Posts Tagged ‘U.S.-Canada relations’

October 29, 2012: Ottawa

Monday, October 29th, 2012

This morning I attended the change of command ceremony for the Chief of Defense Staff at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa. My good friend General Walt Natynczyk stepped down after four years of distinguished service.

Since arriving in Canada, Julie and I have become good friends with Gen. Natynczyk and his wife Leslie. We have gone to hockey games, dinners, parades, celebrations and every other type of event with them. I spent a week in Afghanistan with Gen. Natynczyk not long after I arrived here visiting Canadian and American troops. It was one of the highlights of my experience as Ambassador.

Ambassador Jacobson with General Natynczyk in Afghanistan, December 2009. (Credit: US Embassy Ottawa)

Ambassador Jacobson with General Natynczyk in Afghanistan, December 2009. (Credit: US Embassy Ottawa)

I have seen first-hand the strength of character, the leadership abilities, the decency that Walt brought to the job. As I have gotten to know senior members of the United States military I have heard — over and over — about the respect they all have for him. He served with our troops in several locations and commanded Americans in combat in Bosnia.

The Canadian people — and the American people — should be grateful for his service. He will be missed.

DJ

October 2, 2012: Ottawa

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

Three years ago today I presented my credentials to the Governor General of Canada to become the 22nd United States Ambassador to Canada.  The last three years have proven what I have said so many times: I have the best job in the United States Government.

Since I arrived I have traveled far and wide in Canada.  I have literally dipped my toes into three oceans.  I have seen cities and towns.  Farms and prairies.  Lakes and mountains.

I have had the privilege of meeting with so many of the Canadian people from every walk of life.  Government officials and business leaders.  Generals and head of NGO’s.  Shop keepers and small business owners.  Factory workers and farmers.

I’ve had Christmas dinner with soldiers in Afghanistan.  Walked with wounded warriors.  I have learned to cross country ski and curl.  I have rooted for your sports teams – unless they are playing ours.  I have eaten your food and drunk your wine.  I’ve come to love Tim Bits.

While I always hesitate to say I have been everywhere and have met everyone, I can say that I have covered a lot of ground and met a lot of people.  I do it to try to better understand Canada and the Canadian people.  Because understanding your country and your people is – in my view – the most important thing I can do to make the most of my opportunity as United States Ambassador.

We have achieved much over the last three years:

  • Building on what was already the largest trading relationship in the history of the world.
  • Expanding the largest energy trading relationship while taking steps to preserve our planet.
  • Creating a border where we do not have to choose between efficiency and security.
  • Taking steps to harmonize our regulatory structures to enhance trade and competiveness.
  • Working around the world to foster the values of freedom and individual rights that we share and cherish.

Those are just the highlights.  There’s much more.  And yet, we still have much to do.  The good part of this job – and perhaps the bad – is that we will never be done.  There are always problems to solve.  There are always opportunities to seize.

So I look forward to continuing to travel this beautiful country.  To continuing to work to improve what is already perhaps the strongest relationship in the world.  To continuing to try to improve the lives of the American and the Canadian people.

In the meantime, on behalf of myself and my family, I want to thank you for welcoming us into your country and doing so with such warmth and grace.

DJ

July 4: The U.S. and Canada: Neighbors, Partners, and Friends

Wednesday, July 4th, 2012

As we celebrate Canada Day and July 4 this week, I thought it might be a good time to reflect on the state of our bilateral relationship.
In short, I believe the relationship between the United States and Canada has never been stronger.

On so many fronts we are working together to achieve our shared goals: managing our border for greater efficiency and greater security; expanding trade for greater prosperity; and enhancing peace and security around the world.

The past couple of weeks have – quite frankly – been exceptional.

