News

The Canadian prime minister framed the spending as a necessary response to a world where the country is more vulnerable to threats — and less protected by Americans.
Canada will meet NATO’s defence spending threshold of 2 percent this year as it shifts spending away from the United States ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will meet its NATO commitment and spend 2 per cent of national GDP on defence this ...
NEW DELHI: Pushing back on criticism he is facing for inviting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the G7 summit in ...
— Count them out: One of the Liberals around the table will emerge as chair, though some are ineligible: ARIELLE KAYABAGA was recently named deputy government House leader to STEVEN MACKINNON; ...
The Prime Minister says the boost is necessary, while pushing back at NATO members’ calls to raise defence spending even ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney is promising that Canada will quickly boost its defence spending to hit the NATO member target of two per cent of national GDP this year. Canada has long ...
TORONTO - Canada, under pressure to spend more on its military, vowed on Monday to boost funding for the armed forces and hit ...
Canada said it will devote a greater share of GDP on defence, given the need to reduce its heavy reliance on Washington. Read ...
Mark Carney isn’t interested in being prime minister of Canada. Sure, he may like the title and the presumed prestige that ...
Steven Chase reports that the new money doesn’t include defence-related spending in other departments, but it pushes total ...
Ottawa is upping this year’s budget for the Department of National Defence by $9.3-billion. That and existing spending from other departments will push defence-related expenditure to $62.7-billion for ...