PUGWASH and related events, October 2025 in Ottawa

Outcome details about these events will be posted shortly.

Thursday October 23, 4:00 to 6:00 PM
Award presentation to the Hon. Douglas Roche, O.C.
by Canadian Leadership for Nuclear Disarmament (CLND)

of the Award for Distinguished Service in Nuclear Disarmament followed
by Mr. Roche’s Lecture entitled “Creative Dissent: A Politicians’ Struggle for Peace” 

Friday, October 24 from 9:30 AM to 5:15 PM 
Conference on “Canadian Security Interests and Trump 2.0”
Co-sponsored by Canadian Pugwash Group (CPG) and University of Ottawa Centre for
International Policy Studies (CIPS)

Saturday October 25
8:45 AM to 10:15 AM: CNANW Annual meeting
Participants:  Members of CNANW member groups
Location:  Brittany Salon, Cartier Place Hotel.

10:30 AM – 12:00 PM: Canadian Pugwash Group (CPG) AGM
Participants: CPG Members
Location: Brittany Salon, Cartier Place Hotel

1:00 PM – 3:45 PM CNANW/CPG Nuclear Disarmament Advocacy Forum
This year’s theme is “Effective Advocacy for Nuclear Disarmament: Understanding Your Adversary”
is intended to strengthen capacity to advocate in support of nuclear disarmament; in
particular, understanding and making the most effective case against the doctrine of nuclear
deterrence.
Contributors:  Mr. Guy Roberts (recorded), former official with NATO and the US Defence Department on nuclear weapons policies,
Chinese Embassy to Canada representatives, and Mr. Alex Neve OC, Chairperson, Canadian Leadership for Nuclear Disarmament
Location:  Brittany Salon, Cartier Place Hotel

4:00 – 5:00 PM:  CPG Board Meeting
Location:  Brittany Salon, Cartier Place Hotel

The Douglas Roche Common Security Project: Invitation to a Youth Competition

If you are a 4th year undergraduate and/or graduate Canadian university student, this invitation is for you.

The Canadian Network to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (CNANW) in partnership with Canadian Pugwash Group are pleased to invite you to a youth competition to award three bursaries in the amount of $2,500 each for the production of an essay and/or video. The outcome is to explore the move from a world where some nations possess and rely upon nuclear weapons, to a global security paradigm based upon a Common Security framework, without nuclear weapons.  

You will find here the application letter with all the details: CNANW 2025 Douglas Roche Common Security Project – Application October 2025

The dates to remember are as follows:

·       The deadline for submission is December 1, 2025, 12:00 pm ET.

·       The selection committee aims to announce the three successful candidates on January 1, 2026, 12:00 pm ET.

·       The three selected participants will have four months, to 1 May 2026, to present their completed project. 

For any additional information, please contact Dr. Sylvie Lemieux, CNANW Steering Committee member and Board member of Group of 78, at slemieux3599@rogers.com  or Dr. Arnd Jurgensen, CNANW Steering Committee member and Board member of Science for Peace at ajurgensen@sympatico.ca.

We are looking forward to your application.

Regards,

The Douglas Roche Common Security Project Committee

Douglas Roche: Carney went to the UN to advance Canada’s foreign policy, Trump went to abuse, harangue the UN in a tirade of false accusations

The author is a member and past Chair of Canadian Pugwash Group
Published in The Hill Times, September 29, 2025

Mark Carney’s four days at the UN showed his belief that Donald Trump’s aggressiveness can be fought off by strengthening Canada’s trade, energy, and security through diplomacy. When Carney returned home and went to Question Period, the opposition seemed uninterested in grilling him on what he had accomplished at the UN. 

EDMONTON—The contrast could not have been sharper. Prime Minister Mark Carney went to the United Nations in New York from Sept. 21-24, and used the organization’s convening power to advance Canada’s foreign policy interests. United States President Donald Trump went to the UN for a few hours and abused the organization in a tirade of false accusations. These two story lines intersected, and Carney emerged as a new leader in the international community.

All this has to be seen in perspective. Of course, the U.S. is the giant whose every twitch grabs the headlines. When the escalator to the General Assembly broke down on Trump and his wife, CNN led with this malfunction as a metaphor about how the UN can’t get anything done. When Carney co-chaired a meeting with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the plight of the Ukrainian children stolen by Russia, this humanitarian action was treated as just a side event.

For nearly an hour, Trump stood at the green podium in the General Assembly belittling and berating the UN for its immigration and climate policies. He mocked the UN for not choosing him as the developer when the headquarters was renovated decades ago, and treated the delegates as merely an extension of his usual MAGA audience. Carney dutifully showed up at the Canadian desk to listen to Trump’s harangue and later, at his own press conference, tried to smooth over Trump’s viciousness by saying he supported the president’s efforts to bring peace to the world. Carney, who is in the midst of Canada-U.S. trade negotiations, seems very conscious of Trump’s warning, “I only do business with the people I like,” and later took his wife Diana Fox Carney to Trump’s reception for the delegates.

Carney’s principal address affirmed Canada’s formal recognition of the State of Palestine, reinforcing this country’s support for a two-state solution to build peace between Israel and Palestine. The prime minister called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the release of the Israeli hostages still held by Hamas, and the rapid scale-up of humanitarian relief in Gaza. Recognizing Palestine was certainly a late action by Canada, since more than 150 countries had already done so, but in the company of the United Kingdom and France in this UN setting, Carney felt comfortable moving ahead, despite Trump’s veiled threats he would punish Canada in the trade talks for such action. Only a few days previously, the U.S. had vetoed—again—a Security Council resolution demanding an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.

Carney’s shining moment at the UN was his co-chairing, along with Zelenskyy, a meeting of 42 states to build pressure for the return of more than 20,000 Ukrainian children abducted by Russia. Accompanied by his wife, Carney called for more international support for the International Coalition for the Return of Ukrainian Children. The meeting laid plans to embed the return of the children within broader efforts for peace, reconciliation and accountability in Ukraine.

Carney then turned his attention to a meeting of specialists on the technicalities of achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, which has become an agonizing issue for the UN because the money that should be going to development processes in the most vulnerable states is being siphoned off by the escalating arms expenditures. The world now spends $2.7-trillion annually on arms, an amount which is 750 times greater than what nations devote to the UN. In his capacity as current chair of the G7, Carney tried to shore up the mechanisms to boost human development.

Here, Carney is doing high-wire diplomacy. He has acceded to Trump’s demand that NATO states devote five per cent of their GDP to defence spending, which, in Canada’s case, will mean a quadrupling of defence spending over the next decade. This will amount to $150-billion a year. Even if a good slice of this will be in the form of strengthening infrastructure here at home, defence spending will continue to dwarf what is spent on diplomatic efforts to build peace.

Yet it was diplomacy that Carney concentrated on during his four-day New York stay. He seemed moved by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ cry, “We have entered into an age of reckless disruption and relentless human suffering,” and leaders must decide now “what kind of world we choose to build together.” He met privately with Guterres and, according to Carney’s press statement, discussed Canada’s commitment to a “strong and effective” UN. Canada currently contributes $2.2-billion to the UN annually, and is the organization’s seventh-largest donor. He announced $207-million in new international assistance to improve global children’s nutrition and to address climate change.

The current UN financial crisis is caused by the U.S. defaulting on $1-billion in payments, and the Trump administration’s plans for a $1-billion cut in future assessments. This has already caused Guterres to lay off 15 per cent of UN staff. Trump, in his tirade against the UN, said not a word about America cutting back its payments.

