CELEBRITY
🚨🔥Canada has just sent shockwaves through the global economy by officially declaring its alliance with the United States a strategic weakness. In a move that no one saw coming, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced that Canada is dumping a staggering 20.5 billion dollars in U.S. Treasuries. The “special relationship” is in tatters as Beijing and New Delhi become the new priority. Carney warned that nostalgia is not a strategy and it is time for Canada to take back control of its borders and its future. The era of American dominance over its northern neighbor is ending. Read the full story behind this historic betrayal in the comments below.👇👇
That narrative is punchy—but it doesn’t hold up to how global finance and diplomacy actually work.
First, Mark Carney is not the Prime Minister of Canada. He’s a former governor of both the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, and while he’s influential, he doesn’t make government policy or announce national strategic shifts.
On the core claim: a $20.5 billion sale of U.S. Treasuries by Canada wouldn’t be unusual or “shockwaves”-level. Countries regularly adjust their holdings of U.S. Treasury securities as part of routine reserve management—sometimes by tens of billions—without signaling a geopolitical break. Canada has historically held hundreds of billions in U.S. assets; a move of that size would be a small portfolio adjustment, not a strategic divorce.
Also, the idea that Canada is pivoting away from the United States toward China and India in a way that replaces its U.S. relationship doesn’t reflect reality. The U.S.–Canada relationship is deeply integrated through trade (like the USMCA), energy systems, and defense (via NORAD). That kind of interdependence doesn’t unravel through a single financial decision.
Bottom line: there’s no credible evidence of a “historic betrayal” or a declaration that the U.S. alliance is a “strategic weakness.” What you’re seeing reads more like viral, sensational framing than a verified geopolitical shift.