OTTAWA — MPs will vote Wednesday afternoon on whether to advance a bill that would close a loophole in Ottawa’s weapons export regime that allows Washington to send Canadian arms to countries that would otherwise be blocked.
“We are living within a lie with our arms exports,” NDP MP Jenny Kwan told a Tuesday press conference.
Kwan tabled a private member’s bill last September following attempts by Washington to purchase Canadian weapons for Israel, despite a Canadian ban on exports of various types of weapons to that country.
Bill C-233 is set to face a vote at second reading after Wednesday’s question period. If it passes that vote, it will be sent to a committee for study.
Ottawa and Washington have a defence production agreement that allows shipments of Canadian arms to the U.S. — including shipments purchased by Washington — to effectively avoid the detailed review typically required to get an arms export permit.
Alarmed by the prospect of Israel violating international law through its bombardment of Gaza after the Hamas attack of October 2023, Ottawa has restricted arms exports to Israel since early 2024.
The Liberals originally said this ban applied to all lethal arms; they later said that sales of arms to Israel would still be allowed if the weapons were being used to defend civilians.
Critics have long called for a total arms embargo on Israel and have accused Ottawa of being incapable of upholding its promise to keep Canadian arms out of Gaza.
The government was criticized in 2024 when the U.S. announced plans to send Quebec-made ammunition to Israel, a sale Ottawa said ultimately did not proceed.
Activists also have argued that loopholes are allowing Canadian weapons to be used in Saudi Arabia’s armed intervention in Yemen and in the bloody civil war in Sudan.
“A massive pipeline of Canadian weapons and components continue to flow to Israel freely via this loophole, despite Canada’s so-called pause on arms,” Michael Bueckert, vice-president of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East, told Tuesday’s news conference.
The bill, which has undergone preliminary debate, has received some support in the House of Commons, despite the government’s rejection of the legislation.
The government has argued Canada already has strong arms control laws and that the proposed changes would harm the defence sector and Canadian jobs. The Conservatives have echoed those points while stressing that Ottawa needs to support its allies.
The Bloc Québécois has warned the bill likely would cause the U.S. to acquire the same weapons from other countries.