China is stepping up its involvement in the UN administration and outreach. It was notable that Carney had a private meeting with the Premier of China, Li Qiang, to discuss canola, seafood and electric vehicles. This meeting laid the groundwork for a possible summit between Carney and China’s president Xi Jinping. If such a meeting were to occur, it would confirm Canada’s swing to renewed cooperation with the world’s second-largest economy, a move clearly designed to offset Canada’s economic dependence on the U.S.

Carney also met with the leaders of Namibia, Kenya, Barbados, Jamaica, Haiti and Malaysia in a burst of meetings that strengthened this country’s network of UN relationships. His four days at the UN showed his strong belief that Trump’s aggressiveness can be fought off by strengthening Canada’s trade, energy, and security through building networks of action with the UN at the core.

That is a message that desperately needs to be broadcast across the country, but I’m not sure it has been heard. When Carney went straight to Question Period in the House of Commons on his arrival back from New York, the opposition seemed not the least interested in grilling the prime minister on what he had accomplished at the UN.

Senator Douglas Roche’s latest book is Keep Hope Alive: Essays for a War-free World (Amazon).

The Hill Times

 

CPG: Canada Must Say No to ‘Golden Dome’ Strategic Missile Defence — A Call for Parliamentary Oversight

Canadian Pugwash Letter

Ahmed Hussen, Chair
Standing Committee on National Defence

Charles Sousa, Chair
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development
House of Commons

Dear Chairs,

On behalf of the Canadian Pugwash Group, I am writing to express our grave concern about the Government of Canada’s movement toward participation in the United States’ proposed strategic ballistic missile defence initiatives within “Golden Dome”.

Recent reports suggest that the government is considering removing long-standing restrictions on strategic missile defence, paving the way for Canadian direct involvement in those elements of Golden Dome or similar schemes. Negotiations are reportedly already under way.

This situation raises profound questions of accountability and oversight. To date, there has been no parliamentary debate, committee review, or public consultation on whether Canada should commit tens of billions of dollars to what would be one of the most expensive and controversial military programmes ever launched. Decisions of this magnitude cannot be allowed to proceed with so little attention or accountability.

Read full letter here: CPG_Letter_GoldenDome_ParliamentaryOversight_Sept2025

Douglas Roche, O.C. Named 2025 Winner of CLND Award for Distinguished Achievement in Nuclear Disarmament

 

Douglas Roche, O.C. Named 2025 Winner of CLND Award for
Distinguished Achievement in Nuclear Disarmament:

Presentation and Lecture in Ottawa on October 23, 202

July 17, 2025

Douglas Roche, O.C. will receive the Canadian Leadership for Nuclear Disarmament (CLND) 2025 Distinguished Achievement Award. He has devoted himself over many decades to the vital cause of nuclear disarmament and, ultimately, the global abolition of nuclear weapons. CLND is a civil society initiative sponsored by the Canadian Pugwash Group. It is endorsed by more than 1,000 recipients of the Order of Canada who have called for Canada to work for comprehensive negotiations for the elimination of nuclear weapons.

“We are immensely proud to give this year’s Award to Douglas Roche, honouring his unwavering and inspiring leadership, for more than 50 years, resolutely focused on ridding the world of its catastrophically deadly arsenal of nuclear weapons,” said Alex Neve O.C., CLND Chairperson. “There is no one who has been so steadfast, brought so many others to this vital campaign, and shown all Canadians the moral clarity and pragmatic necessity of the cause. Doug Roche embodies the very epitome of the essence and finest qualities of leadership. And he has ardently and eloquently shown us all just what is at stake: our very survival.”

Douglas Roche has had the rare distinction of serving in the three roles of a Canadian Member of Parliament, Ambassador for Disarmament and Senator. He received appointments from two prime ministers of different parties: Brian Mulroney appointed him ambassador and Jean Chretien named him a senator. In all of those roles he has been a clarion voice for peace, justice and human rights, and has been untiring in his determined effort, in particular, to advance nuclear disarmament.

Roche, who is also a former Visiting Professor at the University of Alberta, has been a lifelong educator, informing Canadians of the risks posed by nuclear weapons and policy options to lessen those risks. He has written 25 books, and multiple articles and speeches. To strengthen disarmament education, he has organized many Parliamentary breakfasts, civil society meetings, roundtables, seminars, and briefings. He holds nine honorary doctorates and is an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Roche has also been integral to the creation of a wide range of effective nuclear disarmament advocacy groups. He was founding Chairperson of  Parliamentarians for Global Action, the Middle Powers Initiative, and the Canadian Network to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. He was the first international president of Parliamentarians for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament.

“For his integrity, knowledge, dedication and unflagging hard work, Douglas Roche commands an exceptional – in fact unrivalled – level and degree of respect across Canada and globally, including from governments, UN officials, civil society leaders, academics, and peace and human rights activists,” said Neve. “At the age of 96, the determination and energy he continues to bring to this crucial campaign, sets a model that we all must aspire to follow.”

The Award will be presented at 4 PM on Thursday, October 23, 2025 and followed by Douglas Roche’s lecture, on “Creative Dissent: A Politician’s Struggle for Peace.” This public event is sponsored by CLND and the Centre for International Policy Studies (CIPS) at the University of Ottawa, in Room 4007 of the Faculty of Social Sciences Building, 120 University Private, Ottawa. The lecture will be followed by a reception and will conclude at 6 pm.

 

Previous recipients of the CNWC/CLND Achievement Award are:

2011 Murray Thomson

2012 Bev Tollefson Delong

2013 Fergus Watt

2014 Dr. Adele Buckley

2015 Paul Dewar

2016 Peggy Mason

2017 Metta Spencer

2018 Debbie Grisdale

2019 Dr. Mary-Wynne Ashford and Dr. Jonathan Down

2021 Dr. Jennifer Allen Simons

2022 Paul Meyer

2023 Tariq Rauf

2024 Ernie Regehr

 

Contact:    Elaine Hynes

CLND Secretariat

clnd@pugwashgroup.ca

Recent publications by Canadian Pugwash members

Cesar Jaramillo: Gaza Genocide Must Be Called Out – With or Without an ICJ Ruling” Sane Policy Institute” Sept. 30, 2025

David Harries (co-speaker): AI and OUR Future – Safety and Security: The Promise, Peril, and the Public Good” KEI Network, Sept. 11, 2025

Jez Littlewood (co-author): “How new technology could make it easier to identify covert bioweapons programs” Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, Sept. 15, 2025

Cesar Jaramillo: “The Deterrence Ceiling: Ukraine’s Postwar Security Under Russia’s Nuclear Shadow“, Sane Policy Institute, Sept, 13, 2025

Ernie Regehr: “When Winning Isn’t An Option” Arctic Security Briefing Paper, The Simons Foundation Canada, Sept 9, 2025

Jeremy Whitock: “For 80 years, Canada has been a leader in the responsible development of nuclear energy“, Hill Times, August 11, 2025, [WhitlockHT]

Earl Turcotte: “As world marks 80 years since atomic anniversary, Canada has room to lead” The Hill Times, August 6, 2025

Robin Collins, Gordon Edwards, Jeremy Whitlock: Three letters on radiation issues The Hill Times, August 4, 2025

Sean Howard:‘Other, more benevolent things’: Revisiting Helsinki to prevent the final act of nuclear war”  Rethinking Securitiy, July 30, 2025.

Jeremy Whitlock: Remember, enriched uranium can do good” The Hill Times, Letter, July 21, 2025 [WhitlockHT]

Douglas Roche: Bob Rae is Feeling the UN’s Pain” The Hill TImes, July 16, 2025 [RocheHT]

Robin Collins:The Debate about Gaza’s Death Count and Human Shields” Rideau Institute, July 15, 2025.

Cesar Jaramillo: “NATO Goes MAGA” Sane Policy Institute, July 8, 2025.

