logo
Canadian military flies the flag in frozen north as struggle for the Arctic heats up

Canadian military flies the flag in frozen north as struggle for the Arctic heats up

The Guardian09-03-2025

The winter sun hasn't yet risen above Inuvik's jagged horizon of black spruce trees, but already, more than 150 nervous soldiers have gathered in a community recreation centre.
Tables clear of their breakfast and fingers fiddle with pens, a giddiness akin to the first day of school settles over the room.
Few have traveled this far north before, more than 200 kilometres above the Arctic Circle in Canada's Northwest Territories. For some, the trip here marked the first time they had ever been on an airplane.
'You are here to be exposed to the Arctic environment,' Lt Col Darren Turner, the land taskforce commander, tells the group, which snaps to attention when he enters. 'You are here to demonstrate our sovereignty and that we can protect and defend our territory from all threats.'
Running from mid-February until 9 March, Operation Nanook was Canada's sprawling military exercise in the hostile theatre of the Arctic. In aircraft and slogging on foot through the tundra, nearly 650 personnel simulate retaking key infrastructure, testing cutting-edge equipment – and, most importantly, learning to survive the cold.
The operation, conducted alongside allies from the United States, United Kingdom, Belgium, Sweden and Finland, reflects an aim to 'project force' in the Arctic, but also to sustain that force amid frigid conditions.
The backdrop of the mission is a recognition that Russia and China – which now calls itself a 'near-Arctic nation' – have a growing interest in a region that makes up nearly half of Canada's land mass. Thinning sea ice has opened up the North-west Passage for a longer window of time and thawing permafrost holds the promise of immense fossil fuel and critical mineral wealth.
The national defence minister, Bill Blair, warned on Thursday that climate change was upending the region and providing 'growing access to Arctic resources and shipping lanes that, unfortunately, is enticing other adversarial nations to engage in heightened competition'.
'Both nations are seeking to challenge the existing unipolar world and exert national spheres of influence in the Arctic region,' Maj Andrew Melvin, who oversaw the short-term land operations, told the reservists.
While a direct, armed confrontation with Russia or China is 'highly unlikely', he warned the two countries had sophisticated intelligence-gathering tools and could use the mission to gain new knowledge of Canada's operations.
'We are out here. We are demonstrating our sovereignty and our ability and capability to operate in high Arctic conditions. They don't like that. They want to demonstrate through messaging that we are not able to maintain our sovereignty in the Arctic,' said Melvin. 'You are here to prove them wrong. You are here to show that what we do, we do the best in the high Arctic.'
But threats to Canada's sovereignty have also come from a closer quarter.
In recent weeks, Donald Trump has threatened to make Canada the 51st US state, an idea roundly condemned by all Canadian political leaders. While the threats have frayed diplomatic relations, senior military figures say Operation Nanook reflects a 'business-as-usual' approach by the two countries' armed forces.
'We are working with our allies like we would. We don't let politics get in the way of our professionalism,' said Turner. 'We're professional soldiers, doing our job and fulfilling our purpose. We'll let the politicians worry about that.'
Most soldiers duck the issue of tension with a longtime military ally. But some are blunt in their rejection of the idea.
'We're Canada. We're not a state and we never will be,' says one.
Last year, Canada's federal government paid C$8.6m (US$4.7m) to acquire a privately owned aircraft hangar – known as the Green Hangar – next to Inuvik's Norad airbase, following interest from China and Russia.
