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THE HAGUE — Canada and its NATO allies agreed Wednesday to substantially hike their defence spending target to five per cent ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney hailed a new and aggressive NATO target to boost military spending, while acknowledging that other ...
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada is “looking for a closer partnership” with the European Union — but not to become a ...
Canada and its NATO allies agreed at their annual summit on Wednesday to substantially hike their defence spending target to ...
Canada’s new pledge to spend five percent of GDP on defence by 2035 could cost up to $150bn annually—but Prime Minister 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.
President Donald Trump is one of the leaders in attendance amid the fragile situation between Israel and Iran.
Canada and its NATO allies agreed at their annual summit on Wednesday to substantially hike their defence spending target to five per cent of annual GDP by 2035, Prime Minister Mark Carney said.
As Prime Minister Mark Carney commits to meet the new NATO spending target of five per cent of GDP by 2035, former vice-chief ...
PM Carney believes budgetary sacrifices in order to meet military obligations is something Canadians can put out of their minds for now.
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Wednesday a ten-year military spending plan to meet NATO's new 5 per cent defence spending benchmark.
Canada and its NATO allies have agreed to a new target of spending five per cent of GDP on defence and security by 2035.