The Daily Telegraph

Canada considers nuclear submarine patrols

- By Tony Diver US Editor

CANADA is considerin­g joining the Aukus pact and believes it may need nuclear submarines to patrol its Arctic waters, Justin Trudeau has said.

The Canadian prime minister said yesterday that he had already held “excellent conversati­ons” with the US, UK and Australia over joining the alliance. Aukus, launched in September 2021, is a defence alliance focussed on sharing nuclear submarine technology, which last year announced intentions to help Australia build its first vessels.

Canada would become the fourth member of the pact, which is now looking at sharing informatio­n on technology, AI and the constructi­on of new weapons.

The country has been floated as a possible contender for membership by several high-profile figures from member states, including Boris Johnson, who was in office as prime minister when the alliance launched.

Mr Trudeau said it was “really important that allies, particular­ly across the Indo-pacific, work together in a stronger and tighter ways,” in a nod towards the threat from China.

Supporters of Canada’s membership have said that the country’s supply of critical natural minerals would allow the UK, US and Australia to be less reliant on exports from China.

The announceme­nt came as Mr Trudeau launched a new defence policy document that included calls for the purchase of convention­ally-powered submarines and left open the prospect of a nuclear model. “That is certainly what we will be looking at, as to what type of submarines are most appropriat­e for Canada’s responsibi­lity in protecting the longest coastline in the world, and certainly the longest Arctic coastline in the world,” he said.

The paper set out significan­t investment in the Canadian armed forces, but did not establish how the country planned to reach the Nato defence spending target of two per cent of GDP.

In February, Mr Johnson and Liz Truss, his successor, backed a paper from the Legatum Institute calling for Canada’s membership to be fast-tracked to “strengthen the West’s collective defences”.

Mr Johnson said Canada was the “most obvious next candidate” because it had “fought – often heroically – for freedom”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom