Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says Ottawa seeks to deepen its intelligence sharing with European partners, as Washington diverges on issues like Ukraine.
Intelligence experts have expressed concern about U.S. President Donald Trump appointing officials who have shared false information and talked of retribution for intelligence agencies that don't align with Trump.
Joly says she is concerned by the U.S. voting against Canada and its allies Monday in a United Nations resolution that blamed Russia for invading Ukraine and voiced concern for Ukraine's sovereignty.
Today marks three years of Russia’s illegal, unjustified, and unprovoked full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
— Mélanie Joly (@melaniejoly) February 24, 2025
Ukrainians continue to bravely defend their sovereignty, freedom, democracy, and future.
Canada will continue to stand with Ukraine - for as long as it takes. 🇨🇦🇺🇦
She says she has been in touch with senior officials in Australia and the U.K., as well as other European allies, about increasing intelligence collaboration.
This is team Canada in the UK.
— Mélanie Joly (@melaniejoly) February 25, 2025
Thank you for all your hard work.
🇨🇦🇬🇧
Voici l’équipe du Canada au Royaume-Uni.
Merci pour votre excellent travail. pic.twitter.com/5mVQULxg8i
Joly says the world is becoming increasingly dangerous, and countries are creating "new coalitions" to deal with the disruption.
She says that is why Canada must have "a working relationship" with countries it has disagreements with, such as South Africa, India and Saudi Arabia.