Cape Breton Post

Canada to send troops to Latvia

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canada is sending hundreds of troops to Latvia for the long haul.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced at the NATO leaders’ summit in Poland on Friday that Canada will take command of a 1,000-strong multinatio­nal force in Latvia, as the alliance beefs up its presence in the Baltics and Poland in response to recent Russian actions.

Speaking on the sidelines of the summit, defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance revealed that Canada will send about 450 soldiers along with armoured vehicles to the Baltic state as part of an “enduring” NATO presence in Eastern Europe.

The Canadians will form the “nucleus” of a battlegrou­p in Latvia, Vance said, that with the addition of forces from other allies, is expected to grow to about 1,000 troops. Germany, the United States and Britain are leading similar forces in Lithuania, Poland and Estonia.

Allies are expected to begin announcing contributi­ons at a conference next week, while officials indicated the first Canadian troops could begin arriving in Latvia early next year. Vance couldn’t say how long they would stay.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g “has been clear this is an open-ended commitment,” Vance said. “And so Canada has committed to that. We’ll take it as it comes. But it is intended to be enduring.”

There had already been fears NATO and Russia are on the brink of a new Cold War, if they aren’t already in one. The lack of any clear timetable for when Canadian troops will come home from Eastern Europe may well add to those comparison­s.

In addition to the troops, Canada will deploy up to six CF-18s to Europe on an occasional basis to help patrol allied airspace. It will also continue sending naval frigates to the region, as it has done since April 2014.

The combined efforts will bring the number of Canadian military personnel in Eastern Europe at any given time up to a maximum of 800, which the government says is Canada’s largest sustained military deployment to the continent in over a decade.

Appearing with Vance, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan pushed back on the Cold War comparison­s.

“This is about sending a right message of cohesion within NATO,” he said, “giving confidence to member states, and showing how important deterrence is so we can get back to a responsibl­e dialogue.”

Speaking to reporters earlier in the day, Stoltenber­g said alliance members “don’t want a new Cold War. The Cold War is history and it should remain history.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of National Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan listen to opening remarks at the first plenary session at the start of the NATO summit in Warsaw Friday.
CP PHOTO Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of National Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan listen to opening remarks at the first plenary session at the start of the NATO summit in Warsaw Friday.

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