• Funderpants @lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    So I want to jump in here to correct what has been a rampant misconception for about 17 years now. That Canada does not have treaty obligations to spend 2% of GDP on defense spending.

    This misconception is so old it has its drivers license.

    NATO met in 2006 and set a spending target. A non-binding benchmark spending amount, that’s it. No obligation, no treaty, no penalty, no enforcement mechanism.

    In 2014 they met again and revamped the language, making it a goal to move towards over a ten year period.

    In August 2023, they updated the language agreement again, committing to a goal to move towards a 2% minimum ‘in the future’.

    The language has been very specific and intentionally not a requirement. Both the Harper and Trudeau government have intentionally sought this kind of softer, target oriented language to keep us from having to commit the funds.

    Here is a recent article that confirms the goal vs obligation:

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg intended to make NATO’s current military spending target of 2% of national GDP a minimum requirement rather than a goal to aim for. https://www.reuters.com/world/nato-allies-agree-spend-at-least-2-their-gdp-defence-diplomats-2023-07-07/

    • yeather@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Oh so we specifically skirt around the 2% by using weirld language in the treaties. That does not inspire anymore confidence than before.

      • Funderpants @lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        Well no, 31 member nations agreed to precise and specific language to set a goal. It is quite intentional on all parties so as not to obligate anyone to do it.

        I am obligated to pay taxes. I have a goal to save for retirement. See the difference precise language makes?