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Many NATO members lag far behind the U.S. in defense-spending levels and military capabilities. Now they are trying to fix ...
To help shift the country away from its dependence on the United States, Canada’s prime minister plans to spend billions to ...
Canada has signed on to the NATO pledge to increase defence spending to 5 per cent of annual GDP by 2035. That means that ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced the federal government will increase spending on defence. That's good news to local ...
Canada plans to join NATO's new defense investment pledge by committing to invest 5% of its GDP in defense spending by 2035.
Defence and economic policy experts agree the NATO agreement is broad enough that it affords allies a lot of wiggle room to ...
There are many challenges on the way to rebuilding Canada’s military, and we don’t have the luxury of time to achieve this ...
Prime Minister says NATO leaders will likely agree to 10-year timeline, and Canada should get credit for some already planned ...
Here's what to know about the new spending target, its two categories of 'core defence' and broader defence-related infrastructure, and how Canada plans to achieve each.
Canada’s new pledge to spend five percent of GDP on defence by 2035 could cost up to $150bn annually—but Prime Minister Mark ...
The tens of billions in additional military spending will quickly translate into massive social spending cuts.
Signing on to NATO's new defence spending target could cost the federal treasury up to $150 billion a year, Prime Minister ...