Lethbridge Herald

Canadian MPs hearing hints

MPS IN WASHINGTON HEAR THE CALL FOR MORE MONEY SPENT ON DEFENCE

- Alexander Panetta THE CANADIAN PRESS — WASHINGTON

Canadian MPs visiting Washington this week said they kept hearing a familiar message in the U.S. capital: that Canada and other NATO partners will be expected to pony up more money for the military.

It’s something members of the parliament­ary committee on national defence said they would take home after three days of meetings at the Pentagon, the U.S. Capitol and think-tanks that concluded Wednesday.

They tempered that by saying their U.S. interlocut­ors recognized Canada’s nonfinanci­al contributi­ons — such as volunteeri­ng for roles in combat zones including Afghanista­n, Libya and Iraq, in addition to efforts in Eastern Europe.

Stephen Fuhr, the Liberal chair of the defence committee, said there’s clearly a desire to see Canada spend more, but no one is demanding that Canada rush to the NATO spending target of two per cent of GDP.

“Is there an expectatio­n? I’ll be 100 per cent frank. Yes. There’s an expectatio­n Canada will contribute more,” he said. “There’s no doubt about that. But there’s also a recognitio­n of what Canada does bring to the table — which I think is also very important.”

Successive American administra­tions have pushed Canada to increase its spending — which is less than half of its agreed-upon NATO target. One difference now is President Donald Trump has suggested he might take a harder line than his predecesso­rs.

Despite that pressure, there are indication­s the federal budget later this month will not include any significan­t new injections of money for the military. Rather, many are now turning their attention to the fall, by which point the Liberals will have completed their defence policy review.

A Conservati­ve lawmaker travelling to Washington with the committee agreed with his Liberal colleague on two fronts — James Bezan said there is an expectatio­n Canada will spend more and it’s tempered by a recognitio­n that Canada has contribute­d in other ways.

But there is one area of potential disagreeme­nt between the parties.

It involves math.

The Liberals have in the past suggested they could boost defence spending by simply copying the formulas other countries use to calculate their contributi­ons. One example cited Wednesday by Fuhr: the coast guard, whose budget is included in the U.S., not Canada.

There’s a similar debate in the U.K. — where a report to Parliament from the defence committee cited foreign aid and military pensions as reasons that country passed the NATO benchmark last year. The report titled began with a question mark: “Shifting the goalposts?” Fuhr said math is part of this conversati­on. “It’s a lot more than saying just, ‘Who spends two per cent and who doesn’t?’ (It’s also), who brings capability? Who actually shows up? What’s in the calculatio­n? This is where this conversati­on goes.”

Bezan warned against fudging the numbers; that includes lumping in the coast guard.

“You always have to be comparing apples to apples. Some countries, their coast guard is an extension of their navy. They are armed; they are doing border security; counter-narcotic traffickin­g,” Bezan said.

“In Canada, some of those activities for our coast guard are limited. And they’re definitely not armed — so how would that account for a defensive posture?”

Canada is currently one of the lowest-spending members of NATO, by its share of GDP.

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