Carney Visits Ukraine as Canada Weighs Sending Soldiers to Aid in Peacekeeping

1
18


Mark Carney is visiting Ukraine for the first time as Canada’s prime minister, as his government says it may be prepared to join peacekeeping efforts led by European allies.

Canada is a member of the coalition of about 30 nations, led by France and the UK, that have pledged to defend Ukraine. The cohort is pushing for robust security guarantees in the event of a peace deal with Russia, with some member nations committing to deploy troops to enforce any agreement.

The North American nation is not ruling out participating in such an effort if the coalition agrees to it, a senior government official said in a background briefing with reporters. The comments come after Carney on Friday emphasized the importance of training and weapons for Ukrainian troops.

“There has to be security on the land, in the air and in the sea. There’s a role — potential — for the members of the coalition to provide support for all of those elements. We’ll see what role Canada might play within that broader group,” he said at a news conference. 

“It’s a fluid situation. It’s a delicate situation,” Carney added. “Any security guarantee starts with a robust Ukrainian army and that means weapons, that means training, that means viability.”

Canada lacks the capacity to send a significant number of soldiers, and its support to date has focused on training Ukrainian forces and providing billions in financial aid. Its small military faces a shortfall of qualified members and is already stretched thin from responding to domestic emergencies and maintaining a brigade in Latvia. 

The US has ruled out sending troops to Ukraine, but has signaled openness to deploying US air defense systems. Still, major hurdles remain to reaching a peace deal — including that the Kremlin is demanding that Kyiv cede control over vast swathes of eastern Ukraine and has rejected the prospect of NATO troops on Ukrainian soil.

Carney is visiting Kyiv to mark Ukraine’s Independence Day, timing that is meant to convey Canada’s staunch support of the country’s sovereignty, the government official said. He will meet with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and outline details of C$2 billion in support pledged during the Group of Seven leaders’ summit in June.

Canada has long been a military spending laggard, but Carney is joining European leaders in promising major new investments amid Russia’s aggression and the US pullback from traditional defense alliances. He signed a security partnership with the European Union in June that marked a first step toward Canada jointly procuring equipment with the bloc’s nations.

Carney also expects on Sunday to advance a bilateral security agreement reached with Ukraine in 2024. He will then travel to Warsaw, Berlin and Riga, Latvia, where he’ll meet with government officials and business leaders to promote Canada’s burgeoning defense sector and its critical minerals, nuclear and aerospace industries.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


Canada, Ukraine, peacekeeping, security guarantees, military spending
#Carney #Visits #Ukraine #Canada #Weighs #Sending #Soldiers #Aid #Peacekeeping

1 COMMENT

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here