warning to Canadians.”

The consequences of this capitulation are apocalyptic: a weakened Canada, economically dependent on China, strategically isolated from the US, and vulnerable to CCP coercion. Even before this debacle, Canada was on the verge of dissolution and fracture because of successive Liberal governments at the federal level. By aligning itself strategically with the Chinese and globalist European Union, Canada has signed its own death warrant. Soon the country will cease to exist. At one time I thought it was possible to exorcise the CCP’s influence and restore Canada’s sovereignty, but alas, it is already too late. Now annexation by the United States, bound and determined to secure the continent, is assured.

https://counter-currents.com/2026/01/chaos-in-the-north-canada-surrenders-to-china