Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has pledged an additional $5 billion in aid to Ukraine, to be funded by revenues from frozen Russian assets.
Trudeau made the announcement on Feb. 24 at a summit of world leaders in
Kyiv to mark the third anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Canada has frozen just over $140 million in Russian assets since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, according to the RCMP’s
latest available figures updated in December 2024.
To date, the Trudeau government has committed
$4.5 billion in military assistance to Ukraine. This includes
Leopard 2 main battle tanks, armoured combat support vehicles, anti-tank weapons, small arms, and ammunition.
Since February 2022, Canada has pledged over $19.5 billion in total assistance to Ukraine.
At the Kyiv summit, Trudeau also committed to sending Ukraine additional military equipment, including 25 third-generation Light Armoured Vehicles, two armoured combat support vehicles, and four F-16 flight simulators. This builds on recent deliveries of F-16 landing systems, millions of rounds of ammunition, drone camera components, and first aid kits, he said.
Asked to confirm if Ottawa will send troops to Ukraine, Trudeau told reporters at the Kyiv summit that “everything is on the table.”
“We know we’re going to have to continue to do more and more in an uncertain world. And Canada will be there. As to how we will be there, we will work with our neighbours on it,” he said during a
joint press conference with European leaders on Feb. 24.
U.S. President Donald Trump has pushed for a
ceasefire to quickly end the Russia-Ukraine war. After phone calls with his counterparts earlier in February, Trump
said that Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy were ready to negotiate a resolution. A senior Moscow official
confirmed over the weekend that arrangements are underway for a meeting between Trump and Putin.
Trudeau said Canadians are “deeply connected to Ukraine” as Canada has the second-largest Ukrainian diaspora in the world. “Canada knows this is a war that we cannot afford to ignore. I know the stakes. Canadians know the stakes,” he said.
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Feb. 6 survey from Angus Reid Institute shows waning support among Canadians for further Ukraine aid, with 25 percent saying the country is doing “too much” to assist Ukraine, up from 13 percent who said so in May 2022. During the same period, the number of those who said Canada is “not doing enough” has halved, dropping from 38 percent to 19 percent.
During the Kyiv summit, Trudeau reiterated Canada’s commitment to achieving NATO’s defence spending target of 2 percent of GDP. At last summer’s NATO summit in Washington, D.C., he
committed to meeting the target by 2032 after facing criticism for Canada being the only member without a plan to do so.
In January, Defence Minister Bill Blair
said Canada may be able to meet NATO’s 2 percent defence spending target ahead of schedule, after Canada’s Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Jennie Carignan suggested a two-year timeline to reach the goal.
As of 2024, Canada is one of eight NATO members—of 32 in the alliance—that have yet to meet the 2 percent defence spending target, according to NATO
data.
Meanwhile, several NATO members, including Estonia, are exceeding the 2 percent target by nearly twice the amount, with Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal saying at the Kyiv summit that the country is aiming to reach 5 percent next year.