Michael Manulak, broadcast: “Reflections on Canada and the Global Order” BrianCrombie.com, July 7, 2025

Sean Howard:Manifesting our humanity: Remembering how to survive in the nuclear age” The Cape Breton Post, July 4, 2025.

Paul Meyer: The Future of Iran’s Nuclear Program: Could Withdrawal from the NPT be Next?” Policy, July 5, 2025.

Robin Collins:Canada – and the world – need prudent not excessive military spending” Ceasefire Blog, July 2, 2025.

Cesar Jaramillo:Flawed in principle and practice: why Canada must say no to Trump’s Golden Dome” The Hill Times, June 30, 2025.

Douglas Roche: “The real Mark Carney is about to emerge” The Hill Times, June 30, 2025.

Erika Simpson and Gordon Edwards: “Iran’s uranium enrichment: myths, realities, and what Canada should understand” The Hill Times, June 30, 2025.

Michael Manulak, participant: “Canada’s foreign policy must catch up to its military spending” Globe and Mail, June 27, 2025.

Paul Meyer:Canada Shouldn’t Buy into the Mirage of “Golden Dome” CIPS, June 25, 2025.

Erika Simpson: “NATO’s dangerous new trajectory of expensive targets” The Hill Times, June 25, 2025.

Peter Jones:Will Iran be Donald Trump’s Forever War?” Policy, June 22, 2025.

Peggy Mason, participant: “Canada and Gaza: What are the Moral and Legal Obligations?” OFIP, June 16, 2025.

Erika Simpson and Hwang, J.: “Forging Peace in 2025-2030: The Role of Canada and South Korea as Middle Powers in Leading Global Conflict Resolution“. In Factis Pax: Journal of Peace Education and Social Justice19(1). June 16, 2025.

Jeremy Whitlock:Non-proliferation and the Nuclear Revival” 49th Annual CNS/CNA Student Conference, Toronto, June 8-11, 2025.

 

Published views by members of CPG are not necessarily those of our organization.

Meyer: Canada Shouldn’t Buy into the Mirage of “Golden Dome”

Paul Meyer is a Board member and Past Chair of Canadian Pugwash Group

https://www.cips-cepi.ca/2025/06/25/canada-shouldnt-buy-into-the-mirage-of-golden-dome/

A new Canadian Government is assuming power at a time of great upheaval in international affairs. Norms of non-aggression, cooperative security and strategic restraint are being undermined. Regrettably, some of this disruption originates with our American ally with whom, as the Prime Minister has said, we will need to forge a new security relationship. 

Whitlock: NON-PROLIFERATION AND THE NUCLEAR REVIVAL

Jeremy Whitlock is a member of Canadian Pugwash Group

IAEA Dept. of Safeguards (ret’d)
Principal: Ottertail Consulting Inc. Stratford, ON

Paper delivered to 44th Annual CNS Conference and the 49th Annual CNS/CNA Student Conference
Westin Harbour Castle Hotel, Toronto, ON, Canada, June 8-11, 2025

FULL PAPER LINKED HERE: Non-proliferation and the Nuclear Revival – Jeremy Whitlock – CNS2025

The summary:

The nuclear revival will need to proceed in lock step with enhancements to the non-proliferation regime if it is to succeed while remaining consistent with international legal obligations. In the past the evolution of the nuclear industry has proceeded at a slow enough pace that nuclear safeguards – the cornerstone of non-proliferation and therefore of civilian nuclear energy expansion – has generally been able to keep up with emerging implementation challenges. The safeguards challenges of the current nuclear revival however, based on the diversity of technologies and timeliness of proposed deployment, will be both significant and quickly evolving. There is a clear need, therefore, for early engagement so that safeguards solutions can be integrated within the design process and considered alongside safety and security requirements.

The good news is that, given sufficient early engagement, safeguards solutions exist and non-proliferation does not have to be an impediment to nuclear innovation (or put another way, nuclear innovation an impediment to global security). Quite the contrary, as embodied in the tenets of the NPT, non-proliferation can rightfully assume its role as an enabler and cornerstone of nuclear innovation: the NPT, it must be remembered, recognizes the “inalienable right” of nations to benefit from peaceful nuclear technology.

