Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Germany late Monday, trying to increase commerce and defence ties with Europe’s largest financial system amid a five-day journey via the continent.
Carney is shifting to align Canada extra intently with Europe as U.S. President Donald Trump upends the worldwide buying and selling system along with his tariff conflict, and Russia’s ongoing conflict in Ukraine heightens international safety dangers.
After making a shock go to to Kyiv for Ukrainian Independence Day on Sunday, Carney travelled to Warsaw for a gathering with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, the place the 2 leaders struck a brand new strategic partnership on commerce, defence and vitality earlier on Monday.
In Berlin, Carney will maintain conferences with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz earlier than ending the journey by visiting Canadian troops stationed in Riga, Latvia.
Carney and Tusk stated they’ve agreed to work extra intently in areas equivalent to defence, aviation, cybersecurity and clear vitality. The 2 nations will begin holding annual bilateral conferences and work to encourage industrial partnerships in these sectors.
Carney stated the Polish partnership will drive European demand for Canadian exports and solidify Canada’s defence presence in Europe.
The Prime Minister’s Workplace introduced Monday that Canada would be the lead nation at a big defence trade expo in Poland subsequent yr. That information comes after Canada and Europe signed a deal in June that opens the door for Canada to take part within the Re-Arm Europe program, a large new defence spending coverage by European nations, which ought to permit Canadian firms to bid on contracts.

Carney touted the partnership with Poland and wider co-operation with Europe as integral for assembly Canada’s purpose to quadruple the tempo of defence spending by the top of the last decade.
“We realized a lot from the prime minister, from his authorities, together with the significance of pulling our full weight in NATO,” Carney informed media Monday.
“It’s going to take us just a few years to succeed in Polish ranges of dedication, however it’s potential and we’ve made that dedication.”
Poland expects to spend shut to 5 per cent of its GDP on defence this yr, effectively above the present NATO goal of two per cent. The nation has quickly elevated its defence spending since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Canada has by no means met the 2 per cent goal however Carney stated in June he intends to extend the defence price range to satisfy the goal by the top of this fiscal yr.
Supporting Ukraine is a part of that plan, and Carney reaffirmed Canada’s resolve to again Ukraine in opposition to Russia throughout his go to with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv on Sunday.
In a speech throughout Ukraine’s Independence Day celebrations, Carney urged worldwide companions to ramp up help for Ukraine at a essential juncture in its conflict with Russia.
Tusk stated in Polish that he felt Carney’s resolve after watching the Canadian prime minister communicate with Zelenskyy the day earlier than.

Get day by day Nationwide information
Get the day’s prime information, political, financial, and present affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox as soon as a day.
“I perceive the readiness of Canada, of Poland, and of our European companions to maintain serving to Ukraine in the course of the conflict and after the conflict. We shall be co-operating intently on this discipline with Canada,” he stated, in response to a translation supplied by the prime minister’s workplace.

Poland has been one of many fastest-growing economies in Europe over the previous decade, and has taken on rising geopolitical significance since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Earlier than assembly Tusk, Carney obtained an indication from Canadian Armed Forces members stationed in Poland as a part of Operation Unifier, which gives coaching to Ukrainian troopers.
He informed assembled members that their coaching is “important for any future safety assure” in Ukraine.
On Sunday, Carney didn’t rule out sending Canadian troops to Ukraine as a part of a potential safety assure to safe a peace deal within the conflict with Russia. However he has not clarified what that would seem like. He stated conversations with allies for a postwar Ukraine are nonetheless unfolding.
At a joint information convention with Carney in Warsaw, Tusk dominated out the potential for Polish troopers getting into Ukraine after the conflict is over, however will manage logistics on the border to assist the war-torn nation and shield the Europe-Russia border.
Defence Minister David McGuinty informed reporters Monday earlier than Carney’s assembly with Tusk that the form of Canada’s function in sustaining an eventual peace in Ukraine continues to be up for dialogue.
“When (Prime Minister Carney) was talking, he was talking within the context of an entire collection of prospects, and that’s very tough to prejudge. We’ll see how this evolves over time. However we’re hopeful that peace will come,” McGuinty stated.
The prime minister additionally met with Poland’s newly elected president, Karol Nawrocki, earlier than heading to Germany.
Canada-Germany relationship changing into ‘extra necessary’
Former German politician Bernd Althusmann stated the partnership between Canada and Germany is robust, but additionally “extra necessary and invaluable than ever.”
“In unsure instances like these, you want associates and companions,” he stated. “And this is applicable, from my perspective, equally to Canada and Germany.”
Althusmann runs the Canadian workplace of the Konrad Adenauer Basis, a assume tank funded by German federal and state governments to advertise transatlantic relations and democratic values.

