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    1. Little-Chemical5006 on

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      SYDNEY, March 3 (Reuters) – Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Australia on Tuesday, aiming to bolster relations between the two so-called „middle powers“ amid ​what he has called a „rupture“ in world order.

      The leaders of ‌both nations, close allies of the United States, are meeting as war escalates in the Middle East, and will look to strengthen ties as top producers of critical minerals.

      Carney ​is on a multi-leg trip across the Asia-Pacific region also taking in ​Japan and India, where he signed trade deals and reset relations ⁠with New Delhi after a year-long spat over Sikh separatism.

      Canada and ​Australia have warmer ties, with the two nations expected to deepen cooperation in ​areas such as defence and maritime security, critical minerals, trade and artificial intelligence, Carney’s office said ahead of the visit.

      Carney is set to address Australia’s parliament and meet Prime Minister ​Anthony Albanese, who described Canada last week as one of Australia’s „closest friends, ​built on generations of trust“, and urged closer ties to promote national interests.

      Western nations ‌seek ⁠to build their own stockpiles of critical minerals, key for production of semiconductors and defence applications, as China, the world’s dominant producer, tightens supply.

      „There’s a lot Canada and Australia can do together on critical minerals as producer nations,“ Australian ​Resources Minister Madeline ​King said on ⁠Monday, when asked about Carney’s visit.

      „Middle powers“ needed to work more closely together, Carney said last month in a ​widely publicised speech at the World Economic Forum in ​Davos.

      „Middle powers ⁠must act together because if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu,“ he said.

      In a speech on Wednesday at the Lowy Institute think tank ⁠in ​Sydney, Carney is expected to press his ​point further, outlining shifts in the global order and the opportunities they offer middle powers such ​as Canada and Australia.

    2. Maybe middle power leaders should all be more careful all meeting up in the same room

    3. shiftless_wonder on

      Carney left last Thursday with reporters in tow and has yet to hold a presser or answer a single question the entire trip.

    4. Agreeable_Manner2848 on

      Middle powers seem a bit of a naive moniker, maybe lessor middle powers, Canada has no armed forces and Canberra is basically a city-state run by America

    5. dagthegnome on

      There is no such thing as a „middle power.“ The „rules-based“ international order to which liberal globalists are so ideologically committed was never anything but a façade: an illusion enforced by the United States. But propping up that order has long since ceased to be in the US‘ interests, and they’ve finally decided to stop doing it.

      So now we’re back to the realpolitik of global politics: the world is run by 2-3 imperial powers which are the only ones that actually have the power to enforce their own sovereignty and leverage less powerful states when they want to. The rest of us exist inside the sphere of influence of one or another of those powers. And the governments of Canada and Australia appear to be so full of impotent, self-righteous resentment of the United States that they’d rather sell out their countries and their electorates to China instead.

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