Tuesday, March 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Conservatives accuse PM Carney of flip-flopping on Iran military campaign

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2026 10:51 AM
  • Conservatives accuse PM Carney of flip-flopping on Iran military campaign

The Conservatives are accusing Mark Carney of flip-flopping on Iran after the prime minister said he would be leaving the door open to a Canadian military deployment.

Carney originally expressed unequivocal support for the U.S. commencing strikes on Iran last weekend — then said later he did so with regret because the bombing campaign seems inconsistent with international law.

While the prime minister has said Ottawa has no plans to join the military campaign, he added Wednesday that he could not categorically rule out a military deployment if allies called on Canada for help.

Conservative foreign affairs critic Michael Chong says Carney is being incoherent and his statements contradict each other.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte is playing down the idea of an alliance response to Iranian actions, saying nobody has been talking about such a move since NATO member Turkey reported the alliance's defence system shot down an incoming ballistic missile.

Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says she was not aware that her parliamentary secretary, Rob Oliphant, had said days before the U.S. attack that Ottawa does not believe in military action that isn't sanctioned by the United Nations.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Vahid Salemi

MORE National ARTICLES

Those in Canada with loved ones in Middle East hopeful about Hamas-Israel peace plan

Those in Canada with loved ones in Middle East hopeful about Hamas-Israel peace plan
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a first phase of a plan that will see Hamas release the 20 living hostages while Israel pulls troops back to an agreed-upon line.

Those in Canada with loved ones in Middle East hopeful about Hamas-Israel peace plan

Senate debates bill to add warning labels to alcohol packaging

Senate debates bill to add warning labels to alcohol packaging
The Senate is studying a bill that proposes adding cancer warning labels to alcohol packaging.

Senate debates bill to add warning labels to alcohol packaging

B.C. government experts including engineers, foresters expand strike provincewide

B.C. government experts including engineers, foresters expand strike provincewide
The union representing British Columbia's professionals, including engineers, foresters and geoscientists, says those members have joined public service workers in strike action across the province.

B.C. government experts including engineers, foresters expand strike provincewide

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers
As an Alberta-wide teachers strike drags into its fourth day, a labour relations expert doesn't see why the group in charge of bargaining delayed their lockout.

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers

Influencers — not news outlets or politicians — 'dominated' election online: report

Influencers — not news outlets or politicians — 'dominated' election online: report
The report from the Canadian Digital Media Research Network, co-ordinated by the McGill University and University of Toronto-led Media Ecosystem Observatory, looked at the election information environment.

Influencers — not news outlets or politicians — 'dominated' election online: report

Quebec government tables draft constitution that will be 'law of all laws'

François Legault says the Quebec constitution will be "the law of all laws" and reinforce the province's autonomy. 

Quebec government tables draft constitution that will be 'law of all laws'