  • In Windsor and again in Detroit, Prime Minister Harper, Ministers Lebel and Baird, and Ambassador Doer met with Michigan Governor Snyder, United States Secretary of Transportation LaHood, and me, to finalize a decade’s worth of work on building a new bridge at the busiest border crossing between our two countries. Prime Minister Harper called it the most important piece of infrastructure that will be built during his tenure, a visionary project and great act of confidence in the future of the North American economy that will encourage investment and increase trade. Michigan Governor Rick Snyder noted that the new bridge will create tens of thousands of construction jobs on both sides of the border, and be a giant step toward reinventing Michigan.
  • Two days later the Canadian Parliament adopted a long-awaited copyright reform measure that will better protect the intellectual property that forms the basis for our North American knowledge-based economy.
  • The day after that, Prime Minister Harper and President Obama met to announce that Canada had been invited to participate in the Trans Pacific Partnership, a trade agreement of the highest ambition. One that holds the promise of creating literally millions of North American jobs by reducing trade barriers among Pacific nations, including Canada, the United States, and Mexico.
  •  Then two days after that the bi-national Executive Steering Committee created by the President and the Prime Minister met here in Ottawa to review progress on the Beyond the Border initiative designed to improve the operation of the Canada-US border to make it both more efficient and more secure. The conclusion of the Steering Committee was that we are on pace to meet the aggressive agenda and timetable set forth in the Action Plan by the President and the Prime Minister last December.

These achievements took place against the background of political and military cooperation between our two countries in Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, this hemisphere, and elsewhere around the world. Canada and the United States work together to foster the values we both celebrate on our National Days.

On the trade front the good news continues. From 2009 to 2011, trade between the United States and Canada increased by 37.8 % or $188.7 billion. Just last year Canadian exports to the United States increased by $41 billion (13%) or more than 10 times the increase in Canadian exports to China.

Canada remains the overwhelmingly largest foreign supplier of every form of energy to the United States. You send us virtually 100% of the electricity we import; 85% of the natural gas; and stunningly 27% of our foreign oil. The next highest foreign source of oil is Saudi Arabia at 12%!!!

None of this is to say that everything is perfect or that we do not — on occasion — have some bumps in the road. The economic challenges we face, particularly in my country, have, at times, caused strains. And it’s inconceivable that two sovereign nations with the largest economic relationship between two countries in the history of the world, two countries with the longest shared border in the world, would not have issues from time-to-time. But like the friends we are, we address those issues and we try to resolve them forthrightly.

As we honor these special days in our two nations I can say, on behalf of President Obama and the American people, that we are very lucky to have Canada as our neighbor.

Happy Canada Day. Happy 4th of July.

DJ

June 14, 2012: Economic Statecraft Day

Thursday, June 14th, 2012

Today is Global Economic Statecraft Day. When I heard that the U.S. State Department would be celebrating this day, my first thought was “every day in Canada is Economic Statecraft Day.” Our job is to help keep the wheels of the largest trading relationship in the world rolling and Economic Statecraft is how we do that. Our team at the Embassy in Ottawa and our seven consulates throughout Canada work tirelessly to ensure that the $1.8 billion in trade that crosses our shared border every day continues to flow in both directions and that the U.S.-Canadian economic relationship thrives.

I am in Vancouver today, meeting with business leaders to learn more about the business climate in British Columbia, opportunities to enhance bilateral cooperation on trade issues, and views on regulatory and border issues including the Regulatory Cooperation Council and Beyond the Border initiatives.

So what is Economic Statecraft, not just today, but every day? Economic Statecraft is Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s vision to put economics at the forefront of U.S. foreign policy. It means using smart economic foreign policy to promote the North American marketplace. It is a realization that security and prosperity are shaped in boardrooms and trading floors as well as in capital buildings and international summits. In Canada, Economic Statecraft means ensuring that our tremendous economic interdependence strengthens our relationships with each other and in the world.

In The Lexus and the Olive Tree, award-winning journalist Thomas Friedman wrote that no two countries with a McDonald’s restaurant have ever gone to war. This reflects an important point that economic interdependence breeds peace and stability. This, at its core, is Economic Statecraft and there is no better example of successful economic statecraft than in the U.S.-Canada relationship. Our trillion dollar trade and investment relationship creates close political and social connections and these political and social connections lead to even more trade. This “virtuous cycle” of friendships creating trade and trade creating friendships is exactly what Economic Statecraft is all about.

