The Canadian army is growing at a pace not seen in decades, reaching its highest number of recruits in 30 years and potentially reversing the chronic personnel shortage that has plagued the country’s military.

Charlotte Duval-Lantoine, a fellow at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute who researches Canada’s military culture, said that while there may be a “Trump effect” behind the recent rise in enlistment [referring to US President Donald Trump’s remarks to Canada as the “51st state”], military applications had already begun spiking in 2022, around the time of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In March, he [Canada PM Mark Carney] announced that Canada had officially achieved the Nato target of spending 2% of its GDP on defence for the first time since the late 1980s, amounting to over C$63bn ($46bn; £34bn) in a single year. Carney also joined the Nato pledge to spending up to 5% of GDP on defence by 2035.

Canada reached that 2% milestone by increasing salaries, as well as pledging to buy new equipment, upgrade existing bases and build new infrastructure in the Arctic.

In late April, the Canadian military announced it had enrolled more than 7,000 new members in the last fiscal year - its highest number of new recruits in three decades.

That figure is a fraction of the total number of people who have expressed interest in joining the military. As of February, confirmed applications to the Canadian Armed Forces had nearly doubled year over year, rising from 21,700 to 40,116, according to figures shared with the BBC by Canada’s Department of National Defence.

Those numbers reflect applicants who submitted the required documents to confirm their eligibility. The total number of applications was far higher, reaching nearly 100,000 over the past year.

It is a big jump from 2019-20, when around 36,000 people had applied.

      • ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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        6 days ago

        Well, easier to get a firearm than a drone capable of detonating remotely in Canada.

        Baby steps, learn how to operate and handle a firearm in a safe environment first and even if you don’t take it up as a hobby that knowledge will at least stick with you in the inevitable zombie apocalypse. 🧟‍♂️

        • bowreality@lemmy.ca
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          5 days ago

          I said “and”

          Learning to fly a drone is much easier access for people to learn. Get a controller and download a sim from Steam. That’s a good start. Also it’s not all about shooting and detonating stuff. Recon, flying supplies etc. Drones have so many uses and it doesn’t have to be defence either. They are used in surveying, farming, fire fighting, real estate you name it. It’s a great skill to develop with many uses.

          Buying one start at about $200 so much cheaper than a PAL and a rifle. Let alone ammo to practice as well as most people would need range access too. That’s all quite pricey.

          Also not everybody is into fire arms and defence often gets reduced to shoot up and detonating stuff. There is so much more to it. As you mentioned the first aid/medical knowledge would be critical too.