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Four years after full-scale Ukraine invasion, Canada faces tough choices on defence
Canada boosts military spending and signs security agreements with European allies, committing to defend Ukraine and its Arctic territory over the next 15 years.
- In January 2026, Canada joined European allies in Paris last month to sign a security agreement for Ukraine, with Travis Morehen telling the panel it is a 10- to 15-year commitment.
- Analysts in Ottawa warn that four years since Russia's invasion, increased instability will force Canadians to spend more and faster on defense, said Anton Sestritsyn.
- NATO officials note that Ukraine fights a war of attrition with small moves and sophisticated drones while allies hollowed out munitions stockpiles and lack predictable supply chains.
- Wendy Gilmour said Ottawa's boost in military spending will help Ukraine and better prepare Canada to defend its borders, while Canada's 2024 Arctic foreign policy warns Russia's northern buildup could endanger Canada.
- Wendy Gilmour warned that allies still lack predictable munitions and equipment supply chains, while Canadian firms are urged to partner with Ukrainian drone companies that could build factories in Canada.
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Four years after full-scale Ukraine invasion, Canada faces tough choices on defence
Breaking News, Sports, Manitoba, Canada
·Winnipeg, Canada
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources21
Leaning Left18Leaning Right0Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution86% Left
Bias Distribution
- 86% of the sources lean Left
86% Left
L 86%
14%
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