As NATO bolsters its defences, more Canadian soldiers arrive in Latvia
CBC
When Master Cpl. Josaphat Nicolas-Marchal arrived for his deployment at the Adazi military base in Latvia in December, Western intelligence officials had just started warning that Russia could be poised to invade Ukraine.
Now four months into the soldier's rotation, NATO is trying to deter Russia from launching additional offensives and is bolstering the number of troops deployed in eastern Europe.
"It is very different for us, because now we are close to what is happening," said Nicolas-Marchal, who is normally stationed at CFB Valcartier in Quebec but has served previously in NATO missions in Poland and Iraq.
"Whatever happens can happen in Ukraine — or around the world," he said. "We can keep training together and be ready if someone sends us somewhere."
The master corporal is one of approximately 700 Canadian troops stationed at Camp Adazi, a Western alliance military base and training range that's located 25 kilometers outside Riga, Latvia's capital.
Canada's military presence in the country grew last month when an artillery battery consisting of 120 troops and guns arrived from Quebec.
Given the heightened security threat, Canada has extended its Latvia mission indefinitely. Latvia's ministry of defence told CBC News that the government is hoping to strengthen the contingent even further and develop it as a true "war-fighting unit."
But as Latvia looks to bolster its defences, not everyone living close to the base feels reassured by the growing number of troops — with some fearing it could make the region a bigger target for Russian aggression.
When CBC News visited the base on Monday, dozens of Canadian soldiers were taking part in weapons training. In one area, soldiers fired high-powered rifles at targets in close range, trying to simulate battle in an urban environment like a city street or inside a building.
Canada has the largest contingent in Latvia, but around 800 other troops from 10 different NATO countries are stationed there, too, including soldiers from the Czech Republic, Spain and Slovakia.
"It means a lot for us to be here to be contributing to the ongoing situation that is evolving in Ukraine," said Major Anne Pham, commander of the newly deployed Phoenix battle group in Latvia.
Last month, Latvian Defence Minister Artis Pabriks met with his Canadian counterpart, Minister of Defence Anita Anand, in Ottawa to discuss security and bilateral co-operation.
That meeting came a few weeks after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau toured the Latvian base where he officially announced that Canada was extending its contribution to the mission beyond 2023, when it was set to expire.
NATO has four multinational battle groups spread across eastern Europe and recently announced that forces will be deployed in four more countries — Slovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania — to try and prevent the war from spilling over into Ukraine's neighbours.