Preface
Permissions
Introduction
Section 1: Canada and the United States
1. Getting on with the Americans: Changing Canadian Perceptions of the United States, 1939–1945
2. Canada and the Marshall Plan, June–December 1947
3. The Rise and Fall of Canadian–American Free Trade, 1947–1948
4. Too Close for Comfort: John Diefenbaker and the Political Uses of Anti-Americanism
5. When Push Came to Shove: Canada and the United States
6. A Friendly Agreement in Advance: Canada-US Defence Relations Past, Present, and Future
Section 2: Canada and Britain
7. The Anglocentrism of Canadian Diplomacy
8. Dealing with London
9. How Britain’s Weakness Forced Canada into the Arms of the United States
10. From Mother Country to Far-Away Relative: The Canadian-British Military Relationship from 1945
Section 3: Canada in the World
11. Canada as an Ally: Always Difficult, Always Divided
12. When the Department of External Affairs Mattered – And When It Shouldn’t Have
13. Peacekeeping Is Our Profession?
14. Peacekeeping: Did Canada Make a Difference? And What Difference Did Peacekeeping Make to Canada?
15. What’s Wrong with Peacekeeping?
16. War and Peacekeeping in the Canadian Psyche
17. Changing Alliances: Canada and the Soviet Union, 1939–1945
18. From Gouzenko to Gorbachev: Canada’s Cold War
19. Multiculturalism and Canadian Foreign Policy
20. Can Canada Have a Grand Strategy?