Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Inuit call for a larger role in Canada's Arctic defence surge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2026 09:03 AM
  • Inuit call for a larger role in Canada's Arctic defence surge

The leader of the national organization representing Inuit says the federal government must bring them to the table when it makes its plans for defence spending in the Arctic.

Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami head Natan Obed said Wednesday Inuit want to avoid a repeat of their experiences during the Arctic military buildup of the early Cold War, which he said "radically changed" Inuit lives by allowing the "Canadian government to coerce Inuit off of our lands into settled communities."

He was addressing the Nordic-Canadian Arctic Symposium, an Ottawa conference that featured ambassadors from Nordic states and Indigenous representatives from Greenland and Northern Europe.

The conference took place a week before Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is expected to open a new Canadian consulate in Greenland — and roughly a week after U.S. President Donald Trump escalated and then tempered his demands for the United States to acquire the Danish territory.

"The ground is shifting again and we have to meet this moment," Obed said.

"We need allyship, and we need people who are willing to think about a change in the way you think of this country, a change of the way you think of diplomacy."

Addressing the event Wednesday, Anand said Ottawa's growing focus on defending the Arctic will boost living standards in the region while ensuring that Inuit are at the table.

"This means decision-making based on respect, meaningful consultation and co-operation, as well as participating in economic benefits," she said. "Security imposed without partnership is not sovereignty."

Obed said that while Canada has taken positive steps in the past decade to integrate Indigenous Peoples into its decision-making, there are still significant shortfalls.

He cited the exclusion of Indigenous leaders from the formal meetings Prime Minister Mark Carney holds with premiers, and Quebec's legal objection to transferring authority over Indigenous child welfare to Indigenous nations.

Obed noted Denmark included Greenland representatives in the delegation it sent to the White House, and said he doubted Ottawa would bring Inuit leaders along if it held similar talks with Trump.

He said Carney's argument earlier this month in his speech before the World Economic Forum — that great powers impose their will on smaller nations — could also describe Ottawa's treatment of Indigenous nations.

"I couldn't help but think of some of the terms that were used, and the application of those terms in our context — large, main powers only applying the rules of law when it is convenient, and excusing themselves when it is not," he said.

"This is where the large, main powers oppress all those that they can. And instead of middle powers, it's Indigenous powers."

He also warned that American rhetoric about Denmark not doing enough to develop Greenland is likely going to be directed at Canada.

"The argument often starts with the colonial power has not done enough to improve the land … and so therefore they don't actually have territorial authority over it," he said.

"I guarantee you, that same rhetoric is coming to Canada and to the Canadian Arctic."

The conference heard from representatives of the Sami people, an Indigenous group from northern Europe, about the need to include them in climate change adaptation and national security planning.

Anand said Nordic states have known of threats to the Arctic since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Since then, Trump has argued that Russian and Chinese ships are circling Greenland — despite being contradicted by academics funded by the U.S. military — and he has mulled using military force to secure the island.

"Recent weeks have indicated that the Arctic is no longer a low-tension region, and it is increasingly the front line of strategic competition. The international discourse around Denmark and Greenland have highlighted this," Anand told the conference.

"Defending Canada's Arctic sovereignty is an unquestionable national security priority of this government. It is not a secondary concern. It is not a regional issue, but central to how we protect Canada — in our front yard — and how we contribute to global security."

She listed various investments Ottawa is undertaking in the North to bolster defence, and repeated her argument that NATO needs to shift its focus more toward the Arctic.

Danish Ambassador to Canada Nikolaj Harris told the conference that Anand will visit Copenhagen next week before heading to Nuuk to open Canada's consulate in Greenland.

In a roundtable with reporters, Nordic ambassadors said they hope the consulate can help deepen their partnerships with Canada.

Icelandic Ambassador Audbjorg Halldorsdottir said Canada's consulate in Nuuk "is going to co-locate with Iceland at the outset of their stay."

Harris said he hopes the diplomatic mission will spark "concrete co-operation" that benefits people in both countries.

"There is a wide range of areas where we can take inspiration from each other in the North. They have solutions in Greenland that might be of inspiration for Iqaluit," he said.

"I was in Yellowknife last week, and we had good conversation on some of the know-how we have in infrastructure and energy. For instance, how to use hydro energy up in the North under similar conditions. But also an area like waste-to-energy could be another one, (or) how to construct houses under very difficult circumstances."

Finnish Ambassador Hanna-Leena Korteniemi said Canada and the Nordic nations are making progress on getting NATO to focus more on the Arctic, and said whatever comes next will require more resources and a greater public understanding of the threat posed by Russia.

"We need to collectively build up our capabilities," she said. "We need to strengthen strategic communications."

Greenland's government pledged in February 2024 to open an office in Ottawa. Harris said those plans are still underway and the diplomatic mission "will most likely be hosted in the embassy of the Kingdom of Denmark."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

About 20 weather warnings in effect across Canada as rain, snow, cold hammer country

About 20 weather warnings in effect across Canada as rain, snow, cold hammer country
About 20 weather warnings from Environment Canada are set to remain in effect for swaths of the country over the weekend, as the weather agency forecasts more snowfall, blizzards, freezing rain, rain and shivering temperatures from coast to coast.

About 20 weather warnings in effect across Canada as rain, snow, cold hammer country

Carney's foreign policy shift to trade, security prompts questions about human rights

Carney's foreign policy shift to trade, security prompts questions about human rights
As Prime Minister Mark Carney puts trade and security at the centre of Canada's foreign policy, observers say Ottawa is also shifting how it asserts its values on the world stage.

Carney's foreign policy shift to trade, security prompts questions about human rights

'The year that the shoe dropped': How the Canada-U.S. relationship changed in 2025

'The year that the shoe dropped': How the Canada-U.S. relationship changed in 2025
The people anxiously sipping hot chocolate in the Canadian Embassy in Washington on a cold night in January almost a year ago couldn't have predicted the roller-coaster of trade provocations and bilateral blow-ups the next 12 months would bring.

'The year that the shoe dropped': How the Canada-U.S. relationship changed in 2025

Carney meets Zelenskyy in Halifax as Trump prepares to host peace talks

Carney meets Zelenskyy in Halifax as Trump prepares to host peace talks
Prime Minister Mark Carney condemned new Russian air attacks and announced additional economic assistance for Ukraine as he and the country's president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, stood side-by-side and spoke to reporters at a Halifax-area airport.

Carney meets Zelenskyy in Halifax as Trump prepares to host peace talks

9.0 quake in B.C. could kill thousands and cost $128 billion, report foresees

9.0 quake in B.C. could kill thousands and cost $128 billion, report foresees
Minutes after a massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake strikes off Vancouver Island one summer's day, thousands of British Columbians are dead or injured in the wreckage — then comes the tsunami, aftershocks and chaos.

9.0 quake in B.C. could kill thousands and cost $128 billion, report foresees

Sharp rise in 911 calls in Montreal as wintry weather hits Eastern Canada

Sharp rise in 911 calls in Montreal as wintry weather hits Eastern Canada
A winter storm brought freezing rain, blowing snow and strong winds across Eastern Canada on Monday, leading to a surge in 911 calls in Montreal and leaving tens of thousands of customers without power in Ontario.

Sharp rise in 911 calls in Montreal as wintry weather hits Eastern Canada