Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada faces 'massive challenge' as NATO eyes new 5% spending target: expert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2025 01:04 PM
  • Canada faces 'massive challenge' as NATO eyes new 5% spending target: expert

When representatives of NATO nations meet in The Hague late next month, they're expected to dramatically hike the alliance's defence spending target for members — the one Canada is failing to hit already.

At the last NATO summit in Washington last year, allies lined up to call out Canada for failing to meet the alliance defence spending target of two per cent of national GDP.

When Prime Minister Mark Carney attends the NATO summit next month, he'll likely be under pressure to commit to a new defence spending target of five per cent of national GDP.

"We're such an outlier now," said David Perry, president of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. He said Canada will face a "massive challenge" in meeting the new target.

U.S. President Donald Trump has said for months he wants to see NATO countries increase their defence spending to five per cent of GDP.

On Monday, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said he believes allied nations will agree at next month's gathering to a new target of five per cent.

Annual NATO data shows Canada is still failing to reach its current commitment; defence spending amounted to just 1.3 per cent of GDP in 2024. Canada also failed to meet the alliance's target for equipment spending.

"The last time that there were reported stats, we were one of only two not meeting either (pledge). Everybody else meets at least one," Perry said. "We're increasingly, extraordinarily isolated in how far behind everyone else we are."

Laval University international relations professor Anessa Kimball said Canada should be preparing to argue that investing more in the military becomes much harder in the middle of a trade war.

Kimball said Ottawa should prepare to leverage Trump's calls for higher military spending in the alliance and use that to press the case against his tariff agenda.

Kimball, who wrote a book on defence burden-sharing among NATO members, also said Carney may have a ready-made excuse for missing the NATO target.

As governor of the Bank of England, Carney was busy in the U.K. managing the economic fallout from Brexit when Justin Trudeau was in power and directing Canada's military spending.

"While I think that gives him an important level of macroeconomic credibility, it also gives him a little bit of an out. Essentially he can say, 'Trudeau and the Liberal Party left me a bit of a mess and they've known that they had to do this,'" Kimball said.

"Carney couldn't do worse at being convincing as Trudeau was. Trudeau was entirely unconvincing last year."

At the 2024 NATO summit in Washington, after a series of U.S. politicians blasted Canada for failing to meet its commitments, Trudeau pledged to reach the two per cent target by 2032.

His government suggested this could be done by buying up to 12 new submarines — a procurement project for which no deadline was ever given.

Trudeau said at the time that Canada's defence spending was based on its needs, "not some nominal targets that make for easy headlines and accounting practices, but don’t actually make us automatically safer.”

During the spring election campaign, Carney pledged to reach two per cent by 2030.

"The government was elected on a strong mandate to rebuild Canada's defence capacity, rearm the Canadian Armed Forces and invest in the Canadian defence industry," said Laurent de Casanove, a spokesperson for Defence Minister David McGuinty.

"The prime minister was clear that this government will invest to put Canada on track to exceed our NATO defence spending target before 2030."

But Perry said Carney likely will have very little wiggle room at The Hague, even in a room full of allies who know he's new to the job.

"I think, unfairly for him, there's probably not a lot (of room)," he said. "Even though he's brand-new, this commitment for Canada isn't. It's over a decade old."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Khalil Hamra

MORE National ARTICLES

One dead in Merritt rollover crash

One dead in Merritt rollover crash
Police in B-C say one person is dead and four others are injured following a serious single-vehicle rollover near Merritt. R-C-M-P say they were called to the scene at around 3:50 p.m. Saturday after receiving a report of a serious vehicle incident on Highway 5 north of Juliet Road. 

One dead in Merritt rollover crash

Police car stolen at Vancouver park

Police car stolen at Vancouver park
A man with a lengthy criminal record is back in custody after allegedly stealing a police car at a Vancouver park yesterday morning. Vancouver police say the car was allegedly stolen around 10:45 a.m. after officers were flagged down to help a woman in distress in East Vancouver. 

Police car stolen at Vancouver park

Nuremberg and Nazi comparisons to COVID-19 measures 'unacceptable': Rustad

Nuremberg and Nazi comparisons to COVID-19 measures 'unacceptable': Rustad
That's after video surfaced of Rustad saying his party would "certainly be participating with other jurisdictions" after being asked at an online meeting in July about where he stood on "Nuremberg 2.0," which is the idea that people behind public health measures during the pandemic should be put on trial.

Nuremberg and Nazi comparisons to COVID-19 measures 'unacceptable': Rustad

Year long trafficking investigation leads to 1 arrest and seizure of 23 kgs of illicit drugs

Year long trafficking investigation leads to 1 arrest and seizure of 23 kgs of illicit drugs
Surrey RCMP say a more than a year long drug trafficking investigation has led to one arrest and the seizure of 23-kilograms of M-D-M-A, a quantity of fentanyl and other illicit drugs. They say the probe targeted a network that allegedly supplied bulk amounts of illicit drugs to traffickers in several Greater Vancouver cities.

Year long trafficking investigation leads to 1 arrest and seizure of 23 kgs of illicit drugs

Vancouver police boost presence at protests, schools for Oct. 7 anniversary

Vancouver police boost presence at protests, schools for Oct. 7 anniversary
Vancouver Police Chief Const. Adam Palmer says planned and unplanned protests across the city are posing a "significant" risk of disorder, and officers trained specifically for large-scale events will be deployed. In addition, Palmer says tactical response and uniformed officers will be placed at "key locations" in consultation with leaders of both the Jewish and Muslim communities.

Vancouver police boost presence at protests, schools for Oct. 7 anniversary

Eby defends B.C.'s speculation tax increase, says it will create more needed rentals

Eby defends B.C.'s speculation tax increase, says it will create more needed rentals
New Democrat Leader David Eby is defending plans to increase British Columbia's speculation tax on empty homes because he says it works. He says the tax saw 20,000 vacant homes in Metro Vancouver rented out since its introduction in 2017 and he expects more rental opportunities will result from the increase.

Eby defends B.C.'s speculation tax increase, says it will create more needed rentals