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Sunday, 5 April 2026


The Infrastructure of Primacy:

International Institutions, International Law, and the Geostrategic

and Socioeconomic Interests of the United States


Abstract

This paper argues that international institutions and international law constitute a structural extension of United States power rather than a constraint upon it. Drawing on recent developments and data from 2024 to 2026, including the Trump administration's sweeping programme of multilateral disengagement, escalating tariff measures, and the accelerating de-dollarisation initiatives of the BRICS bloc, it demonstrates that these frameworks reduce systemic risk, enhance U.S. economic performance, preserve dollar hegemony, and amplify geopolitical influence. The paper evaluates the short- and long-term consequences of institutional adherence versus erosion, concluding that the disengagement strategy pursued since January 2025 imposes quantifiable economic costs and accelerates geopolitical fragmentation to the detriment of U.S. national interests. The central argument is that the rules-based international order is not an external burden on American sovereignty but the very infrastructure of American primacy.



I. Order as Strategy, Not Constraint

The post-1945 international order, anchored in the Bretton Woods institutions, multilateral trade regimes, and codified international law, was not primarily a normative project but a strategic architecture designed largely by the United States to stabilise capitalism and prevent systemic great-power conflict. Seven decades later, the structural logic that motivated its construction remains intact, even as the domestic political consensus undergirding American participation has fractured.

The U.S. economy, exceeding $28 trillion in nominal GDP in 2025 and deeply integrated into global trade and finance, remains structurally dependent on this rules-based order. Roughly 40 percent of S&P 500 revenues are generated abroad, while the U.S. dollar accounts for approximately 57-60 percent of global foreign exchange reserves according to IMF COFER data. These figures illustrate a central reality: American prosperity is inseparable from global institutional stability.

That structural reality has been thrown into sharp relief since January 2025. The second Trump administration launched an unprecedented campaign of multilateral disengagement: withdrawal from the World Health Organisation, the United Nations Human Rights Council, the Paris Agreement, and the closure of USAID. By January 2026, a Presidential Memorandum directed the United States' withdrawal from 66 international organisations, including 31 entities within the United Nations system. Simultaneously, the administration imposed sweeping tariffs — with average effective rates reaching 7.7 percent in 2025, the highest since 1947 — generating retaliatory responses from major trading partners and producing market volatility not seen since the 2008 financial crisis.

This paper examines whether this strategy of institutional retrenchment serves or undermines U.S. national interests. The weight of evidence strongly suggests the latter. The question is no longer whether international institutions matter, but whether the United States can sustain its strategic primacy without them.

II. Macroeconomic Stability and the Management of Systemic Risk

II.i. Crisis Containment and Global Demand Stabilisation

Institutions such as the International Monetary Fund function as systemic stabilisers. During periods of financial distress, IMF-led interventions prevent localised crises from cascading into global contractions — an outcome of direct relevance to the United States given the deep exposure of its banks, institutional investors, and export-oriented corporations to global market conditions. The IMF's World Economic Outlook of October 2025 estimated global growth at approximately 3.0 percent, characterising the environment as fragile and subject to significant downside risks concentrated in financial tightening, trade fragmentation, and sovereign debt vulnerabilities.

The IMF is currently engaged in economic programmes with Egypt, Jordan, and Ukraine — three countries central to American security interests — and in active discussions regarding Lebanon. As one former Biden administration official has noted, these institutions play a critical and highly cost-effective role in advancing U.S. foreign policy goals across dozens of countries simultaneously. Without coordinated multilateral responses, regional crises in these strategically sensitive economies could produce sharper contractions and demand more expensive and less effective bilateral U.S. interventions.

The short-run implication is clear: IMF-led stabilisation reduces volatility in U.S. equity and credit markets. The long-run implication is equally important: it preserves the global growth environment that sustains U.S. capital accumulation, innovation, and corporate earnings.

II.ii. The Cost of Disengagement: Quantifying the Tariff Shock

The 2025-2026 tariff programme represents the most significant test of institutional disengagement in the modern era and provides preliminary empirical data on its costs. The Yale Budget Lab estimates that the cumulative effect of all 2025 tariffs, accounting for trading partner retaliation, reduces real GDP growth by approximately 0.9 percentage points in 2025 and leaves the long-run level of real GDP permanently smaller by 0.6 percent — equivalent to $160 billion annually in 2024 dollars. U.S. exports are projected to be 18.1 percent lower in the long run under this policy trajectory.

Research from the Tax Foundation estimates that the Trump tariff programme amounts to the largest U.S. tax increase as a percentage of GDP since 1993, raising effective taxes on U.S. households by an average of $1,500 in 2026. The average effective tariff rate of 7.7 percent in 2025, the highest since 1947, demonstrates the magnitude of the departure from the post-war trade liberalisation consensus.

Modelling by Rodriguez-Clare and co-authors using a dynamic quantitative trade framework projects that four years of elevated tariffs with full retaliation would reduce U.S. real wages by 1.4 percent by 2028 and generate an unemployment spike as tariffs eventually unwind. Crucially, the tariffs have not achieved their stated objective of meaningfully reducing the U.S. trade deficit, which fell by only $2.1 billion in 2025, driven by an increase in the services surplus rather than by any structural correction in goods trade.

In a further complication, on 20 February 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorise the imposition of tariffs, striking down the legal basis for a substantial portion of the tariff programme. The resulting policy uncertainty has itself imposed economic costs, as businesses suspended investment decisions and global supply chains were disrupted during the period of legal ambiguity.

III. The Trade Architecture, Supply Chain Resilience, and Productivity

III.i. The WTO System and the Benefits of Rules-Based Trade

The multilateral trading system reduces uncertainty by codifying rules governing tariffs, subsidies, and dispute resolution. This lowers transaction costs for U.S. firms operating globally and underpins the legal predictability that significantly boosts foreign direct investment. Empirical research in international economics consistently shows that rules-based trade increases bilateral trade flows by 20 to 40 percent compared to non-institutionalised arrangements, and OECD and WTO data from 2025 indicate that sustained trade fragmentation could reduce global GDP by up to 5 percent over the long term, with advanced economies bearing the largest absolute losses due to their integration in high-value supply chains.

The administration's imposition of tariffs on Canada, China, Mexico, and the European Union, combined with its characterisation of national security as beyond the jurisdiction of WTO dispute settlement, has prompted formal WTO consultations from Canada, China, and the European Union. The United States has asserted that such actions are not susceptible to WTO review, a position that, if widely adopted, would effectively hollow out the organisation's dispute resolution function and remove the key mechanism that has prevented trading relationships from degenerating into politically-driven confrontation.

