Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand touted Canada’s new commitment to defence spending and the domestic defence sector and called for a NATO policy pivot to the Arctic at a major defence and security conference in Ottawa on Wednesday.
“We’re reaching two per cent of GDP this year and five per cent of GDP by 2035,” she said, referring to the NATO alliance’s commitment to spend the equivalent of five per cent of GDP on defence within a decade.
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That updated target was pushed by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has accused other allies of freeloading on the United States. European countries in NATO have also moved to quickly re-arm as Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine continues.
At the same time, Anand said, the alliance needs to shift its focus to the North.
“Last August, I raised the point about ensuring that NATO has efforts that are geared towards Arctic security and protection, and my foreign minister colleagues around that table, the Nordic Five, agreed with me wholeheartedly,” she said.
The Nordic Five includes Denmark, Iceland, Norway, Finland and Sweden — the latter two countries being the newest members of NATO.
Anand said Canada wants to see a NATO Arctic strategy that is more comprehensive than the Arctic Sentry mission launched earlier this year, and that includes a permanent presence in the region.
She said she planned to discuss the topic with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte later in the day.
The Conference of Defence Associations Institute’s annual conference is focused this year on how NATO allies will fulfil their pledge to reach the 2035 spending commitment.
The agenda for the Ottawa conference includes discussions about the Canadian Armed Forces’ recruitment and retention efforts.
Former defence minister Bill Blair told the same conference two years ago that the military was in a recruitment “death spiral” and that the federal government was unable to spend more on defence.
Anand, who was in charge of defence the year before Blair, told the crowd Wednesday that she “stood on this stage in 2023 indicating that our commitment to NATO, two per cent, was of the utmost importance.”
The Liberal government at the time had no plan to get to its NATO spending target.
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government recently released a defence industrial strategy — something Blair began work on during his time as minister — that sets out a plan to boost domestic defence production.
Anand said governments have long considered defence and security separate from economic growth, but that is no longer the case.
“The defence industrial strategy is about activating the small and medium-size enterprises in this country, as well as larger corporations,” she said.
Conference participants watched a panel discussion Wednesday about Canada’s role in the Indo-Pacific moderated by Vincent Rigby, a former national security and intelligence adviser to prime minister Justin Trudeau.
Rigby said Canada has been struggling to find its way in the Indo-Pacific region for the last several years, even after the release of a regional strategy in 2022.
Carney’s efforts to improve relations with China — which his government now describes as a “strategic partner” — are seemingly at odds with the 2022 strategy document, which frames China as an increasingly disruptive global power.
The panellists agreed Canada likely needs to refresh that strategy — which was meant to cover a 10-year period — and should link it to the Arctic and Europe.
“It ain’t going to be easy,” Rigby said.
“It’s going to be testing the prime minister’s pragmatic diplomacy when it comes to countries like China and India and — dare I say as well — the United States.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 4, 2026.