These beliefs are below menace as Trump casts doubt on American help for the NATO army alliance, and slaps tariffs on nations which might be traditionally shut U.S. companions, together with Canada.
Trump’s return adopted Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, which led to an vitality crunch in Germany. The conflict has additionally had Berlin pledge a army construct up that many Germans thought unthinkable after the disaster of the Second World Struggle and the top of the Chilly Struggle.
“The lesson we’ve realized in Germany is that the world shouldn’t be so peaceable as possibly each considered one of us has hoped,” Althusmann stated.
Canada and Germany have been aligned on a variety of fronts lately, together with local weather change and hydrogen growth, however there have been just a few latest bumps inflicting some wrinkles within the relationship.
In the course of the spring marketing campaign, Canada was the spotlight nation on the Hannover Messe, the world’s largest commerce honest which occurs yearly in Germany. It’s customary for the annual partnering nations to ship high-profile senior politicians to open the honest, as President Barack Obama did in 2016.
German media took discover this April when Canada despatched mid-level civil servants to open the honest, with no elected officers, following weeks of the press asking whom Canada would ship. The occasion occurred throughout Canada’s latest election, and just some weeks after Carney was first sworn in as prime minister.
Canada has additionally not had an envoy in Berlin since November 2023, when former B.C. premier John Horgan died. Ottawa has had an interim head of mission for almost two years, a size of time usually reserved for nations with strained relations.
“It’s not of highest significance,” Althusmann stated. “They’re such robust associates and companions, and we’ve such good expertise between Canada and Germany within the final years.”
Althusmann was a state minister with the centre-right Christian Democratic Union, the get together of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Ursula von der Leyen was once a part of, earlier than she was elected president of the European Fee.
He stated he is aware of each leaders “very effectively” and sees Carney aligning with every on three key themes: vitality, safety and commerce for high-tech fields.
In vitality, Germany is trying to Canada to assist present reasonably priced gasoline, significantly for the nation’s giant manufacturing sector that grappled with restrictions since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

That very same yr, Canada and Germany signed an settlement that was to see Canada export hydrogen to Europe beginning this yr. That plan has hit just a few snags, together with delays in getting the Canadian manufacturing going.
In safety, Germany sees the Arctic as a web site of potential battle, regardless of Berlin, Ottawa, Moscow and Beijing all insisting they need peace within the area.
“It’s for us, a query of peace and freedom within the subsequent (few) years,” Althusmann stated.
German vessels are already doing analysis close to Greenland on international warming and marine biology, he stated, and Germany has labored with the Arctic Council because the Nineties on initiatives equivalent to boosting work with Indigenous peoples.
German arms and defence producers may additionally work with Canadian firms via a brand new European Union partnership.
Berlin has been proposing Canada be part of a challenge with Norway to create submarines for the three nations’ naval forces.
And in financial commerce, Germany has lengthy argued that the 2017 commerce deal between Canada and the European Union may unleash extra progress on either side of the Atlantic. Berlin has totally ratified the commerce deal and has instructed its EU friends comply with swimsuit.
In February, Germany’s ambassador stated colleagues from different EU nations have been working to establish gaps that Canadian enterprise may fill in Europe and vice versa, to make up for American protectionist insurance policies.
“I nonetheless see untapped alternatives within the discipline of inexperienced applied sciences and significant uncooked supplies, the place Canada’s wealth of sources in Germany’s modern strengths can have synergistic impact,” Althusmann stated.
Canada’s combine of personal and public experience in cybersecurity may additionally assist bolster Germany’s resilience, Althusmann stated.
The go to comes as Canada continues to chair the G7, after internet hosting the June leaders’ summit in Alberta. Ottawa is engaged on minister-level occasions that may give Ottawa and Berlin an opportunity to persuade their American counterparts to vary course on points like industrial coverage or overseas help.
“We now have a lot to do for the subsequent (few) years and due to this fact such a go to … is in the appropriate time,” Althusmann stated. “We want this robust partnership, in a second the place nobody actually is aware of what’s going to occur within the subsequent years, particularly within the U.S.,” he stated.