III.ii. Supply Chain Interdependence and the Limits of Decoupling

The 2025 tariff programme has disrupted supply chains in semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, and consumer electronics — sectors in which U.S. firms depend on globally distributed production networks that cannot be quickly or cheaply replicated domestically. The administration's signalling that pharmaceutical tariffs could potentially rise towards 200 percent by mid-to-late 2026 has produced significant uncertainty in healthcare supply planning.

International legal frameworks facilitate standards harmonisation, protect intellectual property, and enable cross-border production networks. Without them, supply chains become redundant and inefficient, inflationary due to duplication of production capacity, and vulnerable to political disruption. The resulting effect is structurally lower productivity growth — a permanent tax on the innovative capacity of the U.S. economy.

IV. Dollar Hegemony, Financial Power, and the Costs of Institutional Erosion

IV.i. Institutions as Pillars of Dollar Dominance

The global role of the U.S. dollar rests not only on the size of the American economy but on trust in U.S. legal systems, the stability of international financial institutions, and the depth and liquidity of U.S. capital markets. As of April 2025, according to the BIS Triennial Survey, the dollar was involved in 89.2 percent of all foreign exchange transactions globally, and the IMF's COFER data places the dollar's share of global foreign exchange reserves at approximately 56 to 58 percent — lower than its peak of 72 percent in 2001, but still far exceeding any competitor. Dollar dominance provides the United States with extraordinary advantages: lower borrowing costs, seigniorage benefits, and, critically, the ability to employ financial sanctions as instruments of foreign policy.

The IMF, World Bank, and global financial regulatory bodies reinforce these conditions by promoting transparency, standardising financial practices, and anchoring market expectations. U.S. officials have consistently used these institutions to advance American interests — appointing the World Bank's president, effectively approving the IMF's managing director, and retaining the sole veto power over major institutional decisions that require an 85 percent majority. As former IMF chief economist Maurice Obstfeld has noted, these institutions serve as ideal vehicles for projecting U.S. cultural, political, and economic influence, precisely because the United States wields disproportionate power within them.

IV.ii. The Tariff-Dollar Nexus: Evidence from Liberation Day

A critical finding from the 2025 tariff programme is its unexpected effect on the dollar. Standard economic theory predicts that tariff imposition should appreciate the imposing country's currency by shifting global demand inward. Instead, the dollar depreciated by more than 10 percent against other major currencies in the first half of 2025 following the Liberation Day tariff announcement of 2 April 2025 — its most significant depreciation in over 50 years.

Research by Hassan, Mertens, Wang, and Zhang, presented at the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity conference in September 2025, provides a theoretical and empirical account of this outcome: when tariffs are met with retaliation, the dollar weakens rather than strengthens, because the trade war erodes the dollar's safe-haven premium. Their model estimates that the tariff levels prevailing in mid-2025 had already raised U.S. interest rates by half a percentage point — a modest-sounding figure that carries enormous fiscal implications given U.S. debt-to-GDP ratios projected to exceed 120 percent by the early 2030s. Every increase in borrowing costs compounds the long-run fiscal burden and reduces the government's flexibility to respond to future crises.

The Brookings analysis further demonstrates that inhibiting trade flows through tariffs weakens the force underpinning the dollar's special role, with the potential loss of safe-haven status leading to higher U.S. interest rates, a lower world-market value of U.S. assets, and reduced inward investment. Morgan Stanley research projected an additional 10 percent dollar depreciation over 2026 to 2027 if tariff policies persist, cementing what some analysts have described as the end of the post-2010 dollar bull cycle.

IV.iii. The BRICS Challenge and Parallel Financial Architecture

U.S. institutional disengagement is occurring against a backdrop of accelerating efforts by the BRICS bloc — now expanded to include Egypt, Iran, the UAE, Ethiopia, and Indonesia, representing approximately 45 percent of global population and 35 percent of global GDP by purchasing power parity — to construct alternative financial infrastructure. These efforts include China's Cross-Border Interbank Payments System (CIPS), which processed the equivalent of $245 trillion in yuan-denominated transactions in 2025; the mBridge multi-CBDC platform; and the launch of the BRICS Unit, a pilot gold-backed settlement instrument in which 40 percent of the backing is in gold and 60 percent in member currencies.

The dollar nevertheless remains structurally dominant. The yuan accounts for less than 5 percent of global reserves; China's capital controls prevent full convertibility; and BRICS lacks the strategic unity required to coordinate a decisive challenge. India's February 2026 bilateral trade deal with the United States — agreeing to halt Russian oil purchases in exchange for U.S. tariff reductions — illustrated the limits of BRICS cohesion when individual members face strong bilateral incentives to align with Washington.

The relevant question, however, is not whether the dollar faces imminent displacement but whether U.S. policy is increasing or decreasing the rate of erosion. The evidence from 2025 to 2026 suggests the former. As the IMF's COFER data has shown a gradual decline from a peak reserve share of 72 percent in 2001 to approximately 57 percent in 2024, the combination of institutional withdrawal, tariff-induced dollar depreciation, and sanctions-driven incentives for dollar avoidance is accelerating a structural shift that, at sufficient magnitude, would permanently raise U.S. borrowing costs and reduce fiscal flexibility.

V. Geostrategic Influence, Alliance Cohesion, and the Legitimacy Premium

V.i. Structural Power and Embedded Leadership

International institutions allow the United States to exercise what Susan Strange termed structural power — the capacity to shape the rules within which all other states operate, rather than simply compelling specific behavioural outcomes through coercion. This capacity extends to setting regulatory standards adopted globally, directing development finance through the World Bank towards U.S. strategic priorities, coordinating multilateral sanctions regimes that impose costs on adversaries at comparatively low expense to the United States, and framing the normative environment within which states define their interests.

The Trump administration's approach has sought to preserve some of this leverage while reducing what it characterises as the cost of multilateral membership. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's statement that 'America First does not mean America alone,' delivered ahead of the World Bank and IMF spring meetings in 2025, signalled a conditional rather than absolute withdrawal. The administration has indeed used its continuing presence in the IMF and World Bank to advance energy priorities — successfully pressing the World Bank to lift its ban on nuclear energy financing and prompting the IMF to reorganise its climate and gender units. These outcomes illustrate that engagement, even at reduced levels, retains influence.

