Trudeau departs for high-stakes talks in Europe on climate change, pandemic

His first stop is the Netherlands, a country with deep ties to Canada

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau leaves today for Europe, where he will participate in high-stakes talks with other world leaders about pressing issues like climate change and the race to vaccinate people in low- and middle-income countries.

While much of the nearly week-long trip will be dominated by the G20 meeting in Rome and the subsequent 26th conference of the parties (COP26) climate summit in Glasgow, Trudeau has carved out time for an official visit to the Netherlands, a country with close historic and diplomatic ties to Canada.

A government official, speaking on background to reporters at a briefing ahead of the trip, said Trudeau was invited by Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte to really deepen the ties between our two countries, which are already very deep. Rutte made a trip to Canada in 2018 and Trudeau is returning the invitation, the official said.

The two countries are closely aligned on foreign policy matters, the official said, pointing to ongoing cooperation on the climate file as the two nations push other developed countries to do more to help turn back rising global temperatures.

In an interview with CBC News, Ontario Independent Sen. Peter Boehm, a former G7 sherpa , said Rutte and Trudeau can use the diplomatic face time to discuss how best to approach the Rome summit.

The G20 countries alone represent 80 per cent of the global economy and the bulk of annual greenhouse gas emissions. That makes the Rome summit — coming just before COP26, where the position of G20 nations will be critical — especially important.

A meeting of the G20 environment ministers arrived at an impasse earlier this year when it failed to reach an agreement on priorities like phasing out coal and limiting global warming to 1.5 C. Multiple countries, including China, India, Russia and Saudi Arabia, balked at some of the proposed language.

Canada and the Netherlands could help broker a pragmatic solution through creative wordsmithing, Boehm said.

It’s a friendly, easy relationship and I would say, since the prime minister is on that side of the Atlantic anyway, renewing that friendship is entirely appropriate in terms of the way these things go, Boehm said, noting that Trudeau and Rutte — who leads the centrist People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy — are ideologically aligned.

They’ll discuss bilateral issues, global concerns and they will compare notes on COP going into Glasgow.

During a stop in the Hague, the diplomatic capital of the Netherlands, Trudeau is expected to deliver an address to parliamentarians at the Binnenhof. He’s then scheduled to travel with Princess Margriet — a member of the Dutch royal family who was born in Ottawa while in exile during the Second World War — to lay a wreath at the Bergen op Zoom Canadian war cemetery in the country’s south.

7,500 Canadian soldiers died during liberation of the Netherlands

The Canadian-Dutch relationship is undeniably defined by the two countries’ shared experience during that bloody conflict. More than 7,500 Canadian men and women died while liberating the Netherlands from Nazi rule in late 1944 and early 1945, before Germany’s surrender.

We are forever grateful to those brave Canadian soldiers who carried the light of freedom to our country in its darkest hour, Rutte said during his 2018 address to the Canadian Parliament. This, we will never forget.

Geoffrey Hayes is a professor of history at the University of Waterloo and an expert on the First Canadian Army’s liberation of the Netherlands. A frequent visitor to the country, Hayes said he’s always struck by the respect Dutch civilians show to the former Canadian soldiers who helped free that country after a brutal eight-month-long military campaign.

I remember, in the 1990s, at the 50th anniversary of the liberation, Canadians were invited over and it was just overwhelming to see the Dutch villagers who were swarming these old Canadian veterans. They were like rock stars. It really was something. The reception was quite extraordinary, Hayes told CBC News.

They appreciate the Canadian involvement in a way that most Canadians just don’t understand. A lot of guys got killed in eight to 10 months of the war and it’s something that the Dutch recognize about the Canadian position.

While helping the Dutch secure their freedom, the Canadian victories also helped to shore up crucial supply lines to Allied armies as they continued their push toward Germany.

We often suggest that the war was over by early ’45 but it certainly wasn’t in the towns and villages of the Netherlands that were liberated by the Canadians, Hayes said. It’s one of the overlooked elements of the war. We weren’t charging towards Berlin and weren’t rushing to occupy Germany.

Geoffrey Hayes is a professor of history at the University of Waterloo and an expert on the First Canadian Army’s liberation of the Netherlands. A frequent visitor to the country, Hayes said he’s always struck by the respect Dutch civilians show to the former Canadian soldiers who helped free that country after a brutal eight-month-long military campaign.

I remember, in the 1990s, at the 50th anniversary of the liberation, Canadians were invited over and it was just overwhelming to see the Dutch villagers who were swarming these old Canadian veterans. They were like rock stars. It really was something. The reception was quite extraordinary, Hayes told CBC News.

They appreciate the Canadian involvement in a way that most Canadians just don’t understand. A lot of guys got killed in eight to 10 months of the war and it’s something that the Dutch recognize about the Canadian position.

While helping the Dutch secure their freedom, the Canadian victories also helped to shore up crucial supply lines to Allied armies as they continued their push toward Germany.

We often suggest that the war was over by early ’45 but it certainly wasn’t in the towns and villages of the Netherlands that were liberated by the Canadians, Hayes said. It’s one of the overlooked elements of the war. We weren’t charging towards Berlin and weren’t rushing to occupy Germany.

The Dutch royal family is really quite unpretentious. They were part of the scene in Ottawa, they were seen freely walking around with their children — that was obviously appreciated, Hayes said, noting that the Netherlands still sends Ottawa roughly 10,000 tulip bulbs each year to repay the kindness shown by Canadians at a time of crisis.

Those kinds of links are in the far distant past but they’re important. There are really strong links now between Canada and the Dutch because of all this.

John Paul Tasker  · CBC News

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