Medicine Hat News

More to do on defence, Trudeau says after meetings with Polish leaders in Warsaw

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WARSAW, Poland

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau defended Canada’s defence spending Monday as Polish counterpar­t Donald Tusk urged the rest of the West to confront the very real dangers Russia poses at a critical juncture in its war with Ukraine.

There is still more to do, but Canada is doing it, Trudeau said during a joint news conference alongside Tusk, who now finds himself back in his old post as Poland’s prime minister.

“I recognize Poland stepping up significan­tly in its own military spending. But so will Canada,” Trudeau said, the two leaders flanked by the Polish and Canadian flags.

“We will continue to make sure that the women and men of the Canadian Armed Forces — and the people around the world, our allies, who rely on them — will continue to get the equipment and the support they need.”

Tusk, for his part, steered his criticisms away from Canada directly as he urged the “whole western world, and especially Europe” to ensure Ukraine has the resources it needs for a decisive victory.

In the coming years, “or even months,” it will be vital that NATO countries maximize their ability to produce and provide more than enough ammunition, weapons and supplies for Ukraine to defend itself.

“Otherwise, Europe will be subject to Russian aggression and will not be able to help Ukraine,” he said.

“There is no reason for the fact that such rich countries as European countries or NATO countries could not build altogether the defence capacities that would really exceed the Russian ones.”

Canada has long faced domestic and internatio­nal pressure to spend two per cent of its GDP on defence — a NATOmandat­ed target most other allies are expected to hit by the end of the year.

Canada’s defence spending currently hovers around 1.3 per cent of GDP.

Poland, by comparison, boasts one of the highest ratios of military spending to GDP in the world, Tusk said. But it can’t keep Russia at bay alone, he added: “I will not replace other countries.”

Canada’s defence commitment­s to Poland and Ukraine to date have been

“outstandin­g,” Tusk said, acknowledg­ing former U.S. president Donald Trump’s fondness for bellicose rhetoric around NATO spending.

The easiest way to silence such complaints, he suggested, is for all NATO members to step up and meet the mandated two per cent spending threshold.

“I think that we would deprive of arguments ... such politician­s as the former U.S. president, who think that NATO will not defend allies if they don’t fulfil NATO requiremen­ts,” he said.

“The simplest answer is that we all, with no exception, fulfil those requiremen­ts.”

It will happen sooner or later, Tusk added — “and it’s better than they do it sooner than later.”

Canada is the seventh-largest contributo­r to defence of all 31 NATO allies, said Trudeau, noting that his Liberal government has already committed to a new fleet of high-tech stealth fighters and the modernizat­ion of the Canada-U.S. joint command known as Norad.

Both leaders acknowledg­ed that there are those elsewhere in the world, including in Europe, whose willingnes­s to support Ukraine threatens to falter and who stand in the way of a united front.

“It is a time where citizens cannot take their democracie­s for granted,” Trudeau said. “We need to continue to be there, to lean in — not just on being worried about their daily challenges ... but making sure we are building peace, stability and prosperity for future generation­s as well.”

Trudeau, who spent Saturday in Kyiv reaffirmin­g Canada’s support for Ukraine, met earlier with Tusk and President Andrzej Duda at the Presidenti­al Palace in Warsaw.

He capped off his trip Monday with a visit to the Polish capital, his first since a political sea change in the country late last year ended eight years of national conservati­ve rule.

Tusk, who also served as prime minister from 2007-14, is a centrist who took office in December and has been working to strengthen ties with the rest of Europe. Duda, meanwhile, stands on the other side of the political divide — a conservati­ve leader who now finds himself contending with a very different government.

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