BEIJING — Canadian leader Mark Carney met China's Xi Jinping this week. The two statesmen talked. Fractured relationships began to heal. And a third man, though he wasn't in the room, nevertheless made his presence clearly known: Donald Trump.
The American president — his policies, his approaches to international relations, his freewheeling and provocative statements about Canada — helped inform meetings 8,000 miles (13,000 kilometers) away between two nations working to reestablish ties stalled for nearly a decade as they grapple with the same challenge: wondering what Washington might do next.
Canada's reengagement with China, its second-largest trading partner behind the U.S., is unfolding in keeping with a term Chinese media have loved this past week — ''strategic autonomy.'' Essentially, it means that a nation like Canada, so intertwined with the United States for so long as unswerving allies, needs other pillars to hold up its international foundations given recent speed bumps in the Washington-Ottawa relationship.
What does such strategic autonomy look like? For Canada, it means a trading partner with whom Carney acknowledges differences in culture and ''ways of life'' — terms he invoked when asked about China's approach to human rights. That's one way of saying that ties between two very different countries have political and cultural limits — particularly in terms of their views of freedom.
Carney, who met with several leading Chinese companies in Beijing, says his government is focused on building an economy less reliant on the United States at what he called ''a time of global trade disruption.''
''The security landscape continues to change,'' said Carney, who departed Beijing on Saturday. ''We face many threats. You manage those threats through alliances.''
Real results, with a larger narrative behind them
Certainly, concrete results emerged from the visit.