America’s New Favourite Excuse... “National Security”
When tariffs stop working, suddenly everything becomes a threat
Something changed in the global trade fight… and most people missed it.
This is no longer just about cheap Chinese goods.
No longer just about unfair competition.
No longer just about trade.
Now it’s national security.
And once governments start using those words, the rulebook changes fast.
Because “national security” gives politicians cover to do almost anything.
Sanctions.
Restrictions.
Tariffs.
Blacklists.
Pressure campaigns.
And lately, America seems to be reaching for that tool a lot.
First it was drugs.
Then forced labour.
Now electric cars.
Same pressure.
Different label.
That should make Canadians pay attention.
Because whenever Washington redraws the battlefield, Canada somehow ends up standing in the blast zone.
BYD Just Moved From Competitor to “Threat”
If you haven’t heard of BYD yet, you probably will.
Five years ago, most North Americans barely knew the name.
Today?
They are one of the biggest electric vehicle companies on the planet.
By 2025, BYD is expected to be selling vehicles at levels approaching Ford… roughly 4.6 million vehicles globally.
Think about that for a second.
Ford spent more than a century becoming Ford.
BYD climbed the mountain in what feels like the blink of an eye.
That kind of growth makes competitors nervous.
It also makes politicians nervous.
Especially when the company is Chinese.
Recently, the Pentagon added BYD and major Chinese firms like Alibaba to a list of companies allegedly linked to China’s military.
That matters.
Because once a company gets pushed into the “military connection” category, the conversation changes overnight.
You are no longer dealing with trade competition.
You are dealing with security politics.
And security politics gives governments much wider permission to hit harder.
Funny How The Reason Keeps Changing
Let’s be blunt.
Canada has heard a lot of explanations lately.
America slapped tariffs on Canadian goods and cited drug concerns.
Then came “forced labour” arguments tied to tariffs affecting more than 60 countries.
Now Chinese EV makers are suddenly military risks.
Maybe some of those concerns are real.
Maybe some are justified.
But patterns matter.
And the pattern looks suspiciously familiar:
Problem → emergency language → tariffs → pressure to comply.
Different headline.
Same outcome.
If you’re Canada, that should raise a red flag.
Because we keep hearing speeches about “free trade” while watching the rules get rewritten every few months.
Here’s The Awkward Part For Canada
Canada recently struck a deal with China that opened agricultural access while allowing a quota of Chinese electric vehicles into the country.
On paper, that sounds practical.
Canadian farmers and fishers get better access.
Consumers get more vehicle options.
Competition might even lower prices.
But now?
That deal sits directly in the middle of a growing U.S.–China power struggle.
And here’s the uncomfortable truth…
America does not usually like allies freelancing with countries it considers rivals.
Especially not rivals it now frames as security threats.
That puts Canada in a familiar position…
Trying to trade with the world while America quietly asks,
“Whose side are you on?”
Let’s Talk About The Tariff Double Standard
Here’s the part that should annoy Canadians.
America hit Chinese EVs with a 100% tariff.
Meanwhile, Canadian autos got hit with 25% tariffs despite being built inside a deeply integrated North American supply chain.
Read that again.
China: competitor.
Canada: ally.
Both punished.
Different explanations.
Same pressure.
That is not how partnerships usually work.
This Is Bigger Than Cars
People think this story is about EVs.
It’s not.
Cars are just the latest battlefield.
The real fight is over who controls the next industrial era.
Batteries.
Supply chains.
Manufacturing.
Critical minerals.
Artificial intelligence.
Energy systems.
The countries controlling those industries will shape the next generation of wealth and power.
America knows it.
China knows it.
Canada?
We are still trying to figure out how not to get pushed around while selling resources to everybody.
The Real Risk To Canada
Canadian workers feel this first.
Auto workers.
Farmers.
Export businesses.
Consumers.
Every time trade rules shift, somebody here gets squeezed.
Prices go up.
Jobs become uncertain.
Supply chains wobble.
And ordinary Canadians get stuck paying for geopolitical chess games they never voted for.
That’s the real frustration.
Because one week the issue is drugs.
The next week labour.
The next week military concerns.
Meanwhile, regular people are still trying to afford groceries and replace a car without needing a second mortgage.
The Bigger Question Nobody Wants To Ask
What happens when “national security” becomes a catch-all excuse for economic protectionism?
Because once that door opens, it never really closes.
A competitor becomes a threat.
Trade becomes security.
Allies become collateral damage.
And suddenly the old rules stop mattering.
That should concern every country sitting beside a superpower.
Especially one that keeps getting told we’re partners… right before the next tariff lands.
The Recap…
America says this is about national security.
Maybe part of it is.
But Canadians should notice the pattern.
Different excuses. Same result.
Tariffs rise. Pressure grows. Canada gets squeezed in the middle… again.
The Gut-Punch…
When every competitor becomes a “security threat,” trade stops being trade.
It becomes economic warfare with better branding.
Source credit:
Research compiled from U.S. Pentagon designations, tariff announcements, North American auto industry sales data, Canada–China trade developments, and publicly reported EV market reporting.
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#CanadaStrong



Thanks Fred for breaking this all down. Canada has been in this unjust tariff war Trump keeps coming up with for too long. Prime minister Carney has managed to keep our economy from going into recession. But as a Canadian senior citizen, it is difficult to understand how any "Supposed Ally" can expect cooperation from us but continues to try to bring us to our knees. It's not going to happen Trump! We will keep our elbows up and stay united to resist the worst you can dig up. Canadians may be kind and friendly, but we have had enough!!!!!😡 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
Fred, good commentary, as always.
I have a further thought -- maybe the same thought -- on your "USA/Trump doesn't like it when somebody becomes a rival and 'the buddies' then deal with that rival." Notice that it is totally okay if USA/Trump trades with the rival!
So in this case, he gets mad at Canada because we DARE to bring in any amount of foreign/Chinese EVs -- rather than buy Teslas (of which most are made in China anyway).
You're also correct -- Trump is playing grade-school economics against Carney (with Ph.D in the subject, and loads of macroeconomic experience). Carney just looks at him and thinks "you're kidding me!" and then goes off and makes more deals with other countries to bypass Trump.
Anyway, don't know if Trump noticed, but both of our sub vendors -- Korea in particular -- are looking at making battery factories in Canada. And many of those will be targeted at consumer vehicles (not made by Big 3 auto).