The countries of Northern Europe and Canada intend to create an association to counter the alleged activity of Russia and China in the Arctic region, Bloomberg reported.
‘Canada is working with the Nordic states to create a new Arctic security coalition that would exclude Russia and enable shared coordination of defence, intelligence and cybersecurity,’ the Bloomberg publication said.
The agency noted that the Canadian Foreign Ministry last week arranged a meeting with the foreign ministers of Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark in the Canadian city of Iqaluit for ‘a dialogue on security in the Arctic.’ Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly told Bloomberg that the countries intend to discuss investment in the Arctic region and the study of dual-use ‘adversary’ technologies.
According to the diplomat, the creation of a new platform for security talks between the northern allies is necessary because they no longer meet privately at the political level, partly because of Russia’s presence in the Arctic Council.
The agency pointed out that by such measures the Canadian government, led by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, is trying to prove to the United States the reliability of Canada as a defence partner, especially in the eyes of US presidential candidate Donald Trump, who demands from NATO countries to increase military spending.
Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Russia was going through a difficult period in Russian history. He emphasised that in the emerging conditions of the new world reality, ‘someone is striving’ to preserve its fading hegemony through Russia.