Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Sorry, Trump: Canada Isn't Committing To Doubling Defence Spending

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2016 12:12 PM
    WASHINGTON — Canada isn't committing to a massive boost in military spending, such as is being demanded of U.S. allies by Donald Trump as part of his presidential election platform.
     
    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan was asked during a visit to Washington about the request that NATO allies meet their stated goal of spending two per cent of GDP on the military.
     
    Trump warned recently that allies should be prepared to defend themselves without any American help if they won't bother following through on the international spending goal set years ago.
     
    Sajjan expressed skepticism Thursday about the value of that two-per-cent yardstick, without committing to it or ruling it out. He said the government will seek a plan that works for Canada, and for its allies, through its current review of defence policy.
     
    There are other ways to calculate a country's contribution, he said.
     
    "We had 158 soldiers who died — sacrificed — in Afghanistan. Having been alongside them, contributions can be measured in many different ways," said the minister, a veteran of the Afghan war.
     
    "We as Canada will make a decision based on what type of military capability, size, composition, is going to be needed for Canada — but more importantly how we integrate with our multilateral partners."
     
    The minister's language echoes that of the discussion paper put out by the government for its ongoing review, which suggests the two-per-cent target is a questionable measure for calculating military effectiveness. 
     
    Canada would need to double its spending to reach that target. It's currently in the bottom tier of NATO countries in terms of spending, at one per cent of the national economy.
     
    Reaching the target would require another $20 billion per year — the equivalent of nearly the entire federal employment insurance program, or half of health transfers to the provinces.
     
     
    But NATO countries signed onto that target a decade ago. It's been a source of annoyance to politicians in the higher-spending countries that only four nations have reached the target.
     
    Trump made it a theme of his recent foreign-policy speech — attached to a threat.
     
    "Our allies must contribute toward the financial, political and human costs of our tremendous security burden. But many of them are simply not doing so," he said recently.
     
    "We have spent trillions of dollars over time — on planes, missiles, ships, equipment — building up our military to provide a strong defence for Europe and Asia. The countries we are defending must pay for the cost of this defence — and, if not, the U.S. must be prepared to let these countries defend themselves."
     
    An international observer of military spending calls the two-per-cent figure arbitrary, essentially political, and unconnected to real security requirements.
     
    But he said the recent invasion of Ukraine has increased pressure on NATO allies.
     
    "I think given the political climate, most NATO members who are currently below two per cent — i.e. most of them — will be reluctant to reduce military spending, and may increase it slightly, unless faced with poor economic conditions," said Sam Perlo-Freeman, head of the Project on Military Expenditure at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
     
    "As Canada is one of the lowest spenders as a share of GDP, it would be in particular politically awkward to further cut spending. But the two-per-cent figure remains more of an aspirational target for many members, which is not going to be reached or approached in the foreseeable future.
     
    "Of course if Donald Trump becomes President, then all bets are off, and if he means what he says about NATO being obsolete, then who knows."
     
    Sajjan is in the U.S. for meetings, and for a ceremony at the North American Aerospace Defence Command in Colorado.
     
    That's the home of the monitoring system for the U.S. missile-defence program, which is another part of the new Liberal government's defence review.
     
     
    Canada declined to join the program a decade ago but remains involved in monitoring the skies for incoming objects — and works in the same room in Colorado with U.S. officers involved in missile defence.
     
    "I look forward to the discussion," Sajjan said of missile defence. 
     
    "This is right now exactly what the defence review is trying to do — is making sure that we have a wide dialogue."
     
    The government is soliciting opinions for the review through July 31.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tim Bosma Trial: Dellen Millard's Ex-girlfriend Says She Thought Nothing Of Hiding Video Camera

    Tim Bosma Trial: Dellen Millard's Ex-girlfriend Says She Thought Nothing Of Hiding Video Camera
    Christina Noudga told a Hamilton court that Dellen Millard gave her a video camera that she hid in her closet, but says she thought nothing of it even after her boyfriend was charged with the murder of Bosma in 2013.

    Tim Bosma Trial: Dellen Millard's Ex-girlfriend Says She Thought Nothing Of Hiding Video Camera

    Drunk Driving Conviction Stands For Ontario Sleeping Man Found In Parked Truck

    Drunk Driving Conviction Stands For Ontario Sleeping Man Found In Parked Truck
    TORONTO — A drunk man found sleeping behind the wheel of his idling parked truck has lost his bid to take his impaired driving conviction to Ontario's top court.

    Drunk Driving Conviction Stands For Ontario Sleeping Man Found In Parked Truck

    Jonathan Nicola , South Sudanese 'Teen' On Ontario High School Basketball Scholarship Likely 29

    Jonathan Nicola , South Sudanese 'Teen' On Ontario High School Basketball Scholarship Likely 29
    "I am not a liar person," Nicola recently told an Immigration and Refugee Board hearing via video conference.

    Jonathan Nicola , South Sudanese 'Teen' On Ontario High School Basketball Scholarship Likely 29

    Researcher To Ending Decade-Long Hunt For Nova Scotia Cougar

    Researcher To Ending Decade-Long Hunt For Nova Scotia Cougar
    HALIFAX — After 10 years of patiently waiting for Nova Scotia's ghost cougar to appear, a determined researcher working in the dark forests of Kejimkujik National Park is calling it quits.

    Researcher To Ending Decade-Long Hunt For Nova Scotia Cougar

    Case Put Over For Man Charged With Murder In Stabbing Of Montreal Store Clerk

    Case Put Over For Man Charged With Murder In Stabbing Of Montreal Store Clerk
    Randy Tshilumba appeared in a Montreal courtroom today in connection with the April 10 slaying of Clemence Beaulieu-Patry, 20.

    Case Put Over For Man Charged With Murder In Stabbing Of Montreal Store Clerk

    Christy Clark Draws Fire For Taking B.C. Liberal Party Stipend Above Her Salary

    Christy Clark Draws Fire For Taking B.C. Liberal Party Stipend Above Her Salary
    The stipend is in addition to the premier's annual salary of about $195,000, is a long-standing tradition in the party and former premier Gordon Campbell received $90,000 at one point.

    Christy Clark Draws Fire For Taking B.C. Liberal Party Stipend Above Her Salary