Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberals Still Planning Peacekeeping Mission Despite Latvia Commitment

The Canadian Press, 09 Jul, 2016 12:36 PM
  • Liberals Still Planning Peacekeeping Mission Despite Latvia Commitment
WARSAW, Poland — The Trudeau government says Canada is still in the market for a United Nations peacekeeping mission despite plans to send a sizeable military contingent to Eastern Europe.
 
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met with Latvian President Raimonds Vejonis at the NATO leaders' summit in Warsaw on Saturday to discuss plans for Canada to send 450 soldiers to the Baltic state. The Canadians will form the "nucleus" of a larger NATO force in response to concerns about Russia.
 
Trudeau and Vejonis exchanged pleasantries before the Latvian president offered to organize a hockey game between Canadian and Latvian soldiers. "You might regret that. We're quite good," Trudeau laughed in reply, before adding: "But I know you are too."
 
Joking aside, the deployment along with plans to continue operating a naval frigate in the region and send fighter jets on an occasional basis, represents the largest military commitment to Europe for Canada in more than a decade, Trudeau said. At the same time, Canada has hundreds of military trainers in Ukraine and Iraq.
 
"It's terribly unfortunate that Canada has to deploy its forces in Latvia instead of having peacekeeping in Africa or in an area of the world where it's much more needed," Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion told the Canadian Press on the sidelines of the summit Saturday.
 
"But we need to do so. We need to do so because Russia had a completely unacceptable behaviour, regarding especially Ukraine."
 
 
Yet both Dion and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said the Liberal government is intent on finding a peacekeeping mission for Canada. Sajjan said Canada can't just respond to crises but must look at situations where it can help reduce or prevent conflict.
 
"We are receiving requests from everywhere," Dion added. "If we are saying yes to everybody, we'd have a big problem. We'll need to be very selective and to choose the way where Canada will have value added within the coalitions in which we are."
 
Sajjan the Canadian military has the resources to participate in a peacekeeping mission while also deploying forces to Europe and Iraq.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds Offer 'No Drone Zone' Signs To Shoo Drone Operators Away From Airports

Feds Offer 'No Drone Zone' Signs To Shoo Drone Operators Away From Airports
OTTAWA — The federal government is hoping its new 'No Drone Zone' signs will shoo operators of unmanned aerial vehicles away from airports and commercial air traffic.

Feds Offer 'No Drone Zone' Signs To Shoo Drone Operators Away From Airports

OECD lauds Ottawa's Approach To Boosting Economy; Raises Concerns Over Housing

OECD lauds Ottawa's Approach To Boosting Economy; Raises Concerns Over Housing
MONTREAL — Canada got a pat on the back from the OECD for trying to boost economic growth through infrastructure spending, but the international economic think-tank said more action is needed to address overheating in major pockets of the housing market.

OECD lauds Ottawa's Approach To Boosting Economy; Raises Concerns Over Housing

Frustration Over Health Disclosure Doesn't Trump Privacy Protection: Experts

Frustration Over Health Disclosure Doesn't Trump Privacy Protection: Experts
HALIFAX — It's a quandry for health care professionals that has caught the attention of experts across the country: should family members and loved ones be told about a patient's struggle with mental health issues?

Frustration Over Health Disclosure Doesn't Trump Privacy Protection: Experts

One Down One To Go, Zoo Officials Recapture One Of Two Missing Capybaras

One Down One To Go, Zoo Officials Recapture One Of Two Missing Capybaras
TORONTO — One of two large rodents that escaped a Toronto zoo has been rounded up.

One Down One To Go, Zoo Officials Recapture One Of Two Missing Capybaras

Police Say Drone That Got Too Close To Plane Was Bigger And Higher Than Normal

WINNIPEG — Authorities in Winnipeg are investigating a close encounter between a passenger plane and a drone that police say was bigger and higher up than unmanned air vehicles normally fly.

Police Say Drone That Got Too Close To Plane Was Bigger And Higher Than Normal

Jury To Disregard Accused's Theory In Tim Bosma Murder Trial: Judge

Jury To Disregard Accused's Theory In Tim Bosma Murder Trial: Judge
HAMILTON — An Ontario judge has told jurors to disregard portions of an accused's version of events in the trial of two men alleged to have killed a stranger who took them out for a test drive in his pickup truck.

Jury To Disregard Accused's Theory In Tim Bosma Murder Trial: Judge