V.ii. The Legitimacy Deficit and Alliance Erosion

The broader pattern of disengagement, however, imposes a legitimacy cost that undermines the more targeted forms of influence the administration seeks to exercise. Allies are more likely to align with U.S. positions when policies are embedded in international law, when actions are coordinated through shared institutions, and when commitments appear credible and consistent. Unilateralism erodes trust and accelerates hedging behaviour. The imposition of tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and the European Union — close allies within existing treaty frameworks — produced diplomatic friction and domestic political pressures in those countries that have made future cooperation on issues of greater strategic significance, including China policy, more difficult to secure.

The United States' withdrawal from 66 international organisations, including bodies responsible for climate science (the IPCC), gender equality (UN Women), and trade development (UNCTAD), has created a legitimacy vacuum that China, the European Union, and other actors are actively seeking to fill. The French scholar's aphorism that the United States is uniquely capable of making enemies of its friends applies with unusual force to a strategy that simultaneously alienates allies through tariffs and reduces U.S. presence in the institutions through which the alliance system operates.

VI. Security Externalities and Conflict Prevention

International institutions reduce the probability of costly inter-state conflict by providing diplomatic channels for dispute resolution, increasing transparency about military capabilities and intentions, and establishing behavioural norms that raise the reputational cost of aggression. While great-power competition between the United States and China persists and in some dimensions has intensified, institutional frameworks lower miscalculation risks, enable crisis management mechanisms, and reduce escalation probabilities — outcomes of material value to a country whose defence budget already exceeds $900 billion annually.

The reduction of U.S. funding for UN peacekeeping operations — with $838 million in cuts announced in August 2025 — reduces the capacity of these operations in regions where American strategic interests are directly implicated. Instability in the Sahel, the Horn of Africa, and the Middle East has historically generated the conditions for terrorist recruitment, mass migration, and proxy conflicts that impose substantial costs on U.S. security. The cost-effectiveness calculation is straightforward: multilateral peacekeeping expenditures funded in significant part by other states typically cost the United States far less than bilateral military deployments to address the consequences of failed or fragile states.

VII. Domestic Socioeconomic Welfare and the Distributional Dimension

VII.i. Consumer and Labour Market Effects

International trade and institutional stability lower consumer prices, expand product variety, and support export-oriented employment. Despite the distributional challenges associated with globalisation, the aggregate effect on U.S. real income remains positive: trade contributes significantly to purchasing power, and global integration supports high-value sectors including technology, finance, and services in which the United States holds competitive advantages.

The tariff programme has imposed direct and measurable costs on households. The Tax Foundation estimates that the total tariff burden amounted to an average tax increase of $1,000 per U.S. household in 2025 and $600 per household in 2026, following the Supreme Court's partial invalidation of the IEEPA tariff authority. The distributional impact falls most heavily on lower-income households, for whom imported goods constitute a larger share of consumption expenditure.

VII.ii. Inequality and the Correct Policy Response

The legitimate grievances underlying political support for trade restriction — wage stagnation, deindustrialisation, and regional economic displacement — are real and deserve serious policy responses. However, the correct response lies in domestic policy measures including investment in education and workforce development, redistribution through the tax and transfer system, and strategic industrial policy in sectors of genuine national security importance — not in the dismantling of international institutions that provide net aggregate benefits.

Protectionism of the scale pursued in 2025 typically exacerbates inequality by raising prices for goods consumed disproportionately by lower-income households, reducing competitiveness in export sectors, and slowing the aggregate growth that generates fiscal capacity for redistributive programmes. The temporary surge in manufacturing employment projected by dynamic trade models is offset by larger contractions in services and agriculture, and by the welfare costs of higher prices across the economy.

VIII. The Reform Imperative: Engagement as the Strategic Response

International institutions are genuinely imperfect. Governance structures reflect the geopolitical realities of the mid-twentieth century rather than the distribution of economic power in the twenty-first. Representation imbalances persist that disadvantage large emerging economies. Bureaucratic inefficiencies accumulate over decades of institutional sedimentation. These are legitimate criticisms that warrant serious reform efforts.

The strategic response to institutional imperfection, however, is reform from within, not withdrawal. An institution reformed under U.S. leadership — with updated voting weights, enhanced accountability mechanisms, and modernised mandates addressing digital trade, climate finance, and pandemic preparedness — serves U.S. interests far more effectively than its replacement by a vacuum that rivals fill on less favourable terms. The creation of the BRICS New Development Bank, CIPS, and the mBridge payment platform illustrates the speed with which institutional gaps are occupied when the United States retreats. These alternatives, imperfect and fragmented as they currently are, will mature.

The UN's own reform process — including discussions on the Pact for the Future and the UN80 reform initiative seeking greater efficiency and reduced mandate overlap — provides channels through which a constructively engaged United States could shape the next generation of multilateral governance. The G20 discussions on Bretton Woods reform offer similar opportunities. Selective engagement, conditioned on specific reforms, is a coherent strategy. Blanket withdrawal is not.

IX. Short-Run and Long-Run Strategic Outcomes: A Comparative Assessment

The distinction between short-run and long-run consequences of institutional adherence versus disengagement is analytically critical and politically underweighted. Short-term signals of strategic independence — tariff impositions, organisational withdrawals, budget cuts — are politically legible in ways that the slow accumulation of structural disadvantage is not. But the evidence from 2025 to 2026 demonstrates that even the short-run costs are larger than their proponents anticipated.

Institutional adherence in the short run produces stabilised financial markets and reduced volatility, coordinated crisis responses that prevent costly contagion, and a predictable trade and investment environment that supports corporate planning and capital allocation. In the long run, it preserves a global growth environment that sustains U.S. capital accumulation and innovation, maintains dollar dominance and the exorbitant privilege associated with it, institutionalises U.S. leadership and structural power, and reduces the probability of large-scale conflict that would impose catastrophic costs.

Disengagement produces, in the short run, trade disputes and retaliatory measures, financial market instability of the kind observed in spring 2025, supply chain disruption, and measurable household welfare losses. In the long run, it produces a fragmented global economy in which the rules are written by others, the emergence of rival institutional blocs that operate outside U.S. influence, a gradual decline in dollar dominance that increases structural borrowing costs, and higher structural inflation and lower trend growth — a permanent reduction in American living standards relative to the attainable counterfactual.

