When Mark Carney declared on Tuesday that the “old order is not coming back,” he forced a reckoning with a truth that many world leaders have avoided.
“We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition,” the Canadian Prime Minister said in his address at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, bluntly calling out the end of the post-Cold War rules-based system rather than treating its problems as temporary glitches.
His message was simple: the rules-based order was never as solid as advertised. “We knew the story of the international rules-based order was partially false … that the strongest would exempt themselves when convenient,” he observed, pointing out that powerful states followed norms only when it suited their interests.
That cuts directly against the comforting myth that global cooperation could reliably constrain great powers — especially when their own interests are at stake.
This was also a rebuke to Washington without naming it. The language Carney used — that the strong do what they can and the weak must suffer what they must — echoes U.S. policy realities today, where tariffs, sanctions, and security commitments have become transactional instruments of power rather than predictable guarantees.
In a more direct snub to U.S. President Donald Trump, he declared: “On Arctic sovereignty, we stand firmly with Greenland and Denmark and fully support their unique right to determine Greenland’s future.”
“You cannot live within the lie of mutual benefit through integration when integration becomes the source of your subordination,” he warned, capturing how alliances can become vulnerabilities if they are not underpinned by real leverage.
Europe is already moving in this direction, talking about “strategic autonomy,” but Carney gave that idea sharper meaning. His pressure on middle powers to stop accommodating great-power behaviour — to “take the sign out of the window,” as he put it — is a demand for political honesty: stop pretending the old order still protects you.
For countries like India, Carney’s words will sound like confirmation. New Delhi long resisted being boxed into any single alliance, preferring diversified ties and strategic autonomy.
Carney’s emphasis that middle powers must not just react but build something “bigger, better, stronger, more just” speaks directly to a strategy India has been quietly pursuing: engaging with multiple partners while safeguarding its own interests.
China, too, will interpret the speech through its own lens. Beijing has long denunciated the rules-based order as Western hegemony in disguise, so Carney’s frank rejection of nostalgia — “Nostalgia is not a strategy” — will be interpreted as validation.
But Carney explicitly rejected a simple replacement with a great-power hierarchy. His appeal for coalitions among middle powers — for “a third path with impact” — runs against China’s preference for bilateral leverage and spheres of influence.
The speech mattered because it stripped away illusions. Carney did not merely claim the rules-based order was eroding; he explained how and why: great powers now use economic integration as a weapon, coercive leverage, and supply chains as vulnerability.
“Great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons,” he said, leaving little doubt about where he sees the most immediate danger.
This is not a call for isolation or defeatism. It is a call for clarity. If the old order is truly gone, then middle powers cannot rely on guarantees that no longer exist. They must build their own resilience and create new structures that function, he said.
“We shouldn’t mourn it,” Carney said of the old order — a recognition that clinging to the past is not strategy.
Carney’s Davos speech was not a lament; it was a challenge. The countries that accept the end of the old order and act to shape what replaces it — rather than waiting for a return to benign predictability — will define the next era of global geopolitics.