In March, Blair promised Ottawa would invest more than C$2.5bn in northern military 'hubs' – nearly 10 times the previously pledged amount – to build airstrips, logistics facilities and equipment to augment infrastructure already in place.
But hiccups during Operation Nanook highlighted a dire need for greater resources.
As teams moved to transport tens of thousand of pounds of gear to a remote frozen lake, one of the Chinook transport helicopters was grounded until spare parts could be found. But the only source for the parts was a military base near Ottawa and took three days to ship.
Last week, the Canadian Press reported that the country's spy agency, CSIS, believes the Arctic is an 'attractive, strategic and vulnerable destination' for foreign adversaries like China and Russia. CSIS warned that resources projects, shipping and possible militarization of the region could be used by other countries to push into territory already claimed by Canada.
Canada's governing Liberals intend to revive the role of Arctic ambassadors, with postings in Nuuk, Greenland, and Anchorage, Alaska, to strengthen diplomatic relations.
Much of the focus on the Arctic centres around increasingly navigable waters and the vast quantities of critical minerals and fossil fuels beneath the permafrost.
'It's about access and it's about resources,' said Turner. 'You can access the north more easily than you have ever been able to. And that's going to change even more drastically over the next 10 years.'
While Canada has promised to purchase new ice breakers, Russia is developing more powerful ships that can outperform Canada's current – and future – vessels.
'Once a route is opened, they will come. We need to have an interest in that,' he said. 'We need to have the capabilities to interdict, to stop, to block that movement.'
While Canada has designated all Arctic Canadian waters as indefinitely off limits to future offshore Arctic oil and gas licensing, a recent agreement between the federal government, the Northwest Territories and Yukon governments and the Inuvialuit, looks to give greater autonomy to Indigenous groups to develop fossil fuel projects.
'We have so much stranded oil and so much stranded gas,' said Jackie Jacobsen, a former lawmaker in the Northwest Territories.
He said the Inuvialuit Petroleum Corporation's M-18 project, which aims to convert an estimated 278bn cubic feet of gas into into usable natural gas and synthetic diesel, would help a people who have long seen their lands used by outsiders. The project recent received a C$100m loan from the Canada Infrastructure Bank, with the aim of creating a local supply of fuel for energy, heating and transportation for the next half-century.
'We're finally the ones that are going to get something out of it. The Inuvialuit will get what's theirs, not just the big oil companies,' he said.
Jacobsen, who also served as mayor for the hamlet of Tuktoyaktuk on the edge of the Beaufort Sea, said if a region was invested in resources, 'it becomes an asset worth defending.'
For others, however, the promise of sustained, large-scale investment in the region rings hollow.
'We know we have massive oil and gas reserves, because they found them in the 1960s,' said Invuik resident Ryan Lennie who also works as a Canadian Ranger. 'And so Inuvik has gone through the boom and bust. We were told we would have so much investment up here, and then soon, it goes back to nothing.'
The rangers, a unit of the army responsible for remote areas, serve as both scouts for the military and a lifeline for soldiers venturing into the north for the first time.
'It's hard to know what to make about these claims. But at the end of the day, I'm more worried about the lack of infrastructure we have up here than running into a Russian when I'm out on my snowmobile.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada pledges to meet Nato's 2% defence spending target next year
Canada pledges to meet Nato's 2% defence spending target next year

