This article from Macdonald-Laurier Institute senior fellow Christian Leuprecht originally appeared in European View, a publication of the Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies.
Read the full journal article here.
May 27, 2025
Buffeted by the headwinds of US unilateralism, Europeans and Canadians are bound together in a community of fate.
As the US departs the field, Europe and Canada need to cooperate more. To avoid being abandoned, they need to avail themselves of Atlanticist power for mutual benefit. Rather than merely protecting a liberal–democratic zone of peace across the Western hemisphere, Europe and Canada need to project the power of the transatlantic security community to deter Russia from using war to precipitate a multipolar world order in which it becomes a global player.
This article draws on the metaphor of transatlantic relations as a triangle: with the US, Europe and Canada at its angles. Canada is in an existentially precarious position: a more autonomous Europe would make Canada even more dependent on the American hegemon, which would heighten Canada’s risk of being absorbed by the US. Although that outcome is not in Europe’s interest, Europe and Canada have been disengaging for decades. Reversing this trajectory would come at a significant military cost but would be a political gain that would be difficult to measure, resulting in cooperation on energy security, critical minerals, defence and defence in depth. Yet, to achieve this strategic counterbalance, Europe and Canada need to protect abiding security and political interests: to keep the US in Europe and to keep the Russians out.
Christian Leuprecht is a Visiting Fellow at the Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies, Distinguished Professor at the Royal Military College of Canada and Queen’s University, and a Senior Fellow at Canada’s Macdonald Laurier Institute.