Canada’s Race to Rebuild Military Triggers a Defense-Tech Gold Rush
There are two kinds of national awakenings. The first is the slow, responsible kind—white papers, committees, polite applause, a bilingual press conference where everyone agrees to “continue the dialogue.” The second is the moment when someone in Ottawa looks at the global news cycle, exhales sharply, and says, “Oh. We need to fix this. Like… yesterday.” Canada has entered Phase Two. After decades of treating defense spending like that gym membership you technically still have but try not to think about, the country is suddenly sprinting toward military modernization with the energy of someone who just realized winter is not optional. And in the background? Venture capitalists are doing what venture capitalists do best: sniffing opportunity. Welcome to Canada’s defense-tech gold rush. The Polite Superpower Problem For years, Canada has cultivated a global brand somewhere between “reliable peacekeeper” and “the world’s calmest neighbor.” It worked. It still works—until it doesn’t. The w...