
When I served as counselor of the State Department, I advised the secretary of state about America's wars with Iraqi insurgents, the Taliban, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and al-Qaeda. I spent a good deal of time visiting battlefields in the Middle East and Afghanistan as well as shaping strategy in Washington. But when I left government service in 2009, I eagerly resumed work on a book that dealt with America's most durable, and in many ways most effective and important, enemy: Canada. There are, as Donald Trump and Don Corleone might put it, two ways of doing this: the easy way and the hard way. The easy way would be if Canadians rose up en masse clamoring to join the United States. Even so, there would be awkwardness. Canada is slightly larger than America. That would mean that the 'cherished 51st state,' as Trump calls it, would be lopsided in terms of territory. It would be 23 times larger than California, which would be fine for owning the libs, but it would also...
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