X. Conclusion

The evidence assembled in this paper, drawing on developments through April 2026, supports a clear conclusion: international institutions and international law are integral to the United States' geostrategic and economic success, functioning simultaneously as stabilisers of the global economy, multipliers of American power, and anchors of the financial and legal trust upon which dollar hegemony depends.

The disengagement strategy pursued since January 2025 has already produced quantifiable costs. Real GDP growth is measurably lower than it would otherwise be. The dollar has depreciated substantially, raising U.S. interest rates and increasing the fiscal burden on a government that will face prolonged challenges of debt sustainability. Traditional allies have been alienated. Institutional vacuums have been created that rivals are actively filling. And the legitimacy premium that has historically allowed the United States to exercise structural power at relatively low cost is being steadily spent down.

None of this necessitates an uncritical defence of the status quo. The institutions of 1945 require modernisation; the governance structures of 1944 do not reflect the world of 2026; and the United States is entitled to demand greater burden-sharing from allies who benefit from American security guarantees. A strategy of assertive reform — conditioning engagement on specific institutional improvements, demanding more equitable burden distribution, and using U.S. leverage within institutions to advance its interests — would address these legitimate concerns without forfeiting the structural advantages that multilateralism provides.

The erosion of the rules-based international order will not liberate American power. It will diminish it, replacing structured influence with costly, uncertain, and fragmented competition in which the United States holds fewer advantages than it currently possesses. The lesson of 2025 is not that the international system failed the United States. It is that the United States, in retreating from the international system, is imposing costs upon itself that no rival could otherwise have imposed.

The central strategic insight is therefore clear: for the United States, the rules-based international order is not an external constraint on sovereign action. It is the very infrastructure of American primacy — and its maintenance is, accordingly, a core national interest.


Note on Sources

This paper draws on publicly available institutional data, peer-reviewed economic research, and policy analysis from 2024 to 2026. Economic estimates are drawn from the IMF World Economic Outlook (October 2025), the Yale Budget Lab, the Tax Foundation, and quantitative research published in the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity and VoxEU/CEPR. Data on institutional disengagement is sourced from official U.S. government documents, the Center for Global Development, and the Institut du développement durable et des relations internationales (IDDRI). Currency and reserve data are drawn from IMF COFER, the BIS Triennial Survey (2025), and the Atlantic Council. Information on BRICS financial initiatives draws on publicly reported developments through April 2026. All claims regarding empirical projections are attributable to the cited sources and reflect the state of available evidence at the time of writing.


Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Canada, the Strait of Hormuz, and Strategic Leverage


A Bayesian Game-Theoretic Assessment of Energy Disruption,Trade Negotiations, and Domestic Cohesion




ABSTRACT

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz in March 2026, precipitated by Iranian retaliation against coordinated United States–Israel airstrikes under Operation Epic Fury, has generated the largest disruption to global oil supply in recorded history. For Canada—a net energy exporter, a G7 member, and a party to the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) currently undergoing its mandatory six-year review—the crisis presents a structural paradox: while global instability threatens the rules-based international order that Canada depends upon, it simultaneously enhances Ottawa's strategic leverage through elevated oil prices and surging demand for non-Middle Eastern energy supplies. This paper employs a Bayesian game-theoretic framework to examine how Canada can exploit this asymmetric advantage in USMCA renegotiations while navigating the compounding domestic political risks posed by a live Alberta separatist petition campaign. The analysis demonstrates that Canada's optimal strategy is calibrated, conditional engagement—providing diplomatic and technical support for maritime security while carefully sequencing its contributions to coincide with trade concessions, thereby preserving the price premium that underpins its international bargaining power without inciting secessionist mobilization at home.


INTRODUCTION: A CRISIS THAT RESHAPES STRATEGIC INCENTIVES

The Strait of Hormuz is the world's most consequential energy chokepoint, carrying approximately 20 percent of global seaborne oil trade and one-fifth of internationally traded liquefied natural gas (LNG) through a waterway barely 34 kilometres wide at its narrowest point. On 28 February 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated airstrikes on Iran under Operation Epic Fury, targeting IRGC command infrastructure, ballistic missile sites, and nuclear facilities. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps responded by declaring the Strait closed to commercial shipping on 4 March 2026, backing the declaration with drone and missile attacks on transiting vessels. By mid-March, tanker traffic through the Strait had fallen by approximately 70 percent, with over 150 ships anchored outside the waterway; shortly thereafter, traffic approached zero. The International Energy Agency characterized the resulting disruption as the largest in the history of the global oil market—eclipsing the 1973 oil embargo and the 1979 Iranian Revolution in its immediate supply impact.

Brent crude, which had been trading in the low 60s throughout much of 2025, surged past USD 100 per barrel on 8 March 2026 for the first time in four years, reaching a peak of USD 126 per barrel in mid-March. More recent data show Brent trading at USD 114 per barrel as of late March, with analysts citing a potential worst-case scenario of USD 200 per barrel should the closure persist indefinitely. The Dallas Federal Reserve estimates that a closure lasting two quarters would lower global real GDP growth by 0.3 percentage points; a three-quarter closure could reduce global growth by as much as 1.3 percentage points.

For Canada, the crisis arrives at an analytically complex intersection of international and domestic pressures. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand conducted diplomatic outreach across Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council in March 2026, jointly condemning Iranian attacks and signalling Canadian readiness to contribute to post-ceasefire maritime stabilization. Defence Minister David McGuinty specified that Ottawa was considering the deployment of naval vessels, de-mining expertise, cyber capabilities, and intelligence assets—conditional on the achievement of a ceasefire. Canada simultaneously signed on to a G7 joint statement on 21 March 2026 affirming the importance of safeguarding maritime routes, including through the Strait of Hormuz.

This diplomatic posture coincides with two structural realities that define Canada's strategic environment: first, Canada is a net oil exporter that derives direct fiscal and macroeconomic benefit from elevated global oil prices; second, the United States requires Canadian energy cooperation precisely at the moment when USMCA—the agreement governing continental trade—undergoes its first mandatory six-year joint review, with a decision deadline of 1 July 2026. This conjunction transforms the Hormuz crisis from a purely humanitarian or security concern into a multi-level strategic bargaining environment in which Canada's every signal carries simultaneous weight in Washington, the Persian Gulf, and Alberta.

