It鈥檚 a bit like a flea attacking a pit bull, but the Trudeau government deserves a thumbs-up for trying to inflict a painful Canadian bite on Russia for its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.
This was a government which, until this crisis came along, was lost in botched affairs on every foreign file.
It was led by a prime minister who seemed incapacitated by hostage-taking China and still vacillates on allowing Huawei technology into 5G networks.
It鈥檚 a prime minister who infuriated India with excessive dress-ups and his meddling in a farmers鈥 protest.
And after being repeatedly ignored or ruled-against by the Biden administration, Justin Trudeau has become former U.S. president Donald Trump鈥檚 favorite punching bag for his bungled handling of the Freedom Convoy although, in my view, being called a 鈥渇ar-left lunatic鈥 by an all-round lunatic is a badge of honour.
Now along comes Putin鈥檚 Folly -- and suddenly all isn鈥檛 completely hopeless for a third-term Liberal government which recently seemed in need of leadership change.
A government which took weeks to clear the street in front of its Parliament buildings is doing everything right in trying to stop a bully sending in tank convoys to force a Soviet Union reincarnation.
It鈥檚 almost as if adult supervision or someone with a spine has taken hold of a government which often seemed stymied by difficult (and sometimes easy) decision-making.
The government stars are finally starting to shine. And unfortunately for Trudeau, he鈥檚 not among them. Rather, they鈥檙e standing right beside him.
There comes a moment where you study an Opposition leader or a cabinet minister and you just know they鈥檙e ready to become prime minister one day.
In Trudeau鈥檚 case, while he was delivering his usual breathless dramatizations of the situation at Monday鈥檚 news conference, the heir apparents framed him on the television screen.
To his right, deputy prime minister Chrystia Freeland, fidgeting with a thick stack of documents. To his left, looking calm and cool, Defence Minister Anita Anand.
Either one looks ready to step into Trudeau鈥檚 shoes and deliver far superior leadership.
The bonus is that both are women in a country that still needs to make the progressive step forward by electing a woman as prime minister.
Both are whip-smart, delivering scandal-free service so far in the portfolios they鈥檝e been assigned.
And, as their Ukrainian-invasion-handling has shown, both have risen to this character-testing crisis by orchestrating a furious political retaliation for Russia鈥檚 inexcusable invasion.
Freeland, in particular, has been readying for this showdown most of her adult life.
Fluent in Ukrainian and a published author on Russia鈥檚 post-communism transition and the rise of its oligarchs, she was such a journalistic pest while living in Moscow that the KGB tapped her phones and ultimately denied her re-entry to the former Soviet Union.
She delivered extremely poignant remarks Monday, invoking Martin Luther King, Gettysburg and the Battle of Britain as analogous to this as an historic democratic showdown against the bloodthirsty tyrant who has turned Russia into a pariah.
If that sounds like hyperbole, well perhaps, but there鈥檚 no doubting Canada is turning its words into every avenue of possible action against Putin.
It鈥檚 frankly difficult to see what more Canada could do short of putting actual soldier boots on Ukrainian soil, but that likely means we鈥檙e marching into World War 3 and Russian nukes are warming up in their silos.
Consider the retaliation list, which saw Canada leading the global charge to shut down international transactions technology to freeze Russian banks out of global markets.
Lethal weapons, including anti-tank systems, are on their way; Canadian sanctions against Putin and his billionaire buddies have been imposed; a blockade against most exports to Russia announced; matching donations for humanitarian charities offered; a crude oil import ban imposed (although we don鈥檛 currently import any); a demand to take all Russian television off Canada鈥檚 airwaves delivered (which Bell and Rogers have already done); and fast-tracked immigration for Ukrainian refugees offered.
It鈥檚 a unified reflection of Russian revulsion; a diplomatic shunning unlike anything experienced in recent memory. How we still have an ambassador in Moscow is beyond me.
But this crisis has also uncovered Liberal leaders-in-waiting for the prime minister's job, at least until the Conservatives figure out how their next leader can reclaim the government-in-waiting position.
Thanks to the best and brightest in Trudeau鈥檚 cabinet, the tiny Canadian flea is preparing to deliver a bite greater than its size.
While sadly unlikely to happen, the world can only hope enough bites will drive a fleabag like Putin from irritation to capitulation.
That鈥檚 the bottom line...