DJ

December 7, 2011: Beyond the Border: A Shared Vision for Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

I have just come from the Oval Office, where President Obama and Prime Minister Harper took our relationship to the next level as they announced the Action Plans for Beyond the Border: A Shared Vision for Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness.

The United States and Canada have long been the best of neighbors, friends, partners, and allies. Based on foundations of mutual reliance and respect we have built prosperity at home while standing shoulder-to-shoulder defending our shared values around the world. We have long understood that if we work together we are stronger, more prosperous, and more competitive.

President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper arrive to speak in the South Court Auditorium on the White House complex in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011


Building on that spirit, in February we set forth a plan for the future of North America. We committed to a shared vision for perimeter security and economic competitiveness. We agreed to work together within, at, and away from our borders to enhance our security, better coordinate our regulatory systems, and accelerate the legitimate flow of people, goods and services. We rejected the false choice between security and efficiency at the border. We realized that by improving the efficiency of the border in smart ways we would enhance the security of North America while lifting the standard of living of our people. We promised to consult with our citizens and to deliver a detailed Action Plan to realize our vision. Today we deliver on that promise.

In 1961, President Kennedy had the opportunity to address the Canadian Parliament. He famously said: “what unites us is far greater than what divides us.” With the actions we take today between our two great countries that statement was never more true.

I invite you to read all about the action plans and what they involve here. We’ve posted all the documents and fact sheets from the United States Government and I’m writing to invite you to learn as much as you can about the plan and what it involves. I invite your comments here and welcome your suggestions and support.

DJ

October 12, 2011: Ottawa

Friday, October 21st, 2011

Today I had a lunch that was a real thrill for the lawyer in me.

I often joke that I was a lawyer for 30 years, but that I have recovered. Well … the fact is I haven’t recovered. And days like this remind me that I don’t want to recover.

I had lunch with all of the Justices of the Canadian Supreme Court in their dining room. Just saying it kind of sends chills down my spine. As a student and then as a lawyer, I learned to revere the Supreme Court in my country. That sentiment carries over to Canada’s Supreme Court.

I am reminded of the famous line from Justice Robert Jackson of the U.S. Supreme Court: “We are not final because we are infallible; we are infallible because we are final.” They were certainly infallible hosts, and couldn’t have been nicer to me.

After lunch I had another thrill. I got a chance to meet with all of the Supreme Court Clerks. They truly are the very best and the very brightest young people Canada has to offer. And they did not disappoint.

I talked a little about what I do as an Ambassador, the state of the US-Canada relationship, and – perhaps most relevantly – how being a lawyer prepared me for my job as a diplomat.

It was quite an afternoon.

DJ

September 16, 2011: Boston

Monday, September 19th, 2011

Today Ambassador Doer and I spoke at a breakfast meeting of the New England Council, where we had a chance to talk about Beyond the Border, Regulatory Cooperation, and other key issues.     

Ambassador Jacobson and Ambassador Doer at the Hampshire House above the famous "Cheers" bar

The meeting took place at the Hampshire House which, those of you who are familiar with Boston know, is the restaurant upstairs of the famous bar where the television program Cheers was set. Unfortunately, the bar wasn’t open at 7:30 am when we arrived. So – instead of a beer – we had to settle for a photo.

DJ

August 8, 2011: Toronto

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Yesterday I gave a speech at the American Bar Association Convention in Toronto. The fact that 7000 United States lawyers came to a convention in Canada says much about the nature of the relationship between our two countries.

Before I got started I told the story about my first ABA convention many years ago. I had a great time. I learned a lot. I met some good people. And I bought a t-shirt. It said in big letters: “Talk is Cheap.” Then in small letters underneath it said: “Until you hire a lawyer.” That t-shirt was never far from my mind in the days when I practiced law.

The substance of my remarks were about the fact that in so many other places around the world, the very notion of the rule of law – something we take for granted – is wholly absent from society. And it’s not necessarily because people are mean or evil. Though sometimes, that is all too true. It’s often simply because they don’t understand the fundamentals of the rule of law. They don’t know about fair and impartial courts. They don’t understand reported decisions. There is no predictability of result. There is no enforcement of judicial decisions.

