Yes, certainly, I'd be glad to.
I think Peter is right about nations. Of course we want our country to hold its head up in the world, but you have to consider what your assets are and what your limitations are when you aspire to influence international events.
There's a certain amount of the Canadian presence that is, you might say, a fortuitous accident of our history. That is to say, we happen to be a country that was once a French colony and then became a British colony. That has given us in this past generation the possibility of creating links, if we wished, with two-thirds of the sovereign states in the world, with many of whom we really share, initially anyway, very little except this historic accident that they too were once either a French colony or a British colony. Well, if you apply the hard-boiled test of immediate Canadian interests, very often you find that our interests in these countries are minuscule, initially at least, and the relationships have to be synthesized out of almost nothing, to begin with.
When empires were put on the block after the first war, and particularly after the second war, the nation faced the decision of whether it would limit its perspectives. For instance, again as Peter was suggesting, we might have said Canada's role is really in the Americas, and if we're going to help poor countries, for instance, there's lots of poverty to be dealt with right here on our geographic doorstep, so to speak. We could have, had we wished to, focused our efforts then and not developed a worldwide set of connections. Again, I myself think it was because of a historic accident. That is to say, when the British empire broke up, it broke into some huge pieces, and when India, in particular, became independent in 1947 and marked the end of the British empire, it was obvious that this was a vast, new sovereign state, one of the most populous countries in the world, the focus of hundreds of millions of people, many of them living in poverty. This was a vast weight in the international system that you simply couldn't ignore, in particular because we had a connection with it in the Commonwealth membership and in the fact that India was this vast democracy, and we wished to encourage and support India.
So when the question was first put to Canada, in effect we said yes, we are open; we must be open, surely, to the possibilities of an expanded relationship with countries like India and Pakistan. But that set the pattern. Nobody thought at the time that, well, if you do that in India and Pakistan, what do you do for all the other ex-British colonies that are going to become sovereign states in the next generation? In particular, no one foresaw at that time that the French empire was going to be put on the block in the fifties.