II. THE ANATOMY OF THE 2026 HORMUZ CRISIS

Escalation Chronology and the Structure of Disruption

The current crisis did not emerge without warning. Iranian officials had signalled potential disruptions to the Strait in response to escalating nuclear tensions following the collapse of Geneva negotiations. In the fortnight preceding the strikes, Iran increased its oil export rate to three times normal and reduced its domestic storage to insulate itself against anticipated disruptions. War-risk insurance premiums for Strait transit rose from 0.125 percent to between 0.2 and 0.4 percent of ship insurance value per transit—implying cost increases of several hundred thousand dollars per voyage for very large crude carriers.

Operation Epic Fury on 28 February 2026 triggered an Iranian retaliatory campaign that extended well beyond the Strait itself. Iran launched missile and drone strikes against military and energy infrastructure in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Iraq. Major container shipping companies—including Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, and CMA CGM—suspended Strait operations within 48 hours and began rerouting vessels around the Cape of Good Hope, adding approximately 10 to 14 days to voyage times and dramatically increasing freight costs.

By 10 March 2026, oil production among Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates had collectively fallen by approximately 6.7 million barrels per day. U.S. Central Command reported destroying at least 17 Iranian naval vessels in the early days of Operation Epic Fury, briefly establishing dominance in the Persian Gulf. Nonetheless, Iran's continued reliance on cheap drone swarms, coastal anti-ship missiles, and the threat of sea mines—weapons inherently difficult to neutralize in confined waterways—maintained de facto closure conditions for commercial shippers even in the absence of a formal Iranian naval presence. The Lloyd's List Intelligence report confirmed that at least two transiting vessels paid fees of up to USD 2 million to Iranian authorities for safe passage, evidence of Iran's shift toward selective, monetized access.

Differential Impacts Across the Global Economy

The disruption is not symmetrical in its effects. Nations most exposed are those heavily dependent on Persian Gulf crude: China, India, Japan, and South Korea together account for approximately 70 percent of all Hormuz crude flows and 59 percent of LNG flows through the Strait. QatarEnergy declared force majeure on all LNG export contracts; LNG benchmark prices in Asia rose 39 percent in a single trading session. The crisis also threatened one-third of globally traded fertilizer exports, with Middle East urea prices rising approximately 20 percent in early March alone—a secondary shock with potentially severe consequences for global food production during the 2026 spring planting season.

By contrast, major oil-exporting nations outside the Persian Gulf—including Canada, Norway, and the United States—stand to benefit fiscally and commercially from sustained high prices, even as their consumers face higher refined product costs. This asymmetry is central to understanding Canada's strategic position.

III. CANADA'S ENERGY POSITION: A STRUCTURAL PARADOX

Economic Beneficiary in an Importing World

Canada occupies what analysts have described as a paradoxical position in the 2026 crisis. As a net oil exporter with substantial productive capacity in Alberta's oil sands and offshore Atlantic production, Canada derives direct macroeconomic benefit from elevated global benchmarks. Western Canadian Select (WCS)—the primary Alberta heavy oil benchmark—rose by approximately USD 35 per barrel in the fortnight following the Strait closure, reaching approximately USD 85 per barrel. Alberta government revenues are projected to increase materially as a result, and ATB Financial's March 2026 economic outlook explicitly revised upward its provincial GDP forecast citing the oil price surge.

This fiscal benefit, however, is accompanied by a domestic cost asymmetry. Because refined petroleum products are priced on global benchmarks regardless of a country's production status, Canadian consumers faced a rapid surge in gasoline prices from approximately CAD 1.30 per litre in late February to CAD 1.55 per litre by mid-March 2026—a reversal of the savings generated by the prior elimination of the federal carbon levy. Approximately 30 percent of Canada's refined petroleum products are imported from the United States, meaning Canada simultaneously benefits from crude export revenues and bears a share of global refined product price increases.

Infrastructure Capacity and the Trans Mountain Advantage

The crisis has sharply elevated the strategic value of Canada's existing and planned export infrastructure. The Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) pipeline, which came into service in May 2024 and tripled capacity to approximately 890,000 barrels per day, has enabled Canadian heavy crude to reach Asian buyers—particularly China and India—via the Westridge Marine Terminal near Vancouver without transiting the Strait of Hormuz, the Strait of Malacca, or the South China Sea. LNG Canada's Kitimat facility, which shipped its first cargo in June 2025, similarly provides Pacific-route LNG supply that bypasses all Persian Gulf chokepoints entirely.

Nevertheless, infrastructure constraints impose real limits on Canada's ability to serve as an emergency substitute supplier. The Canadian oil sands cannot rapidly increase output above existing productive capacity; pipeline utilization is already high; and industry analysts estimate that perhaps 10 percent of spare capacity on TMX—approximately 100,000 barrels per day—could be mobilized for accelerated Asian delivery in the short term. A second West Coast pipeline, which Ottawa and Alberta agreed in principle to facilitate through their November 2025 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), would add approximately 1 million barrels per day of additional export capacity but cannot be constructed in a timeframe relevant to the current crisis.

The strategic implication is significant: Canada can credibly position itself as a reliable, geopolitically stable, non-Hormuz-dependent energy supplier for Asian markets in the medium to long term. Locking in long-term contracts with Japan, South Korea, India, and China during this period of acute vulnerability could yield commercial and geopolitical dividends lasting decades.

IV. A BAYESIAN GAME-THEORETIC FRAMEWORK

Defining the Players and Information Structure

The Hormuz crisis constitutes a multi-player, incomplete-information strategic environment amenable to Bayesian game-theoretic analysis. The principal players are Canada, the United States, Persian Gulf producers (particularly Saudi Arabia and the UAE), Iran, and the broader G7 coalition. Each actor holds private information about its own preferences, constraints, and thresholds for action that is not perfectly observable by others—the defining feature of a Bayesian game.

The United States is uncertain whether Canada will provide substantive military support for Strait reopening operations, or whether Ottawa will limit its contribution to post-ceasefire stabilization. Canada is uncertain whether Washington will interpret conditional Canadian participation as strategic defection warranting trade retaliation in USMCA negotiations, or as legitimate middle-power positioning that can be tolerated given Canada's energy cooperation value. Persian Gulf states face uncertainty about the coherence of Western coalition commitments. Iran must assess whether to sustain the closure—extracting toll revenues and diplomatic concessions—or to de-escalate in the face of mounting military pressure.

These multiple uncertainty structures interact to produce a Bayesian signaling game: each actor's observable actions provide evidence that competitors use to update their probabilistic beliefs about others' types and intentions. Canada's challenge is to manage these signals simultaneously across multiple audiences without triggering defection by any of them.

