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Canada pledges $4.3B in support for Ukraine as Carney, Zelenskyy meet at G7

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2025 10:44 AM
  • Canada pledges $4.3B in support for Ukraine as Carney, Zelenskyy meet at G7

Prime Minister Mark Carney outlined $4.3 billion in new support for Ukraine's defence as he met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Alberta on Tuesday.

The Prime Minister's Office said that sum includes $2 billion for weapons like drones, ammunition and armoured vehicles — funding that Canada will count toward its NATO defence spending target.

Canada is also lending Ukraine $2.3 billion to help the embattled country rebuild its infrastructure.

The Prime Minister's Office said the loan will be repaid by interest charged on Russian assets frozen in Europe.

Canada also announced a new sanctions package targeting Russia's shadow fleet and energy revenues.

Carney, who is serving as the G7 summit host this year, invited Zelenskyy to the meeting and has said Canada intends to make Ukraine's defence a central part of the discussions.

The G7 leaders were scheduled to hold a working breakfast session Tuesday on ending Russia's war on Ukraine.

As he met with Zelenskyy Tuesday morning, Carney condemned "in the strongest terms" the latest round of Russian attacks.

"This underscores the importance of standing in total solidarity with Ukraine, with the Ukrainian people, and we had a discussion last night amongst G7 leaders ... We underscored the importance of using maximum pressure against Russia, who has refused to come to the table," Carney said.

Kyiv was bombarded overnight with 32 missiles and more than 440 drones, Zelenskyy said — the deadliest attack on the capital this year.

Twelve people were killed and more than 130 injured, Zelenskyy said, adding Russia targeted civilian infrastructure, including housing.

"It's a big tragedy for us and we need support from our allies," he said, thanking Canada for its aid.

"We are ready for the peace negotiations, unconditional ceasefire. I think it's very important, but for this we need pressure."

Carney said Canada's latest round of sanctions targets "a number of individuals," as well as 40 entities in Russia and 200 vessels in the so-called shadow fleet that Russia is using to evade sanctions.

The G7 continues for its second and final day without U.S. President Donald Trump, who left the talks ahead of schedule on Monday.

Trump, who said he left early to deal with the escalating violence in the Middle East, is missing the sessions Carney set aside to focus on foreign policy.

Speaking to reporters on Air Force 1 Monday evening as he returned to Washington, Trump was asked whether he talked to anyone at the summit about his previous comments about making Canada a U.S. state.

"I think it's a much better deal for Canada, but you know, it's up to them," Trump responded.

He said if Canada doesn't join the U.S., it will have to pay "a lot of tariffs and things" and said Ottawa would have to pay $71 billion to be part of the "Iron Dome" — an apparent reference to the Golden Dome, a missile defence system Trump has proposed for the U.S.

Trump said Ottawa and Washington may make a separate deal on the Golden Dome.

Despite Trump's departure, the G7 agenda is busy.

Carney began his day with a meeting with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte — their first in-person discussion since the federal government announced it plans to meet the NATO spending target this fiscal year.

The Liberals have outlined plans to rapidly scale up defence spending to the equivalent of two per cent of GDP, a target that Canada has agreed to for over a decade but has never actually met.

Carney thanked Rutte for his leadership of the alliance, which is set to meet next week in the Netherlands.

He said Canada is "stepping up to meet our commitments and (I) look forward to defining those new responsibilities and capabilities."

Rutte said that with Canada and Portugal promising to boost defence spending, "the whole of NATO will now be in 2025 at two per cent before the summit starts next week in The Hague."

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is to meet with Carney late Tuesday afternoon after attending various meetings, including a discussion of energy sovereignty with peers from Brazil, South Africa and Mexico.

Modi's visit has prompted angry protests from Sikh separatist groups. In 2023 and 2024, former prime minister Justin Trudeau and the RCMP said there was evidence linking agents of the Indian government to the murder of Canadian Sikh separatist activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, B.C., in June 2023.

Last October, RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme said the police force had evidence linking Indian government officials to other crimes in Canada, including extortion, coercion and homicide.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

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