Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Says No Plans To Join U.S. Missile Defence, Send Troops To Afghanistan

The Canadian Press, 24 Aug, 2017 11:36 AM
  • Justin Trudeau Says No Plans To Join U.S. Missile Defence, Send Troops To Afghanistan
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has thrown cold water on suggestions the Liberal government wants to sign onto continental ballistic missile defence, or that it might send troops back into Afghanistan.
 
 
The question over whether Canada should be part of the U.S.'s continental missile-defence shield has been rekindled in recent days amid concerns about North Korea's growing nuclear arsenal.
 
 
Canada opted out of ballistic missile defence in 2005 following a divisive national debate, but many defence experts and parliamentarians, including some Liberals, want the issue reopened.
 
 
Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan has also resurrected questions about whether Canada will be asked to follow suit.
 
 
Speaking in Montreal on Wednesday, however, Trudeau appeared to close the door on both ideas.
 
 
 
 
"On those cases, we will always take the decisions in terms of what is the best interests of Canadians," Trudeau told reporters after meeting federal and provincial immigration officials.
 
 
"And our long-standing positions on those two issues are not going to be changed any time soon."
 
 
The comments on ballistic missile defence were the strongest yet from the Liberal government, which has largely sidestepped questions about its intentions in recent weeks.
 
 
Whether the prime minister has succeeded in finally putting the issue to rest is another question, however, particularly if tensions between Washington and Pyongyang continue to escalate.
 
 
At least one Liberal MP has said Canada should reconsider its decision not join the U.S. missile-shield system, as have both the House of Commons and Senate defence committees.
 
 
The Liberals had also said in their recent defence policy that they planned to discuss with the U.S. ways to improve North America's defences against, among other things, ballistic missiles.
 
 
 
Exactly what form those discussions will take — and what concrete measures will be taken to better protect the continent — remains unclear.
 
 
Trudeau's position on Afghanistan was less of a surprise, as he had previously ruled out a NATO request for Canada to send police trainers to the war-torn country.
 
 
The last Canadian troops left Afghanistan in 2014, and despite concerns about a resurgent Taliban, the Liberals have instead emphasized Canada's military contributions to Iraq and Latvia.
 
 
Still, it's uncertain how the comments will be received by the Trump administration and NATO, both of which have called on allies to redouble their efforts and help end the 16-year-old conflict there.
 
 
"We will ask our NATO allies and global partners to support our new strategy, with additional troop and funding increases in line with our own," Trump said Monday. "We are confident they will."

MORE National ARTICLES

John Horgan And Justin Trudeau Discuss Opioids And Wildfires

John Horgan And Justin Trudeau Discuss Opioids And Wildfires
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Premier John Horgan met in Ottawa on Tuesday and focused on areas where they agree.

John Horgan And Justin Trudeau Discuss Opioids And Wildfires

'Surrey Our New Home' Refugee Strategy Released

'Surrey Our New Home' Refugee Strategy Released
Given the unique challenges that refugees face, the Surrey Local Immigration Partnership (LIP) developed a three-year strategy called “Surrey Our New Home”. 

'Surrey Our New Home' Refugee Strategy Released

Scaachi Koul’s best-selling essay collection to be made into comedy series

Scaachi Koul’s best-selling essay collection to be made into comedy series
Koul’s debut features a collection of sharp-witted, poignant, and often mortifying essays drawn from Koul’s life growing up the daughter of Indian immigrants in Canada’s Midwest.

Scaachi Koul’s best-selling essay collection to be made into comedy series

Renowned Canadian Yoga Innovator, Author MICHAEL STONE Dies In Victoria; Suspected Drug Overdose

Renowned Canadian Yoga Innovator, Author MICHAEL STONE Dies In Victoria; Suspected Drug Overdose
VICTORIA — A Canadian yoga innovator, Buddhist and author has died of a suspected drug overdose after his family said he took street drugs in Victoria.

Renowned Canadian Yoga Innovator, Author MICHAEL STONE Dies In Victoria; Suspected Drug Overdose

Auto Insurance Rates In B.C. Could Spike 30 Per Cent Without Overhaul

Auto Insurance Rates In B.C. Could Spike 30 Per Cent Without Overhaul
VANCOUVER — A new report warns that British Columbia drivers may have to pay 30 per cent more for auto insurance unless the provincial government makes big changes.

Auto Insurance Rates In B.C. Could Spike 30 Per Cent Without Overhaul

Search Suspended In Fraser Valley For Vancouver Woman Last Seen On July 8

Search Suspended In Fraser Valley For Vancouver Woman Last Seen On July 8
AGASSIZ, B.C. — RCMP in Agassiz, B.C., say the search has been suspended for Sophie Dowsley, two weeks after she and her hiking companion were reported missing in the Fraser Valley.

Search Suspended In Fraser Valley For Vancouver Woman Last Seen On July 8