Readying the country to ‘defend against help’

Canada must focus on what we can do on our own without American assistance—and perhaps in opposition to Washington’s desires in the Arctic.
Mark Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney, left, meets with U.S. President Donald Trump in the White House's Oval Office on May 6. Carney and his new cabinet should insist that the Department of National Defence and Canadian Armed Forces start thinking and planning as a national force first and foremost.

Here’s a thought experiment: If you were going to build the Canadian Armed Forces from a blank sheet of paper, what would it look like? This isn’t realistic or advisable, of course, but it helps to answer where the CAF should head in an increasingly uncertain world. ...

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