For Canada this will possibly include a national debate over technologies such as reprocessing – a technology that it pioneered in the earliest years of its nuclear program but has generally avoided until very recently. For innovations such as this, there are clearly proliferation challenges but also non-proliferation solutions (largely in the form of adequate safeguards).

Safeguards by Design, the proactive practice of good engineering whereby an end user’s international obligations are accounted for as early as possible, is also a concept pioneered by Canada. By continuing to accord due weight to this requirement, Canada is in a position to honour its legacy of leadership in global non-proliferation, and help ensure a sustainable nuclear revival.

 

CPG Statement: Flawed in Principle and Practice — Why Canada Must Say No to ‘Golden Dome’

Flawed in Principle and Practice: Why Canada Must Say No to ‘Golden Dome’

A Statement from the Canadian Pugwash Group – June 2025

As Canada’s new government takes office amid growing global instability, an early and consequential test of its approach to continental defence will be how it responds to the United States’ proposed “Golden Dome.” Announced in January by President Donald Trump, this sweeping missile defence initiative envisions a $175 billion shield over U.S. territory, with Canada invited to participate for $61 billion. Canada should decline involvement in this flawed and destabilizing scheme.

Canada’s proud tradition of supporting arms control, non-proliferation, and disarmament has earned it global respect. That reputation would be placed at risk by participation in a project that emphasizes unilateral technological dominance over diplomatic restraint. Rather than entangle its defence policy in an unproven and provocative system, Canada should focus on practical investments that reinforce continental cooperation, security, and credibility.

Existing plans to modernize NORAD – upgrading early warning systems and strengthening surveillance of cruise and hypersonic missiles – offer a credible, cooperative path forward. This approach supports Canadian sovereignty and security while remaining consistent with long-standing international commitments and the mutually agreed framework of NORAD’s mission.

A Deeply Problematic Proposal

The “Golden Dome” proposal is not merely expensive; it is strategically unsound and technically unreliable. As with earlier U.S. missile defence efforts, including President Reagan’s “Strategic Defense Initiative” of the 1980s, this latest version suffers from three fatal flaws:

  • False Sense of Security

Despite decades of development and hundreds of billions of dollars invested, U.S. missile defence systems have demonstrated only limited effectiveness. Current ground-based interceptors have a success rate of roughly 50% – and only under highly scripted test conditions. These trials do not simulate real-world scenarios involving decoys or other countermeasures that would likely be used in an actual nuclear strike.

Proposals for space-based sensors or interceptors – hallmarks of Golden Dome – face severe technical and logistical obstacles. They also assume adversaries would not respond with countermeasures, an assumption both unrealistic and dangerous. A system that offers the illusion of security while failing in practice would do more harm than good.

Contrary to the implications of its name, the so-called Golden Dome bears little resemblance to Israel’s Iron Dome. It is designed not for short-range projectiles but for long-range, nuclear-armed missiles – against which interception is exponentially more complex and far less reliable.

Indeed, experts estimate that thousands of space-based interceptors would be required to defend against even a single missile launch from North Korea, let alone a coordinated attack from a major nuclear power. The system is not only exorbitant, but fundamentally implausible.

  • Provocative and Destabilizing

Strategic missile defence disrupts the already fragile balance of deterrence among nuclear-armed states. If a nation believes its retaliatory capability could be compromised, it may feel compelled to expand its offensive arsenal or adopt risky postures such as launch-on-warning.

Rather than enhancing security, initiatives like Golden Dome increase the risk of miscalculation, arms racing, and preemptive escalation, especially in times of crisis. These risks are not theoretical; they are embedded in the logic of deterrence that governs nuclear relationships to this day.

