When United
States President Donald Trump declared that Canada was “mismanaging” its
forests and therefore responsible for the smoke drifting into the United
States, he did more than display a misunderstanding of basic science. He
revealed a profound ignorance about the natural world, the scale of Canada’s
geography, and the limits of human power in the face of climate‑driven
catastrophe. His threat to impose tariffs unless Canada “gets its wildfires
under control” is not merely foolish—it is a reckless distortion of reality
that undermines one of America’s closest allies.
Let’s be
clear. No government on Earth can
prevent or control wildfires across a landmass as vast, remote, and
ecologically complex as Canada’s northern forests. To suggest otherwise
is to advertise a dangerous level of stupidity about how nature works.
A forest
the size of a continent
Canada’s
boreal forest region is not a national park with paved access roads and ranger
stations. It is the largest intact forest ecosystem on the planet, stretching
more than 4,800 kilometres (3,000
miles) from Canada’s border with Alaska to the shores of Newfoundland on
the North Atlantic. It covers 5.6
million square kilometres (2.3 million square miles)—roughly 80% of the size of the entire lower 48 American
states, or 140% of the landmass
of the European Union.
This is a
wilderness so vast that large portions have never been walked by human beings.
There are no highways, no towns, no infrastructure, and no practical way to
“manage” the forest in the simplistic way Trump implies. To accuse Canada of
“poor management” of an ecosystem this large is absurd. It is like blaming the US
government for failing to “manage” the Pacific Ocean.
Wildfires
in this region are not caused by bureaucratic negligence. They are caused by
the same forces that have shaped the boreal forest for millennia—lightning,
drought, heat, wind, and climate change.
Lightning
doesn’t ask permission
In
just the past several days, the Government of Canada’s Lightning Detection
Network has recorded more than 14,000 lightning
strikes across
northern Ontario and southern Manitoba—each one a potential ignition source
when the forest floor is parched. Lightning is responsible for most of the
large wildfires in Canada’s boreal region, a reality no government can prevent
any more than it can command rainfall or reverse drought conditions driven by
climate change.
Canada is
experiencing one of the driest,
hottest summers in recorded history. The Canadian Wildland Fire Information
System reports that fire danger levels
across multiple provinces are at “extreme”, driven by record‑low precipitation
and high winds. These are climate‑driven conditions, not political ones.
To blame
Canada’s government for the smoke drifting into the United States is like
blaming firefighters for the direction of the wind.
Canada is
throwing everything it has at the fires
Trump’s comments ignore the scale of the response Canada has already mobilized. According to federal and provincial emergency agencies:
- More than 6,000 firefighters are currently deployed nationwide, including crews from every province and territory.
- Over 200 aircraft, including Canada’s world‑renowned water bombers, are engaged in suppression operations across the country
- International assistance has been requested and received from the United States, Australia, New Zealand, France, South Africa, and Mexico.
- The Canadian Armed Forces have been deployed to support evacuations, logistics, and ground operations.
- Thousands of volunteers and emergency workers are risking their lives daily in some of the most dangerous terrain on Earth.
In other
words, Canada is not sitting idle nor “mismanaging” anything. Canada is
throwing everything it has—every plane, every firefighter, every resource—at a
fire season that is historically unprecedented. And yet the fires still rage
because nature is bigger than governments.
A forest
fire is not a house fire
Perhaps
the most useful way to illustrate the absurdity of Trump’s claim is through
analogy.
When a
house catches fire, firefighters arrive within minutes. They have hydrants,
hoses, ladders, and roads. They can surround the structure, attack the flames
from multiple angles, and extinguish the fire within hours. The area is small.
The access is easy. The resources are concentrated.
Now
imagine a fire the size of Delaware,
or Connecticut, or Vermont. Imagine that fire burning in
terrain with no roads, no hydrants, no communications infrastructure, and no safe access points. Imagine flames over 30 metres high (over 100
feet) moving at 20 kilometres per hour
(12 mph) through dense forest, driven by winds that shift unpredictably.
Imagine smoke so thick that aircraft cannot fly and temperatures so high that
water dropped from planes evaporates before it hits the ground.
That is
what Canadian firefighters are facing.
To demand
that Canada “put out the fires” is to demand the impossible. It is to demand
that human beings overpower the combined forces of drought, heat, lightning,
wind, and climate change. Only a fool
would make such a demand.
Canada
has always stood with the US
Trump’s
comments also betray a disturbing lack of gratitude.
Just last
week, a Canadian water bomber pilot died fighting fires in Colorado. Canadians
have fought fires in California, provided aid after hurricanes in Louisiana, helped
with floods in New York, and following tornadoes in the Midwest. We have never
blamed American leaders for the impacts of natural disasters. We have never
threatened tariffs or politicized tragedies beyond our control because smoke
crossed the border.
We asked
how we could help, we donated and we prayed for our friends because that is
what neighbours do.
Let’s be
honest. Trump’s threats have nothing to do with forest management. They are
part of a pattern, where he uses crises—real or manufactured—to bully Canada
into concessions on trade, energy, and continental security. Rather than being
angry about smoke from forest fires crossing borders, he is exploiting smoke.
He is using
a natural disaster as a political weapon, as leverage to extract economic
concessions from a country that has stood by the United States for generations.
It is gangster politics—extortion dressed up as environmental concern, and it
is beneath the office he holds.
Only
weather can change the situation
Every
fire expert in Canada and the United States agrees that the only force capable of shifting the tide is weather.
Significant rainfall, cooler temperatures, and reduced winds are the only
variables that can slow or extinguish fires of this scale.
Government’s
cannot manufacture rain, legislate humidity, or order lightning to stop. The
fires will end when nature decides they will end.
Blaming
Canada for the uncontrollable forces of nature is not leadership. It is ignorance
and it is dangerous. It undermines the very alliance that has kept North
America stable and prosperous.
The facts
are clear. The science is clear. The scale is clear.
The only
question is whether the President of the United States is willing to see it.
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