Washington presses Ottawa to honor commitments to allies

Justin is letting Joe down
Canada’s latest defense policy
A commitment to allies
Canada won’t meet the goal
Our North, Strong and Free
Hitting 1.76% by 2029
One win for Canada
The Americans aren’t happy
Comments from Andrew Leslie
“Our NATO allies are despairing”
A letter from the U.S. Senators
A valued ally
Looking for more from Canada
Urging Ottawa to meet its commitments
The response from Ottawa
“We know we've got work to do”
Justin is letting Joe down
Canada, one of NATO's founding members, is now disregarding the frustrations of its allies and has no plans to fulfill the commitments it made to its military partners.
Canada’s latest defense policy

The federal government unveiled its latest upgrade to Canada’s national defense policy in April 2024. However, Ottawa’s new plan had one major flaw: it failed to meet NATO’s 2% defense spending agreed to by Canada. 

A commitment to allies

According to NATO, leaders from every NATO member state agreed at the 2023 Vilnius Summit to a new Defense Investment Pledge that saw each of the defensive alliance’s members commit to spending 2% of their GDP on defense spending. 

Canada won’t meet the goal

However, the federal government's new national defense policy revealed Ottawa would not meet the 2% spending threshold, though a breakdown of the new defense policy by the Government of Canada noted it was getting close. 

Our North, Strong and Free

The ‘Our North, Strong and Free’ policy will see Canada invest $8.1 billion dollars over the next five years into defense spending as well as another $73 billion over the next 20 years. But this still isn’t enough to hit NATO’s 2% threshold. 

Hitting 1.76% by 2029

Canada’s defense investments will push its defense spending-to-GDP ratio to 1.76% by 2029-30, something the government called “a significant step forward in our efforts to reach the NATO commitment of 2% to which we agreed at the Vilnius Summit in 2023.”

One win for Canada

“The initiatives under this defense policy also put Canada on track to exceed NATO’s target of 20% for major equipment expenditures as a proportion of defense funding,” the Government of Canada added. 

The Americans aren’t happy

While the Government of Canada might be proud of its spending achievement, its allies aren’t happy, and one retired lieutenant general of the Canadian Forces and former Liberal Member of Parliament told the National Post that Canada’s allies weren’t happy. 

Comments from Andrew Leslie

“The current prime minister of Canada is not serious about defense. Full stop. A large number of his cabinet members are not serious about defense. Full stop,” said Lt.-Gen. Andrew Leslie in an article published on May 12th. 

“Our NATO allies are despairing”

“Our NATO allies are despairing. Our American friends are frustrated,” Leslie added. It was a sentiment that was echoed by nearly one-quarter of United States Senators two weeks later when they sent a letter to Justin Trudeau over Canada’s defense spending. 

A letter from the U.S. Senators

CBC News reported that 23 members of the U.S. Senators from both parties sent a letter to Trudeau that expressed dismay over Canada’s level of defense spending in what the news agency called “a dramatic and public escalation of pressure from Washington.”

A valued ally

The letter noted that Canada was a “valued ally” that had long contributed to NATO and was essential to NATO operations but added that it needed to uphold its commitments to the alliance, a reference to Canada's failure to meet NATO’s 2% spending threshold.

Looking for more from Canada

“As we approach the 2024 NATO Summit in Washington, D.C., we are concerned and profoundly disappointed that Canada’s most recent projection indicated that it will not reach its two percent commitment this decade,” the letter added. 

Urging Ottawa to meet its commitments

“In 2029, Canada’s defense spending is estimated to rise to just 1.7 percent, five years after the agreed upon deadline of 2024 and still below the spending baseline,” the letter noted before urging Trudeau to develop a plan to meet Canada’s commitment. 

The response from Ottawa

Canadian Minister of Defence Bill Blair was quick to shrug off the letter from the United States Senators while speaking to reporters on May 23rd, saying he believed he could reassure the concerned senators according to CBC News. 

“We know we've got work to do”

"Canada is on a very strong upward trajectory in defence spending. We know we've got work to do, we've acknowledged that since day one," Blair said. "We've clearly indicated in our budget the path to getting that done."

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