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Canada pledges to meet Nato's 2% defence spending target next year

Canada will significantly boost its defence spending to hit a Nato target of 2% of GDP years earlier than planned, Prime Minister Mark Carney has a speech at the University of Toronto on Monday, Carney said the action was required to ward off the "multiplying" threats from hostile governments, terrorist entities and cyber criminals. He also conceded his country was "too reliant" on the United States for defence, adding that Washington was "reducing its relative contribution to our collective security". Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte is pushing for members to agree to a new spending target of 3.5% of GDP at a summit later this month. In his address, Mark Carney said the world was at a "hinge moment" similar to the end of the Second World War. He said his country must act in the face of an aggressive Russia and China, and threats to Arctic also accused Washington of looking to "monetise its hegemony" by making access to its market more spent 1.4% of its GDP on defence in 2024. GDP stands for gross domestic product, and is a measure of all the economic activity of companies, governments, and people in a the election campaign earlier this year, Carney had pledged to hit the 2% spending target by 2030, while the previous government under Justin Trudeau had promised to meet it by 2032. However on Monday, Carney said the spending goal would be hit by March next prime minister said Canada's equipment had aged, "hindering our military preparedness".Only one of four submarines were seaworthy and less than half the maritime fleet and land vehicles were in good working order, he said. Carney said the new strategy would have four pillars - investing more in soldiers and equipment, expanding the military's capability, strengthening the domestic defence industry, and diversifying Canada's defence partnerships. This is an age where "middle powers" must act to defend themselves knowing "if they're not at the table, they're on the menu", Carney said. Carney's announcement comes just a week before Canada hosts the G7 Summit from 15 to 17 June. Speaking to reporters later, Carney said the government's new plan includes a cash increase of C$9.3bn ($6.5bn, £4.8bn) for this fiscal year, which he said will bring Canada's defence spending to the Nato threshold. Some of it would be immediately "spendable" on personnel and would include investing in new submarines, aircraft, ships, armoured vehicles and artillery, as well as new drones and sensors to monitor activity in the Arctic and seafloor approaches to the country, he said. Carney said the government would also create a new defence procurement agency, following criticisms of the current process as slow and unwieldly. The agency would "move more quickly in making procurement decisions" and would focus on building domestic capacity.A report by a parliamentary committee in June 2024 highlighted that delays, cost overruns, bureaucratic hurdles, a shortage of personnel and the politicisation of the defence procurement process raised concerns about the government's ability to provide the armed forces with the equipment it needed "in a timely and cost-effective manner". Nato members have for years pledged to meet the 2% target - now seen as the bare minimum - but Canada has long lagged behind its allies. Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte arrived in London on Monday where he said the military alliance needed a "400% increase in air and missile defence" to maintain a credible defence deterrence. Last week, Rutte proposed that Nato members spend 5% of their GDP on defence - something US President Donald Trump has called for in the past.

Canada promises to ramp up defense spending, met NATO target much earlier
Canada promises to ramp up defense spending, met NATO target much earlier

Reuters

time7 hours ago

  • Reuters

Canada promises to ramp up defense spending, met NATO target much earlier

TORONTO, June 9 (Reuters) - Canada's Liberal government will pour extra billions into its armed forces and hit NATO's 2% military spending target this fiscal year, much earlier than scheduled, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Monday. Canada has been under heavy pressure from the United States and other NATO allies for years to increase funding for its military. Canada currently spends about 1.4% of GDP on defense. "Now is the time to act with urgency, force, and determination," Carney said in a speech in Toronto. The previous Liberal governent had promised to hit the NATO target by 2032. Canada will boost pay for the armed forces and buy new submarines, aircraft, ships, armed vehicles and artillery, as well as new radar, drones and sensors to monitor the sea floor and the Arctic, Carney said. (Reporting by Wa Lone, writing by David Ljunggren, editing by Promit Mukherjee) ((Reuters Ottawa editorial; opens new tab)) Keywords: CANADA POLITICS/DEFENSE

Canada to announce new security and defence investment plan, Globe and Mail reports
Canada to announce new security and defence investment plan, Globe and Mail reports

Reuters

time11 hours ago

  • Reuters

Canada to announce new security and defence investment plan, Globe and Mail reports

June 9 (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney will unveil a new security and defence investment plan on Monday that would enable Canada to meet NATO's 2% military spending target this fiscal year, the Globe and Mail reported, citing two senior government sources. The spending increase, worth billions of dollars, will allow Canada to meet NATO's 2% target in the fiscal year ending next March and exceed it in future years, the report said. NATO's current defence spending goal of at least 2% of GDP is met by 22 of its 32 members. Canada was near the bottom of the list in 2024, according to estimates published by the alliance. The plan will include higher pay for members of the Canadian Armed Forces, new aircraft, armed vehicles, ammunition, new drones and more sensors to monitor the sea floor and the Arctic, the Globe and Mail said. Reuters could not immediately confirm the report. The Prime Minister's Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular business hours. The spending announcement would come days before a June 24-25 summit of NATO leaders. Reuters reported last month that NATO chief Mark Rutte had proposed alliance members should boost defence spending to 3.5% of GDP and commit a further 1.5% to broader security-related spending to meet U.S. President Donald Trump's demand for a 5% target.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store