So, there is a huge demand for knowledge about how to impose the rule of law. But what about the supply?

Well of course there are many programs that exist. The United States government has been promoting the rule of law for over four decades. The U.S. Agency for International Development is the government agency in charge of U.S. foreign aid and rule of law programs. USAID sponsors rule of law projects with the help of partner organizations in more than 60 countries around the world. And many of these USAID projects are only possible in partnership with the American Bar Association in programs like the Rule of Law Initiative.  

But we need to do much more. And we have the capacity to do much more.

Today, the United States, Canada, and several other countries are oversaturated with bright, energetic, and talented young lawyers. The New York Times recently reported that across the United States, twice as many people passed the bar exam in 2009 as there were new job openings.  

In this environment of surplus talent, we have an opportunity to match our over-supply with the global demand. To spread our knowledge of the rule of law to the places around the world that need it so desperately. Not to insist on our specific rules and norms, but to give others the tools to apply their own values in a coherent, consistent, and fair way.

Rather than having young lawyers being unemployed or underemployed, saddling them with holes in their resumes, and wasting their energy, their talents, and their enthusiasm, I’d like to see a new Peace Corps of young lawyers. A new Peace Corps of our best and brightest who spread the thing that separates us the most from so much of the world.  The thing we all care so deeply about. The rule of law.

I was fortunate enough to have a chance to visit with outgoing ABA President Steve Zack about these issues.  Maybe we will be able to do something about them.

DJ

July 7, 2011: Navigating the Largest Trading Corridor in the World

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

The Detroit-Windsor trade corridor serves as the backbone to the world’s strongest economic partnership. The U.S. and Canada enjoy the largest and most comprehensive trading relationship found between any two states in the world with over $1 trillion in annual trade and investment.  U.S. trade with Canada totaled more than $520 billion in 2010.  Many people don’t realize it, but U.S. exports to Canada exceeded U.S. exports to China, Japan, South Korea and Singapore combined.

Last week I navigated that critical Detroit-Windsor trade corridor with members of the President’s Export Council (PEC) on their first international foray.  PEC members consulted with a group of vibrant Detroit area small- and medium-sized enterprises and met with the CEO representing the Canadian Council of Chief Executives and Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters to investigate what has made the U.S-Canadian trading relationship so strong.

It’s only appropriate that PEC members’ first international foray should be to Canada.  If we are going to meet President Obama’s National Export Initiative goal of doubling exports by 2014, Canada will figure prominently in that effort.  Increased U.S./Canada trade benefits both countries’ economies, jobs outlook and future growth.  U.S. exports to Canada increased by $44 billion in 2010 – up 22 percent.

We asked some of the best minds in the U.S. and Canadian business worlds to tell us what we can take from the success of the U.S.-Canadian commercial relationship that may be helpful in creating supply chain opportunities in other countries.  We discussed ideas on how to bolster cross-border trade and reduce the bureaucracy that slows down the movement of goods and people at our borders.

We talked about the importance of the North American competitiveness and steps the U.S. and Canada can take together to improve the efficiency of our marketplace.  This includes finding ways to constantly improve the flow of trade across our mutual border as well as investment in border crossing infrastructure such as new customs facilities, new and upgraded bridges, roads and tunnels.  An important focus was on what can be done to smooth the export process for small and medium businesses.

The PEC members will report back to President Obama on what they have heard last week in order for the U.S, and Canadian governments to incorporate the ideas into our border and regulatory cooperation initiatives.

By the end of business today, more than $1.4 billion dollars in merchandise will travel through the Detroit-Windsor trade corridor.

Tomorrow – it’s $1.4 billion and counting.

April 27, 2011: Devil’s Lake, North Dakota and Morris, Manitoba

Friday, April 29th, 2011

The last couple of days I traveled in Manitoba and North Dakota and saw a disaster in slow motion.

Since I arrived in Canada I have spent a lot of time addressing the flooding in this part of the United States and Canada. I decided I needed to see it for myself to better understand what is going on. And what better time than as the floodwaters crested.