Canada's Strategy Space

Canada's feasible strategy set in this environment can be characterized across three principal options:


Strategy

Core Actions

Bayesian Signal Transmitted

Full Military Intervention

Immediate naval participation in Strait reopening alongside U.S. forces; no ceasefire precondition

Canada is an unconditional alliance partner; U.S. updates upward; Alberta senses Ottawa prioritizing global stability over provincial revenues

Conditional Engagement

Post-ceasefire vessel, de-mining, and cyber support; diplomatic brokerage with Persian Gulf states and China; explicit linkage to trade negotiations

Canada is a cooperative but self-interested middle power; U.S. must offer concessions to secure full cooperation; Alberta receives energy infrastructure commitments

Non-Participation

Passive diplomatic support only; no military or technical contribution; free-riding on allied action

Canada defects from alliance obligations; U.S. updates downward on Canadian reliability; severe USMCA consequences likely; middle-power reputation damaged

Table 1: Canada's Strategy Space and Bayesian Signal Structure


Bayesian Posterior Updating and Bargaining Payoffs

In a formal Bayesian bargaining framework, the United States assigns a prior probability p to Canada providing unconditional military support. If Canada signals conditional cooperation—publicly tying its maritime contributions to ceasefire conditions and implicitly to USMCA outcomes—U.S. negotiators must revise downward their probability estimate that Canada will cooperate regardless of trade concessions. This revision increases the U.S.'s expected cost of Canadian defection, which in turn raises the equilibrium level of trade concessions offered to secure Canadian alignment.

Critically, the bargaining payoff matrix shifts in Canada's favour as oil prices rise. At USD 114 per barrel, the macroeconomic value of Canadian energy exports to the United States—and the cost of any disruption to continental energy flows—is substantially higher than at pre-crisis prices. This price-leverage correlation means that the Hormuz crisis has, paradoxically, enhanced Canada's negotiating power in USMCA negotiations by increasing the opportunity cost to the United States of Canadian defection. The bargaining surplus available for Canada to capture through conditional participation is at a historical maximum precisely during the crisis.

This logic suggests a dominant signaling strategy: Canada should be visibly engaged in multilateral diplomacy and post-ceasefire planning, while withholding unconditional military commitment in a way that preserves uncertainty about the extent of its support. The signal should communicate cooperative intent but not cooperative certainty—maintaining leverage without triggering retaliation.

V. THE STABILIZER–BENEFICIARY DILEMMA AND CANADA'S OPTIMAL POSITION

A fundamental normative and strategic tension runs through Canada's Hormuz policy: should Canada act as a stabilizing middle power, prioritizing global order and alliance solidarity, or should it behave as a rational energy-exporting state, extracting maximum advantage from a structural windfall?

The stabilizer logic is compelling. Canada's foreign policy identity has historically emphasized multilateralism, international law, and human rights. Foreign Affairs Minister Anand has explicitly framed the closure of the Strait as a violation of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and of customary international law. Canada's co-signing of the G7 joint statement on 21 March 2026, its participation in the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council foreign ministers' meeting, and its communications with Chinese counterpart Wang Yi on 26 March all reflect a commitment to the stabilizer posture. Moreover, Canada's long-term prosperity depends on a rules-based international order in which major supply routes are not weaponized by revisionist states.

The beneficiary logic is equally compelling. Higher oil prices materially benefit Alberta, increase federal and provincial fiscal revenues, and strengthen Canada's hand in USMCA negotiations. Every day the Strait remains closed, Canada's strategic value to the United States—as an alternative energy supplier, a continental trading partner, and a security ally—increases. Precipitous Canadian military action to reopen the Strait would truncate this leverage advantage.

Game-theoretic analysis resolves this tension not by choosing between the extremes but by identifying the dominant strategy as conditional, sequenced engagement. Full stabilization sacrifices leverage; overt free-riding damages credibility and invites retaliation. The equilibrium position—visible multilateral engagement, technical support contingent on ceasefire, explicit linkage to trade negotiations—preserves both the relational capital of the stabilizer and the bargaining power of the beneficiary. Canada's explicit statement that contributions would be contingent on a ceasefire, consistent with the French-led coalition's position, represents an empirically observable approximation of this equilibrium posture.

VI. THE USMCA REVIEW: CONTEXTUAL STAKES AND CANADIAN LEVERAGE

The Mechanics of the 2026 Joint Review

The USMCA's built-in six-year joint review—the first of its kind in North American trade history—requires the United States, Mexico, and Canada to determine by 1 July 2026 whether to extend the agreement for a further 16 years, initiate a revised agreement, or allow a 10-year sunset countdown to commence. The U.S. Trade Representative held public hearings in December 2025 and transmitted its objectives report to Congress in January 2026, with Ambassador Greer signalling that the administration was not prepared to recommend renewal without changes. Brookings Institution analysis describes the review as a potential inflection point for the entire architecture of North American trade.

The Trump administration has approached the review as an opportunity to extract concessions on long-standing disputes: automotive rules of origin, dairy market access, Canada's digital services tax, restrictions on Chinese investment in North American supply chains, and enhanced contributions to continental defence. Prime Minister Mark Carney—who won the April 2025 federal election explicitly on a platform of resisting U.S. economic coercion—has described the old U.S.–Canada relationship based on steadily increasing integration as effectively over, while simultaneously committing to 2 percent of GDP defence spending by March 2026 and engaging substantively on the Golden Dome missile defence framework.

In parallel to the formal review, Canada and the United States have been engaged in bilateral negotiations on tariffs—including Section 232 tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum, lumber, and other sectors—that have proceeded in an atmosphere of strategic uncertainty. A USMCA-compliant rider attached to some tariffs has been declared illegal, while sectoral tariffs and new Section 301 investigations remain active. Canada has also avoided triggering the USMCA's Article 32.10 non-market country provision by explicitly declining to pursue a free trade agreement with China.

Energy Leverage and Interdependence Asymmetry

The Hormuz crisis has materially strengthened Canada's position entering these negotiations. The United States simultaneously confronts three acute vulnerabilities: energy price shocks that are driving domestic inflation; supply chain instability that threatens manufacturing sector recovery; and voter pressure related to gasoline prices ahead of domestic political cycles. Canada's ability to increase oil and LNG deliveries to the United States—and, critically, to redirect capacity away from U.S. markets toward Asian buyers—creates a form of interdependence asymmetry that shifts the bargaining surplus toward Ottawa.