The space-based components of Golden Dome would also accelerate the weaponization of outer space. Canada has long been a vocal proponent of keeping space free of weapons, in line with international norms. Participation in this project would undermine that legacy.

Golden Dome’s destabilizing potential is not only theoretical. Russian and Chinese officials have already warned that expanded U.S. missile defence efforts could trigger countermeasures, including the deployment of more advanced offensive systems and the loosening of nuclear postures.

Canadian participation could make us a target in broader geopolitical rivalries, increasing, not decreasing, our exposure to risk. In addition, it would hamper efforts to push for further strategic arms reductions involving China, Russia and the United States.

  • Fiscally Unsound

The $175 billion price tag cited by the U.S. President is widely considered unrealistic. The U.S. Congressional Budget Office has estimated that space-based elements alone could exceed $500 billion over 20 years. Canada’s suggested contribution of $61 billion would be wildly disproportionate to its needs and capabilities.

At a time of fiscal constraint and competing national priorities, Canada must focus defence spending on capabilities that actually strengthen security, readiness, and sovereignty. Golden Dome fails this test on every front.

The opportunity cost of such a commitment cannot be ignored. A $61-billion expenditure would crowd out investment in urgently needed capabilities such as cyber defence, Arctic security, and domestic resilience. It would also strain Canada’s ability to fulfil other global obligations, including peacekeeping, climate security, and humanitarian response.

A Better Alternative for Canada

The idea of a missile shield, however ambitious, has consistently failed to deliver. Its appeal is undercut by persistent technical challenges, exorbitant costs, and serious strategic risks.

Canada’s involvement in such a scheme would not only be ineffective and destabilizing but would entangle our defence posture in broader U.S. ambitions – some of which may conflict with international law or Canada’s core security priorities. The proposed space-based elements of Golden Dome directly contradict Canada’s long-standing opposition to the weaponization of space, voiced repeatedly at the UN Conference on Disarmament.

Moreover, a defence commitment of this scale demands transparency and broad political consensus. Yet there has been no public consultation, parliamentary debate, or cost-benefit analysis of Canadian participation. A $61-billion expenditure, it is larger than Canada’s entire annual defence budget.

At a time of rising costs of living, climate stress, and overstretched public services, diverting tens of billions to a flawed and provocative weapons system would be irresponsible. Canada’s defence investments must be effective, accountable, and aligned with our national interest.

Continued NORAD modernization provides a credible, cooperative path forward strengthening North American defence while upholding Canada’s commitments to arms control, space non-weaponization, and strategic restraint.

In an era of mounting global insecurity, Canada must choose credibility over illusion – and reject participation in Golden Dome.

 

 

Open Letter to Prime Minister Carney: Canada Must Say No to ‘Golden Dome’

STATEMENT (PDF) HERE

The Right Honourable Mark Carney
Prime Minister of Canada
House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6

June 11, 2025

Dear Prime Minister,

As your government begins its mandate at a time of profound international uncertainty, the Canadian Pugwash Group urges you to take a clear and principled position on a critical issue of defence and diplomacy: the United States’ proposed “Golden Dome” missile defence initiative.

As outlined in the statement that follows (Flawed in Principle and Practice: Why Canada Must Say No to ‘Golden Dome’) we believe that participation in this unproven, costly, and destabilizing scheme would undermine Canada’s strategic interests, global reputation, and longstanding support for arms control and multilateralism.

Canada should decline its participation in this initiative.

Instead, we encourage the Government of Canada to reaffirm its commitment to NORAD modernization as a credible and cooperative contribution to continental defence. This approach supports Canadian sovereignty and security without fuelling arms races or weakening international norms.

We hope the government will consider the perspectives offered in our statement and would welcome the opportunity to engage further.

Sincerely,
Cesar Jaramillo
Chair, Canadian Pugwash Group

cc: Minister of Global Affairs Canada, Hon. Anita Anand
cc: Minister of National Defence, Hon. David McGuinty

STATEMENT (PDF) HERE

 

EN / FR