Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

5 Canadian soldiers suspended over Nazi salute video

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2025 04:39 PM
  • 5 Canadian soldiers suspended over Nazi salute video

Five members of the Canadian Armed Forces have been suspended and military police are investigating after a video surfaced showing a group of people giving Nazi salutes.

The commander of the army, Lt.-Gen. Michael Wright, called the video's contents disturbing and said that hate and extremism "have no place in the Canadian Army."

"I am deeply disturbed and profoundly disappointed with the content of the video — the behaviour is completely unacceptable, and swift action will be taken," Wright said in a statement provided to media.

The commander said a member of the public shared the video with the military, which shows at least seven individuals, five of whom have been identified as serving members of the Canadian Army.

The video footage was taken in 2023 and also shows an individual performing drill in front of the Royal 22e Régiment flag and "consuming a substance."

Wright said he learned about the video on Aug. 6 and quickly referred the matter to military police.

Wright warned that such hateful conduct hurts the military's ability to "recruit the best of Canada, to maintain credibility to deliver on operations, and it erodes public trust in our institution."

"Canadian Army members who jeopardize that trust and participate in hateful conduct will face the consequences of their actions,’ he said.

Some experts have pointed to a need for the military to step up screening practices to weed out extremists.

Earlier this summer, the RCMP laid terror charges against members of the Canadian Armed Forces in Quebec over an alleged plot to form an anti-government militia and seize land.

The RCMP described that case as one of "ideologically motivated violent extremism."

The dozens of weapons seized in that case, including explosives, assault rifles and a large stockpile of ammunition, are believed to be the largest weapons cache ever recovered in a terrorism incident in Canada.

RCMP charged two active members, Cpl. Marc-Aurèle Chabot and Cpl. Matthew Forbes, and two former members, Simon Angers-Audet and Raphaël Lagacé.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Bank of Canada, Crown corporations set to align with Liberal cost-cutting plans

Bank of Canada, Crown corporations set to align with Liberal cost-cutting plans
A spokesperson for the Bank of Canada confirms the central bank will "align" with the Liberal government's plans to carve out savings of 15 per cent in departments' operational spending over the next three years.

Bank of Canada, Crown corporations set to align with Liberal cost-cutting plans

Candidate in federal Alberta byelection stops door knocking due to death threats

Candidate in federal Alberta byelection stops door knocking due to death threats
Sarah Spanier says she has told Mounties about the online threats, which she attributes to her advocacy for transgender people.

Candidate in federal Alberta byelection stops door knocking due to death threats

Defence spending will lift Canada's economy, but not out of a recession: report

Defence spending will lift Canada's economy, but not out of a recession: report
The updated analysis from Oxford Economics published Wednesday projects that Canada's defence spending commitments will raise the country's real gross domestic product by a tenth of a percentage point this year and next.

Defence spending will lift Canada's economy, but not out of a recession: report

Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack

Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack
A 39-year-old man with the same name has now been charged with hijacking, constituting terrorism, over the incident on Tuesday that saw Norad scramble F-15 fighter jets before the light plane safely landed.

Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack

Carney says he's ready to listen to First Nations on major projects legislation

Carney says he's ready to listen to First Nations on major projects legislation
Carney and several of his cabinet ministers are meeting with hundreds of First Nations leaders in Gatineau on Thursday about the Building Canada Act. 

Carney says he's ready to listen to First Nations on major projects legislation

Environment Canada heat warnings remain in effect from Ontario to Newfoundland

Environment Canada heat warnings remain in effect from Ontario to Newfoundland
Some areas in southern Ontario, including Windsor and Toronto, were also under a heat warning but the weather agency had lifted it as of Thursday morning. 

Environment Canada heat warnings remain in effect from Ontario to Newfoundland