CSIS analysis of the USMCA review explicitly frames the process not as a traditional trade update but as a negotiation over economic security architecture. Canada enters the review with deep institutional alignment with the United States on export controls, investment screening, and technology governance—making it a structurally preferred partner relative to Mexico. This alignment provides a foundation for Canada to seek meaningful concessions on dairy market access, digital trade rules, and automotive supply chain flexibility in exchange for commitments on energy security cooperation.

VII. DOMESTIC POLITICAL CONSTRAINTS: THE ALBERTA SEPARATISM DYNAMIC

The Petition Campaign and Its Structural Conditions

Canada's Hormuz diplomacy unfolds against an unprecedented domestic political backdrop: a live citizen petition campaign that, if it collects 177,732 valid signatures by 2 May 2026, would compel a provincial referendum on Alberta's secession from Canada, potentially held in October 2026. The Alberta Prosperity Project, led by Mitch Sylvestre, received Elections Alberta approval for its petition question in January 2026. Premier Danielle Smith has stated that, while she does not personally support separation, she will respect the democratic process and place the question on the ballot if the signature threshold is met.

The petition campaign reflects accumulated grievances rooted in fiscal federalism, energy policy, and perceived Central Canadian political dominance. Alberta's nine formal demands to Prime Minister Carney included guaranteed pipeline corridor access to tidewater, repeal of Bill C-69, removal of the tanker ban off British Columbia's northern coast, elimination of the oil and gas emissions cap, and the return of emissions oversight to provincial jurisdiction. Smith characterized failure to address these demands as risking an unprecedented national unity crisis.

Recent polling presents a nuanced picture. A March 2026 Calgary Chamber of Commerce poll found that 83 percent of respondents believed separatist discourse increased recession risk and discouraged business investment; 74 percent believed businesses were considering relocation outside Alberta. A January 2026 Research Co. poll showed that while separation sentiment has risen since 2023, roughly one-in-five supporters viewed a referendum vote as primarily symbolic—a protest mechanism rather than a genuine independence mandate. Still, the structural conditions for escalation are present in a way they have not been since the 1990s.

Nested Games: The Ottawa–Alberta Interaction

Federal foreign policy choices regarding the Strait of Hormuz feed directly into the Ottawa–Alberta domestic bargaining game through the mechanism of oil price levels. This creates a nested game structure in which Canada's international strategy and its domestic territorial integrity are endogenously linked.

If Ottawa acts to reopen the Strait rapidly—accepting lower oil prices as the cost of alliance solidarity—Alberta's fiscal windfall diminishes and with it the primary economic driver of elevated separatist sentiment. However, federal intervention to suppress the price premium that is currently filling provincial coffers would be read in Calgary and Edmonton as Ottawa once again prioritizing external interests over provincial prosperity, potentially intensifying resentment and secessionist mobilization on non-fiscal grounds.

Conversely, if Ottawa delays its maritime contribution and sustains the price premium, Alberta's GDP share of national output increases, the province's fiscal position strengthens, its leverage in fiscal federalism negotiations grows, and provincial elites accumulate the resources to fund a credible referendum campaign. High oil prices, paradoxically, may reinforce the separatist movement by demonstrating Alberta's self-sufficiency and reducing the perceived value of confederation.

Prime Minister Carney's response has been to pursue a dual strategy: concluding the November 2025 pipeline MOU with Alberta—a symbolic recognition of provincial energy sovereignty—while framing federal Hormuz diplomacy explicitly around protecting global supply chains rather than suppressing oil prices. The MOU, however, drew criticism for elevating Alberta to quasi-sovereign status in bilateral negotiations that excluded British Columbia—a province with legitimate interests in any Pacific pipeline route—and for fuelling Quebec separatist sentiment by demonstrating selective federal accommodation of western grievances.


Interaction Level

Players

Strategic Nexus

International Energy Markets

Canada, United States, Iran, Persian Gulf producers, G7

Hormuz closure duration determines oil price and Canadian fiscal windfall

USMCA Renegotiation

Canada, United States, Mexico

Canadian energy value determines Ottawa's bargaining surplus in July 2026 review

Domestic Federalism

Ottawa, Alberta, British Columbia, Quebec

Oil price levels and pipeline commitments determine separatist mobilization probability

U.S.–Alberta Interface

Alberta Prosperity Project, U.S. State Department, U.S. Treasury

External validation of separatist credibility influences referendum dynamics

Table 2: Nested Game Structure of Canada's Strategic Environment


VIII. NORMATIVE TENSIONS AND THE ETHICS OF STRATEGIC DELAY

Canada's conditional engagement posture raises genuine normative questions that extend beyond strategic calculation. The Hormuz closure has generated a humanitarian emergency in Persian Gulf states that depend on the Strait for over 80 percent of their caloric intake; Iranian strikes on desalination infrastructure in Kuwait and Qatar have threatened drinking water supplies for millions of people. In this context, the deliberate sequencing of Canadian military contributions to maximize trade leverage may be difficult to reconcile with Canada's stated commitment to human rights and the protection of civilians.

The ethical tension is compounded by the identity of Canada's primary diplomatic interlocutors. Foreign Affairs Minister Anand's outreach to Saudi Arabia—a monarchy with a well-documented human rights record—in pursuit of both maritime security cooperation and a bilateral Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement raises questions about the normative consistency of Canadian foreign policy. Canada's decision to join the March 2026 G7 joint statement condemning Iranian attacks while simultaneously benefiting from the price surge those attacks generate involves a moral complexity that liberal internationalist frameworks struggle to accommodate.

From a realist perspective, these tensions are inherent features of state competition rather than resolvable contradictions: energy security constitutes a systemic priority, and Canada's leverage is a structural artifact of the crisis rather than a deliberate creation. From a liberal institutionalist perspective, Canada's obligation to support maritime law and allied solidarity is primary, and trade leverage is a secondary consideration that should not delay humanitarian action. A constructivist perspective would emphasize that Canada's actions in this crisis will shape its international identity and credibility in ways that outlast any specific trade concession.

The dominant strategy identified in this analysis—conditional engagement tied to ceasefire—is normatively defensible precisely because it does not require Canada to obstruct the reopening of the Strait, but merely to condition its active contribution on the end of active hostilities. This position is consistent with France's publicly stated stance and enjoys G7 precedent. It does, however, require that Canada communicate its normative rationale clearly and credibly to avoid the appearance of calculated free-riding on allied military action.

