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In this episode of The Deep Dive, we unpack the most sweeping transformation of Canada’s military in a generation. A new defence blueprint — Our North, Strong and Free — is reshaping everything from budgets to battlefield doctrine. Ottawa is finally moving toward NATO spending targets, backed by a procurement overhaul designed to cut years off equipment delivery. We explore the arrival of F‑35 fighter jets and what they mean for continental defence. Then we turn to Canada’s most ambitious naval gamble yet: a full submarine fleet replacement built for a contested Arctic. Advanced drones, modern air‑defence systems, and next‑generation sensors are redefining how the Forces will fight. Inside the Army, a shift to a mission‑focused divisional model promises faster, more coherent deployments. Tank units are being centralized to boost readiness and eliminate chronic fragmentation. But modernization isn’t just hardware — it’s political. Canada‑U.S. relations are entering a period of unusual strain, pushing Ottawa to double down on Arctic sovereignty. We examine how this tension is reshaping defence priorities and industrial strategy. A new procurement agency aims to bring long‑overdue transparency to a notoriously slow system. Recruitment reforms seek to reverse years of declining personnel numbers. And behind it all lies a deeper question: can Canada scale up hard power fast enough for a more dangerous world? Join us as we break down the stakes, the strategy, and the seismic shift underway. This is not the military Canada once knew. It’s a force being rebuilt for a harsher century. And its success — or failure — will define the country’s role on the global stage. Welcome to The Deep Dive.
By Eric DemersIn this episode of The Deep Dive, we unpack the most sweeping transformation of Canada’s military in a generation. A new defence blueprint — Our North, Strong and Free — is reshaping everything from budgets to battlefield doctrine. Ottawa is finally moving toward NATO spending targets, backed by a procurement overhaul designed to cut years off equipment delivery. We explore the arrival of F‑35 fighter jets and what they mean for continental defence. Then we turn to Canada’s most ambitious naval gamble yet: a full submarine fleet replacement built for a contested Arctic. Advanced drones, modern air‑defence systems, and next‑generation sensors are redefining how the Forces will fight. Inside the Army, a shift to a mission‑focused divisional model promises faster, more coherent deployments. Tank units are being centralized to boost readiness and eliminate chronic fragmentation. But modernization isn’t just hardware — it’s political. Canada‑U.S. relations are entering a period of unusual strain, pushing Ottawa to double down on Arctic sovereignty. We examine how this tension is reshaping defence priorities and industrial strategy. A new procurement agency aims to bring long‑overdue transparency to a notoriously slow system. Recruitment reforms seek to reverse years of declining personnel numbers. And behind it all lies a deeper question: can Canada scale up hard power fast enough for a more dangerous world? Join us as we break down the stakes, the strategy, and the seismic shift underway. This is not the military Canada once knew. It’s a force being rebuilt for a harsher century. And its success — or failure — will define the country’s role on the global stage. Welcome to The Deep Dive.