Canada-India Defence Talks: Rajesh Kumar Singh Meets Canadian High Commissioner

Canadian High Commissioner Christopher Cooter held talks with Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh on defence cooperation. The meeting followed Canadian PM Mark Carney's February 2026 state visit to India. Both sides discussed strengthening ties in maritime security, technology, and energy. Five MOUs were signed to expand the bilateral partnership.

Key Points: Canada-India Defence Cooperation Talks Held

  • Canadian HC Cooter meets Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh
  • Follow-up to PM Mark Carney's Feb 2026 visit
  • Focus on defence, maritime security, and tech
  • Five MOUs signed to renew partnership
2 min read

Canadian HC to India holds talks on defence cooperation with Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh

Canadian High Commissioner Christopher Cooter meets Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh to discuss defence cooperation, following PM Mark Carney's February 2026 state visit.

"discussed next steps towards strengthening India-Canada Defence Cooperation - Ministry of Defence"

New Delhi, May 16

High Commissioner of Canada to India, Christopher Cooter, on Saturday held talks on defence cooperation with Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh.

Cooter's visit was a follow-up to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's February 2026 visit.

In a post on X, the Ministry of Defence said, "High Commissioner of Canada to India, Mr Christopher Cooter, paid a courtesy call on Defence Secretary Shri Rajesh Kumar Singh and discussed next steps towards strengthening India-Canada Defence Cooperation as a follow-up of the state visit of Canadian Prime Minister, Hon'ble Mark Carney to India in February 2026."

Carney during his visit met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Following their meeting, the leaders released a joint statement, welcomed five Memorandums of Understanding (MOU), and announced a broad range of ambitious initiatives that will renew and expand the Canada-India partnership across energy and critical minerals, technology and AI, talent and culture, and defence.

They focused on the potential for new investments in and exports from Canada's infrastructure, energy, manufacturing, mining, and defence sectors. The Canadian delegation emphasised Canada's competitive advantages in energy, defence, agriculture, critical minerals, AI, quantum computing, and health technology - and its role as a premier destination for global capital and investment, Canadian Prime Minister's Office said in a statement.

Canada is a Pacific nation, and stronger ties in the Indo-Pacific are crucial to our security and sovereignty. Canada and India will increase defence cooperation, including maritime security, and identify opportunities for bilateral and multilateral naval activities to deepen interoperability and promote knowledge exchange, underscoring our shared commitment to security and resilience.

Further, the statement said that building on progress made in recent talks, the leaders agreed to advance bilateral cooperation on security and law enforcement. This includes issues of mutual concern to Canada and India, such as the illegal flow of drugs, particularly fentanyl precursors, and transnational organised criminal networks. Prime Minister Carney also underscored that Canada will continue to take measures to combat transnational repression.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Finally some pragmatic diplomacy! Defence cooperation with a Pacific nation like Canada is strategically smart—especially maritime security in the Indo-Pacific. But I hope we're not just signing MOUs for photo ops. Need concrete outcomes: joint exercises, tech transfer, maybe even co-production of defence equipment. The fentanyl issue is real too—glad it's on the agenda.
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Vikram M
Honestly, I'm skeptical. Canada talks big about defence ties but their actual military spending is modest. Plus, their domestic politics around India-related issues has been problematic. Let's see if this translates into real strategic trust—or if it's just Canada hedging with India because US relations are complicated. Actions > words.
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James A
As a Canadian following India-Canada relations, this is genuinely encouraging. The Modi-Carney chemistry in February seemed positive. Defence cooperation, AI, critical minerals—there's so much mutual benefit if we can keep politics aside. Fentanyl crisis is a nightmare back home; glad Canada is serious about cracking down on precursor chemicals.
K
Kavya N
The Indo-Pacific angle is critical. We already have strong naval ties with Quad nations—Australia, Japan, US—adding Canada makes sense. But I hope our defence secretary raised concerns about the pro-Khalistan rallies in Toronto and Vancouver. Carney's promise to combat transnational repression needs to be enforced, not just stated.
R
Rohit P
Nice to see diplomacy working. Canada has expertise in quantum computing and AI that complements India's tech ecosystem. Defence cooperation is a

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