IX. POLICY SCENARIOS AND EXPECTED OUTCOMES

The following scenario analysis applies the Bayesian framework to identify the expected utility of each strategic option, integrating outcomes across international, bilateral, and domestic dimensions.


Scenario

Key Actions

Oil Price Trajectory

USMCA Outcome

Alberta Dynamic

Scenario 1: Immediate Military Participation

Canada joins U.S.-led Strait reopening without ceasefire precondition

Sharp decline as supply normalizes

Limited leverage; U.S. concessions minimal given unconditional Canadian cooperation

High resentment; Ottawa seen as prioritizing alliance over Alberta revenues; separatist mobilization risk elevated

Scenario 2: Conditional Engagement (Dominant Strategy)

Post-ceasefire vessels and cyber support; active multilateral diplomacy; explicit linkage to July 2026 USMCA review

Sustained at elevated levels during negotiation window; decline upon ceasefire

Maximum leverage; Canada extracts concessions on dairy access, digital trade, pipeline facilitation

Ottawa credibly demonstrates energy infrastructure commitment; separatist mobilization partially contained by fiscal windfall

Scenario 3: Non-Participation

Canada declines all military or technical contribution; symbolic diplomatic support only

No direct effect; U.S.-led reopening proceeds regardless

Severe strain; U.S. interprets non-participation as defection; retaliatory tariffs and USMCA non-renewal risk

Short-term provincial revenue benefit but reputational damage to federal government; long-term trade disruption undermines Alberta economy

Table 3: Scenario Analysis — Expected Outcomes Across Strategic Dimensions


Game-theoretic analysis identifies Scenario 2 as dominant in expected utility terms across all three dimensions. It preserves Canada's alliance relationships while extracting the maximum available bargaining surplus in USMCA negotiations; it sustains the oil price premium long enough to demonstrate value to Alberta while providing a pathway to federal–provincial accommodation through pipeline commitments; and it maintains Canada's normative legitimacy by conditioning contributions on the cessation of active hostilities rather than on the achievement of trade outcomes.

Scenario 1 is preferred by the United States in the short run but sacrifices Canada's long-term bargaining position without yielding proportionate relationship benefits. Scenario 3 is dominated across all dimensions: it produces only marginal short-term fiscal gains while imposing severe long-term costs through alliance damage and trade retaliation risk.

X. IMPLICATIONS FOR G7 COORDINATION AND MULTILATERAL ENERGY GOVERNANCE

Canada's divergent incentive structure complicates G7 unity in ways that deserve explicit acknowledgment. European member states—heavily dependent on LNG imports from Qatar and facing severe inflationary pressures—are urgently seeking Strait reopening and are broadly prepared to accept economic pain in the near term to restore supply. Japan and South Korea, among the most vulnerable economies given their near-total reliance on Persian Gulf crude, face acute energy insecurity. Canada's relative comfort with a sustained closure creates a fracture in the alliance's preference ordering that could undermine collective action.

Canada's strategic challenge within the G7 is to avoid the appearance of free-riding on allied military action while retaining the right to sequence its own contributions. The joint statement signed on 21 March 2026 represents a calibrated approach: condemning Iranian behaviour, affirming maritime law, and expressing readiness to contribute to reopening efforts—without specifying the timeline or conditions of that contribution. This ambiguity is strategically valuable but must be managed carefully to prevent the perception of calculated obstructionism.

At a broader level, the Hormuz crisis has exposed the inadequacy of existing multilateral energy governance frameworks. The International Energy Agency's emergency oil reserve release mechanism, while activated, cannot fill a 20-million-barrel-per-day supply gap from a Strait closure. Canada's absence of a strategic petroleum reserve—justified historically by its net-exporter status—has been identified as a structural gap that limits its ability to surge supply in support of allies. Post-crisis governance reform should consider whether major exporting nations ought to maintain reserves oriented toward supply surge capacity rather than import substitution.

XI. CONCLUSION: MANAGING BELIEFS ACROSS MULTIPLE AUDIENCES

The 2026 Hormuz crisis illustrates the degree to which systemic shocks can transform a middle power's strategic environment in a short period of time. For Canada, the convergence of energy market disruption, continental trade renegotiation, and domestic secessionist politics has created a multi-level bargaining environment of exceptional complexity. Every Canadian foreign policy decision in this period reverberates simultaneously across Washington, Riyadh, Asian energy markets, and Calgary—with each audience updating its beliefs about Canadian intentions and capabilities in response to the same observable actions.

The Bayesian framework applied in this analysis demonstrates that Canada's optimal strategy is neither passive accommodation nor overt maximization of the price windfall. It is the maintenance of calibrated uncertainty: being visibly engaged enough that the United States and G7 partners maintain confidence in Canadian reliability, while withholding unconditional commitment long enough to extract the trade concessions that the USMCA review makes available. The ceasefire conditionality of Canada's maritime contribution—publicly articulated by both the Foreign Affairs and Defence Ministers—is an empirically observable approximation of this dominant strategy.

The domestic dimension imposes a further constraint. Ottawa must manage Alberta's expectations in a political environment where a referendum on provincial separation is a live possibility before the end of 2026. The November 2025 pipeline MOU between Carney and Smith represents an attempt to address this constraint through infrastructure commitments, but the MOU's political durability is uncertain given the reception it received from Smith's own party and the complications it has introduced for federal relations with British Columbia and Quebec.

Four strategic imperatives follow from this analysis. First, Canada should actively support multilateral maritime security diplomacy, including the GCC-hosted foreign ministers' process, while maintaining the ceasefire conditionality of its direct military contribution. Second, Ottawa should explicitly frame its energy export capacity as a long-term strategic asset for Asian partners—pursuing medium- to long-term supply agreements during the current period of vulnerability to cement Canada's role as a Hormuz-independent supplier. Third, the federal government should sequence its formal USMCA negotiating positions to coincide with the period of maximum oil price leverage, which the Dallas Fed's modelling suggests will persist through at least the second quarter of 2026. Fourth, Ottawa should invest political capital in the Alberta relationship through concrete pipeline facilitation commitments that demonstrate responsiveness to provincial energy infrastructure demands without appearing to treat Alberta as a co-sovereign jurisdiction.

In Bayesian terms, Canada must ensure that each of its key audiences—Washington, Persian Gulf partners, Asian energy importers, and Albertan political elites—perceives Canadian cooperation as sufficiently uncertain to command concessions, but sufficiently credible to sustain long-term partnerships. The optimal management of these simultaneous beliefs is the central challenge of Canadian statecraft in 2026.


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