Canada is expected to boost military spending after a government review next month, but the increase is unlikely to comfort allies facing new threats and it could further undermine the country's international military credibility, policy analysts said.
Canada is expected to boost military spending after a government review next month, but the increase is unlikely to comfort allies facing new threats and it could further undermine the country's international military credibility, policy analysts said. Canada's lagging military investments are well known, but threats have grown more serious with Russia waging war in Ukraine on the NATO alliance's doorstep and vast areas of the Arctic becoming more accessible because of climate change. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg warned after a visit to the Canadian Arctic last August that Russia and China were forming a strategic partnership that challenged the Western military alliance's values and interests.
'[Putin] looked vulnerable and for a dictator that's kryptonite,' said Roland Paris, director of the University of Ottawa's Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. 'We'll see whether this leads to there being any other kinds of fissures in the regime.'
(OTTAWA) Arctic security and the war in Ukraine were prime concerns for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Sunday as he arrived in Iceland, where he will be.