By Gary Robinson on Monday, 23 July 2018
Category: European Union

CANZUK – a new alliance for the 21st Century

Seizing the opportunity

Speaking in London in April this year, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said:

'…the reality is all of that; you could not find two countries more close in every respect; family, culture, history and values. You know Australia was the sole country outside of NATO and the EU that expelled Russian diplomats in response to the shocking nerve agent attack in Salisbury, here on British soil. There is nowhere in the world where Australians feel more at home than the United Kingdom. We have extraordinary shared values, shared history, shared family. In a post Brexit environment we see even greater opportunities for trade and investment between the United Kingdom and Australia. I can assure you that we will do everything we can to enable the UK to enter into the most favourable open - to quote President Trump - fair and reciprocal, trade deal between Australia and the UK.'[1]

Mr Turnbull's warm words are of course welcome, but if I may be so bold, a little uninspired. Brexit offers more opportunities than a simple bilateral UK-AUZ trade deal.

CANZUK

The grand idea of a continent-spanning 'CANZUK' alliance between Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the UK has been discussed by politicians and journalists for many years.

As historian and journalist Andrew Roberts wrote in 2016:

'Much more unites than divides the CANZUK countries, and were it to become a Union it immediately become one of the global great powers alongside America, the EU and China. It would be easily the largest country on the planet, have a combined population of 129 million, the third biggest economy and the third biggest defence budget.'[2]

Brexit (the UK's decision to leave the European Union) gives the UK the opportunity to finally make this vision a reality. In this article I will discuss how CANZUK would be a mutually beneficial grouping that would help its members address the challenges of the 21st century and help deliver prosperity, opportunity and safety for its 132 million citizens.

Cousins across the seas

As journalist Andrew Lillico wrote in 2017:

'There are 1.3 million UK ex-pats in Australia, 670,000 in Canada and 310,000 in New Zealand. That is 2.3 million UK ex-pats elsewhere in CANZUK (about 45 per cent of all UK ex-pats), nearly twice as many as in the EU27 and three times as many as in the US — even though the population of the US is more than five times that of CANZ.Of 600,000 New Zealanders living abroad, around 90 per cent live elsewhere in CANZUK. For Australia, the figure is about 22 per cent, with the UK as the single largest destination…for geopolitical partnerships to last, a common sense of "us" is vital. CANZUK has that. That is the most basic reason why it will work.'[3]

Achievable?

How realistic would such an alliance be? I would argue that it would be both achievable, and possible to establish within a short space of time.

The CANZUK countries already work together closely. All participate in the "5-Eyes" intelligence partnership.The 'FVEY' countries are Britain, the US, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.[4] All co-operate on crime prevention via Interpol.[5]

All are part of the Commonwealth[6] of Nations and recognise the same Monarch, Sovereign Queen Elizabeth II. We share similar parliamentary systems and laws. In addition, Canada and the UK work together as founding members of NATO.[7]

Given the pre-existing close relationships between the CANZUK countries, their advanced co-operation in many fields and long-established bonds of friendship, I believe that all the necessary elements for a new CANZUK alliance are in place.We need only to grasp the opportunity.

What form would this take?

There are many forms that a CANZUK agreement could take and obviously it would be subject to negotiation, but this is how I envision such an alliance. First, the CANZUK union should be based on the principles of Intergovernmentalism, not Supranationalism. Each member would have a veto in all areas, and decisions would be taken after intense debate and unanimity. Its charter could place specific limits on its powers and the number of civil servants it could employ; to prevent it becoming a bloated bureaucracy.

The CANZUK alliance could contain the following elements:


What can the UK bring to the CANZUK table?

Quite a lot:


Trans-Pacific vision

Several countries, including Australia, New Zealand and Canada, negotiated the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in 2015. This deal was dealt a serious setback however, when US President Trump pulled out of the proposed agreement in 2017 by executive order.[10] Since then, the remaining states have relaunched the initiative under the new name Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP); but this has yet to be ratified.

Since CANZUK would involve only four countries, it is possible that a CANZUK deal could be signed, sealed and ratified before all 11 TPP countries ratify CPTPP – if it ever is.

Summary

The UK made the right decision when it voted to leave the European Union. But make no mistake, the UK is now entering a radically different world from that which existed in the 1970s before we joined the EEC.

Alongside the perennial threats of pollution, crime and hostile nation states, the new threats of cybercrime and cyberterrorism, Isis/Daesh and other radical groups have emerged.

Given the rise of China as an economic powerhouse, the unpredictability and protectionism of the current US administration, coupled with the even greater unpredictability and danger posed by Putin's Russia, it would not be sensible for the UK to 'go it alone' in the world.

Brexit makes a CANZUK alliance possible, and President Trump's protectionism and antipathy towards his NAFTA partners makes it more likely that Canada would seek to join a CANZUK alliance.

CANZUK represents a massive opportunity for its potential members, and we must seize the opportunity now, before the opportunity is lost. Either we shape the 21st century together or we will be side-lined by China and the big trade blocs.Let's unite and thrive together.


[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38721056