Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Anand can't say if balloon gathered Canadian intel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Feb, 2023 11:55 AM
  • Anand can't say if balloon gathered Canadian intel

WASHINGTON - Canada's defence minister says the United States is still trying to determine whether a Chinese surveillance balloon collected any intelligence from either country when it flew over North America last week.

Anita Anand says Canada opted against shooting it down over Canadian airspace because it was deemed not to pose a threat to public safety.

And she says Norad, the Canada-U.S. continental defence system, tracked the balloon throughout its flight, but she won't say precisely where it was when it was first detected.

Anand met today with U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at the Pentagon as she wrapped up a two-day visit to Washington, D.C. with Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne.

Austin acknowledged the role that Canada and Norad played in helping to track and monitor the balloon as it traversed the continent, before the U.S. shot it down over the Atlantic last weekend.

Both Anand and Austin say the incident illustrates the importance of their ongoing efforts to modernize Norad, which military analysts and commanders have been warning for years is badly out of date.

MORE National ARTICLES

Extreme cold grips much of Eastern Canada

Extreme cold grips much of Eastern Canada
In scores of cities and towns, government and private agencies were scrambling to provide shelter for vulnerable people as the wind was expected to make the temperature feel like -40 C to -50 C in many areas.

Extreme cold grips much of Eastern Canada

Chinatown graffiti vandal arrested: VPD

Chinatown graffiti vandal arrested: VPD
Officers patrolling the neighbourhood arrested the vandal – a man in his 60s – Wednesday afternoon, after he allegedly wrote graffiti on a building near Abbott and West Pender Street, then tagged a sign near Main and Keefer Street. 

Chinatown graffiti vandal arrested: VPD

Tom Clark to be Canada's envoy in New York City

Tom Clark to be Canada's envoy in New York City
Clark will be Canada's consul general in New York, putting him in charge of Ottawa's efforts to sow cultural and economic ties in the Big Apple, as well as in neighboring American states and in Bermuda.

Tom Clark to be Canada's envoy in New York City

Test requirement extended for travel from China

Test requirement extended for travel from China
The government says it's concerned about reports of a dramatic increase in COVID-19 cases in China, and the lack of data available from China about potential variants that could be spreading through the country.

Test requirement extended for travel from China

Jan. home sales down 55% from year earlier: REBGV

Jan. home sales down 55% from year earlier: REBGV
The board says sales for the month totalled 1,022, a 55 per cent drop from the prior January. The number of homes that changed hands last month was also 42.9 per cent below the 10-year January sales average.    

Jan. home sales down 55% from year earlier: REBGV

Man acquitted over 'automatism' stabbing of wife

Man acquitted over 'automatism' stabbing of wife
In his decision, Justice Warren Milman outlines Perignon's difficulties with extreme pain from two separate motor vehicle accidents, leading to an opioid prescription described in the judgment as "dangerously high" and above a level that would be "fatal for someone naive to opioids."    

Man acquitted over 'automatism' stabbing of wife