Canada believes US President Donald Trump is no longer interested in turning it into the 51st state, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday.
Asked by CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on the sidelines of the NATO meeting in the Netherlands whether Trump is still saying he wants to annex Canada, Carney replied, “No, he is not.”
“He admires Canada,” Carney told Amanpour. “I think it’s fair to say, maybe for a period of time (he) coveted Canada.”
This is not the first time an official has pronounced the annexation saga over. On May 22, Peter Hoekstra, the US ambassador to Canada, told CNN’s broadcast partner CBC that “Donald Trump is not talking about” turning Canada into the 51st state anymore. (Days later, Trump posted on social media that Canada ought to become the 51st state to reap the benefits of the president’s proposed missile defense system.)
Carney has frequently pronounced the old, close partnership between Canada and the United States as “over.” He began his term by courting European partners in the United Kingdom and France, and even collaborating with Australia on new radar systems for the Canadian Arctic.
Still, Carney credited Trump for pushing Canada toward higher defense spending, especially meeting the defense spending benchmark for NATO members.