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NATO leaders have approved a plan to dramatically increase defence spending across the Western alliance to five per cent of ...
President Donald Trump published a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, accusing Canada of having "financially ...
Canada is committing to a new NATO target of boosting its defence and military spending to five per cent of its GDP.
Canada has never hit the two per cent NATO-mandated defence spending target since it was established in 2014, though Prime Minister Mark Carney recently announced his government would reach the mark ...
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.
Defence and economic policy experts agree the NATO agreement is broad enough that it affords allies a lot of wiggle room to justify certain projects as being defence-related.
THE HAGUE — Canada will reach an even higher NATO spending target in part by developing its critical minerals and the infrastructure needed to get them to market, Prime Minister Mark Carney said as ...
To help shift the country away from its dependence on the United States, Canada’s prime minister plans to spend billions to revitalize its military and meet a NATO spending goal.
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As Prime Minister Mark Carney commits to meet the new NATO spending target of five per cent of GDP by 2035, former vice-chief ...
The leaders reaffirmed their “ironclad commitment” to NATO’s collective defense clause, Article 5. In recent years, Trump had sowed seeds of doubt about whether the U.S. — NATO’s most powerful member ...
Canada joins NATO push for 5 percent Prime Minister Mark Carney is embracing spending amid rising Arctic tensions.