Ambassador Jacobson learns about the floods in Manitoba and North Dakota

For anyone who has never seen this type of flooding, it is hard to describe. It brings to mind biblical times.

I saw two separate but related types of flooding.

In much of Manitoba and North Dakota there are “spring floods.” These are not like the spring floods where I come from where there are a few puddles and a basement or two gets flooded. These are towns and roads and farms disappearing. Water extending over what is usually dry land for as far as the eye can see. Seasonal flooding like this, while destructive — and this is another particularly bad year — can be prepared for. For example, the floodway in Winnipeg.

We also saw a more permanent type of flooding at Devil’s Lake which occurs because there is no natural outlet for all the water during wet cycles like the one we’re in.

We started in Winnipeg where many roads were out. But we finally made it south to Morris, Manitoba. We stood on the levy on the Morris River. I am told that during the summer you can walk across the Morris River. In summer, the bridge near where we stood is normally 20 feet above the river. What we saw today looked quite different. The bridge was submerged. There was a dike built across the road to connect the permanent levees on both sides. And there was water everywhere. Farms, houses, a cemetery, everything was under water.

Floods in Morris, Manitoba

We continued down Highway 75 which was down to one lane, and stopped at the border crossing at Pembina for a quick tour.

Floods in Morris, Manitoba

We then drove several hours south to Devil’s Lake. There was massive flooding on and off for the whole trip. But nothing we saw could prepare us for Devil’s Lake.

Floods in Morris, Manitoba

In the 1940′s after the drought during the Depression, Devil’s Lake was almost dry. Our tour guide remembers riding a horse across what was then open farm country and what is now water as far as the eye can see. The problem is that while water can run into Devil’s Lake, there is no natural run off. So as the rains came the lake expanded. Since the early 90′s the lake has quadrupled in size, rising more than 28 feet and inundating 138,000 acres. Miles of road have been lost, making access for school buses, supplies, and commuting difficult and time-consuming. In just this past week, the lake has risen a foot. Unlike the situation elsewhere in North Dakota and Manitoba, when the spring floods recede — which they will — Devil’s Lake won’t go down. The land is lost until the rainy periods abate (years or decades) or until we can develop some sort of a man-made solution.

Joe Belford, County Commissioner from Ramsey County, ND, took us on an extended tour around the lake. We saw hundreds of homes, tens of thousands of acres of family farms, streets, and businesses which had literally disappeared. It is heart breaking.

One scene — however — stands out in my mind. We were going through one of the many neighborhoods that were in the process of disappearing. Most of the houses were gone. A school was about to flood. (Someone asked why they would build a school so close to the lake. The answer is that when it was built it was 9 miles from the lake.) There was one house still standing with an elderly couple in the front yard raking the lawn. Joe said: “See, they aren’t giving up.” Their perseverance will — I hope — give the rest of us the inspiration to keep working until we come up with a solution to this difficult problem.

Today we drove back from Devil’s Lake and stopped at the Pembina Dike which is just on the Canadian side of the border. There is a long-standing dispute as to whether it is a road (arguably proper) or a dike to divert water (not proper). I’ll let you decide from the pictures. But I must say I didn’t see much (any) traffic.

One positive note. In Manitoba on the road north we saw huge wind farms. The commitment to alternative energy was literally an island of hope in a sea of despair.

We then drove the rest of the way back to Winnipeg where I had lunch with Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger. We had productive discussions about flooding and other issues and then went on a helicopter tour of the Winnipeg Floodway which was built to reroute part of the Red River around Winnipeg. We were told that because it spares the city from most of the flooding it has saved $30 billion since it was built.

Ambassador Jacobson boarding a helicopter to view the floods

While the city itself is dry, much of the surrounding area is not. When we headed south toward Morris and beyond we could see how the Red River — typically a few hundred yards wide — extended for MANY miles. It looked more like a huge lake than a river. It took my breath away.

A helicopter view of the floods in the Red River, Winnipeg

I’m now on my way back to Ottawa with a much better understanding of what the people in this part of the world are enduring and with a new found energy to help try to address their problems.

DJ