
THE AMERICA ONE NEWS

Feb 22, 2025 |
0
| Remer,MNSponsor: QWIKET AI
Sponsor: QWIKET AI
Sponsor: QWIKET AI: Sports Knowledge
Sponsor: QWIKET AI: Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor: QWIKET AI: Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support.
topic

By Rick Hillier, Brice Scheschuk and Kevin Reed
The Canadian government can send a compelling message to U.S. President Donald Trump that it is serious about meeting its NATO commitments by adopting two powerful defence measures.
If the political will is there, Canada could almost immediately start accessing billions of dollars of institutional money for security purposes, which would go toward our commitment of spending two per cent of GDP on defence.