Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada To Join U.S.-British Effort To Train Ukrainian Combat Troops

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 11:31 AM
    OTTAWA — Canada will send 200 military trainers to Ukraine, joining the U.S. and Britain in an international effort to shore up the eastern European country's battered and bloodied combat forces.
     
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Defence Minister Jason Kenney announced the long-anticipated move Tuesday at National Defence headquarters.
     
    The troops will join American and British soldiers early this summer, and the mission will last until March 31, 2017.
     
    Kenney says Canada's latest military contribution addresses a number of requests from the government of Ukraine, and is being provided to help the country in its efforts to maintain sovereignty, security and stability in the face of Russian aggression.
     
    Most of the Canadian trainers are expected to be housed at an existing NATO training centre located in Yavoriv, in the western part of Ukraine, near the Polish border.
     
    However, some instruction will also take place at the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence Demining Centre in Kamyanets-Podilsky, also in western Ukraine.
     
    Kenney took pains to emphasize that the troops will be 1,300 kilometres from the embattled eastern portion of the country, where pro-Russian separatists were last week reportedly preparing for a spring offensive despite an uneasy ceasefire.
     
    He also underlined that Canadian trainers will not accompany Ukrainian troops to the front.
     
    "Let me be absolutely clear about that," Kenney said. "These Canadian Armed Forces personnel will not be going anywhere remotely close to the conflict zone in eastern Ukraine."
     
    In fact, he said, the main training centre is virtually within site of the Polish border and "this is not a difficult place from which to extract them should circumstances become unpredictable."
     
    The Canadians will offer Ukrainian troops their expertise in countering mines and improvised explosive devices, skills painfully learned during the five-year combat mission in Kandahar.
     
    The new mission could also involve instruction on logistics and military policing, something former defence minister Rob Nicholson hinted at last winter when military planners visited the country to determine how best to help.
     
    They will be training "recognized" Ukrainian army units and not any of the notorious irregular forces, some of whom have been described as far-right neo-fascist groups. 
     
    "We are not going to be in business of training ad-hoc militias," said Kenney, who added that they trust the government of President Petro Poroshenko to send them bona fide soldiers and national guardsmen.
     
    The U.S. military has deployed 800 troops to train three — possibly four — battalions in western Ukraine. The British recently sent 75 soldiers to give instruction in command procedures, tactical intelligence and battlefield first aid.
     
    Both Washington and Ottawa have been under pressure to ship lethal military aid to Poroshenko's government, which has been struggling to hold a shaky ceasefire together with rebels.
     
    The Pentagon delayed the training program for Ukrainian soldiers last month to avoid giving the Kremlin an excuse to scrap the peace deal struck in February.
     
    Russia could very well consider the deployment of U.S.-led trainers as a provocation at a time when it has rattled most of Europe with massive, snap military exercises along its borders involving tens of thousands of troops.
     
    It strikes at the heart of the dilemma faced by Western leaders: how to stop Russian President Vladimir Putin's slow-motion dismemberment of Ukraine without provoking a major war.
     
    Kenney says the training mission, which will cost about $13 million in the first year, is an important signal of deterrence and not a provocation.
     
    "It is critically important the world, particularly NATO allies, send a strong signal to Vladimir Putin of deterrence and his aggression will not be rewarded, which is why we've been operating as part of Operation Reassurance with our NATO allies in eastern Europe," he said.
     
    The training mission is separate from the deployment of Canadian troops, jets and a frigate, which are taking part in NATO exercises this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inquest Begins Into Killing Of Six-year-old Boy On Saskatchewan Reserve

    Inquest Begins Into Killing Of Six-year-old Boy On Saskatchewan Reserve
    REGINA — An inquest is to begin today into the killing of a six-year-old boy by an older child on a reserve in southern Saskatchewan.

    Inquest Begins Into Killing Of Six-year-old Boy On Saskatchewan Reserve

    CSIS Sets Up International Secret-swapping Forum On 'Terrorist Travel'

    CSIS Sets Up International Secret-swapping Forum On 'Terrorist Travel'
    OTTAWA — The Canadian Security Intelligence Service has set up a "multilateral forum of trusted partners" to share information on suspected extremists travelling abroad — a group that extends beyond its customary Five Eyes spy network, a newly released memo says.

    CSIS Sets Up International Secret-swapping Forum On 'Terrorist Travel'

    Goldcorp To Sell 40% Stake In South Arturo Joint Venture To Premier Gold

    Goldcorp To Sell 40% Stake In South Arturo Joint Venture To Premier Gold
    VANCOUVER — Goldcorp Inc. (TSX:G) has a preliminary agreement to sell its 40 per cent interest in a Nevada project to Premier Gold Mines Ltd. (TSX:PG).

    Goldcorp To Sell 40% Stake In South Arturo Joint Venture To Premier Gold

    Mike Duffy The One On Trial, But Top Tory Figures Will Land In Defence's Sights

    Mike Duffy The One On Trial, But Top Tory Figures Will Land In Defence's Sights
    OTTAWA — Suspended senator Mike Duffy may be the one on trial, but he won't be only person to see their motives, character and actions dissected, examined and critiqued over the next several weeks inside an Ottawa courtroom.

    Mike Duffy The One On Trial, But Top Tory Figures Will Land In Defence's Sights

    Two Shootings In Delta Happen Hours Apart But No One Hurt, Police Investigate

    Two Shootings In Delta Happen Hours Apart But No One Hurt, Police Investigate
    Police responded to reports of gunfire just before 6 p.m. and found evidence of shots fired but no reported injuries or property damage.

    Two Shootings In Delta Happen Hours Apart But No One Hurt, Police Investigate

    Search On For Man Who Jumped Into Fraser River To Help Wife Who Fell From Boat

    Search On For Man Who Jumped Into Fraser River To Help Wife Who Fell From Boat
    DELTA, B.C. — Police say a woman who fell from a houseboat into B.C.'s Fraser River has been rescued, but a man who jumped in attempt to save her is still missing.

    Search On For Man Who Jumped Into Fraser River To Help Wife Who Fell From Boat