Trudeau acknowledges US Senators’ calls to meet NATO spending target
Addressing a call by U.S. senators to increase military spending, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau blamed the previous Conservative government for lower military investments and said current spending plans are “extremely well-received” by the United States.
“First of all, it’s important to remember where Canada was,” Mr. Trudeau said during a press conference in Halifax on May 24, responding to questions about the bipartisan letter from U.S. senators. “In 2015 under the Harper Conservatives in which Pierre Poilievre was minister in that government, defence spending dropped for the first time to below 1 percent of [GDP].”
The Liberal government made the commitment in July 2023 at the NATO summit in Lithuania to reach the 2 percent target, but more recent domestic pledges fall short.
“We are now on track to reaching over 1.76 percent of GDP, which is a record high for Canada, and we’re not done yet,” said Mr. Trudeau, in relation to the spending target set for 2029/2030.
The prime minister mentioned major investments being made in continental defence modernization or for the purchase of new fighter jets.
“Our recent budget’s massive investments in Arctic safety and security, recognizing NATO’s western and northern flank is Canada’s Arctic, are all extremely well-received by the Americans and by allies around the world who want to see us continue to step up,” said Mr. Trudeau.
“As we approach the 2024 NATO Summit in Washington, D.C., we are concerned and profoundly disappointed that Canada’s most recent projection indicated that it will not reach its two percent commitment this decade,” wrote the senators.
Failing to meet its obligation to the alliance comes to the “detriment of all NATO Allies and the free world,” the group said, which includes Democrats Jeanne Shaheen and Tammy Duckworth, and Republicans Mitt Romney and Ted Cruz.
The Canadian Press contributed to this report.