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Is Canada's NORAD Upgrade Cache New? Defense Secretary is uncertain

Canada's Defense Secretary saidNORADstill do not know where the $ 4.9 billion promised upgrade to radar and surveillance systems came from. increase. In an interview with Mercedes Stephenson of

West Block,General Wayne Airasked more questions about the details of the spending plans facing the government. I was asked about what I was doing. About NORAD upgrade.

Sources told Global News that the military is uncertain about where the money is coming from and that meetings are being held in departments trying to determine how much of the money is new. .. These sources say there is significant concern that the funds may not be new and that capital may need to be reintroduced from within the existing defense budget.

"I don't fully understand the source of funding for this," Eyre said.

"So I can't say exactly where it's coming from, but I think the announcement was welcomed."

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Yale was also asked if the military plans to reduce the sector so that it can allocate $ 4.9 billion for NORAD upgrades.

"We haven't seen a disconnect, but as always, we need to consider rebalancing," he said.

"The force we have today is not the force we need to support tomorrow. Therefore, we need to look at the structure of the force. Is it in the right place? Is the unit in place? Should we consider rerolling the unit to assume a more relevant role in the future security environment? That's all important. ”

Global News to Defense Minister Anita Anand's office I want the clarity of the question.

No answer yet.

Read more: Canada is 40 billion in 20 years to upgrade NORAD's defenses in a "new threat" Spend dollars

The Canadian Army is in the midst of a major consideration of sexual misconduct, while at the same time protecting Canadians from new threats in a more dangerous world. We are faced with fundamental questions about how the military can and should adapt.

Anand called the world "darker" and more "chaotic" than at any point in recent memory earlier this year, and last week the government set out to modernize North America in the next 20 years. Aerospace defense under the NORAD agreement, which said it would spend about $ 40 billion.

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As part of that, she initially spent new money to upgrade early radar and surveillance systems in the north and continent. Announced $ 4.9 billion, which it said was.

Canada has announced a $ 4.9 billion plan to modernize NORAD

but she later fixed it He said that $ 4.9 billion wasn't new and funded instead, and was previously allocated under the $ 8 billion increase in spending promised in the previous federal budget.

Eyre said in an interview that the world certainly stands at and at the "turning point" betweenauthoritarianismanddemocracy. I said there is. The rest of the life of most Canadians.

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"History probably sees this time as a turning point in world order. What are we? The rule-based international order that has prospered for generations is more vulnerable than ever, "he said.

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"And I will see the order characterized by conflict for the rest of our lives. I think. "

The conflict will occur between authoritarian nations and democracy in the world, Eyre said.

He added that it is a growing concern for his counterparts in European and Asian countries.

"The threat is real," he said. "They are all very worried. The threat of global conflict, the conflict between great powers, is as great as it was decades ago, so we need to worry."

Read more: Canada needs to be prepared for "all scenarios" as Russia continues its nuclear threat : Jolly

There are important spending announcements as the interests of countries that have failed to prioritize their defense and security are becoming sharper.

Uncertainty, coupled with social unrest, is characterized by the global economic disaster of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent supply chain struggle. It has become a recent word. ..

Next are the ongoing crises of climate change and natural disasters, and the strategic threats they pose to countries like Canada. The melting of the Arctic ice packs makes it easier to navigate difficult-to-live areas, including actors like China and Russia who appear to be in the habit of ignoring international law.

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Similarly, Russia's provocative and horrific invasion of Ukraine raises what the Canadian authorities have. Has amplified much of the existing global economic pressure on the supply chain, repeatedly described as a threat to existence against the rule-based international order established after World War II.

About the Future of the Royal Military University

Whether the Canadian Army can hire the members it needs to meet more people The unstable world is the one that continues to plague the military.

In a recent report warned earlier this year, systematic racism, discrimination and sexual misconduct "repel" potential new hires, establishing their culture. It clearly links the military's ability to attract a new generation of Canadians directly to the people. The security challenges facing the country.

Read more: Widespread systematic racism in Canadian military "repulsion" new hires: Report

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The Federal Liberal Party received multiple exclusive reports from global news about allegations of sexual misconduct against senior leaders last year. , Launched an independent review on the best ways to modify military culture.

Former Canadian Supreme Court Judge Louise Arbor led the review, and at the end of May, it was "impossible" for military leadership to correct existing cultural issues with the system and the military. Published a ferocious report that he considered to be. "Responsibility" to the country.

In her recommendations, there was a need to reform the Royal Military College of Kingston and the Royal Military College of Sanjan, which are colleges that train future leaders of the Canadian Armed Forces.

Arbor called them "institutions of different times."

"There is good reason to question the wisdom of maintaining the existence of these military colleges, as they do today," Arbor wrote.

"There is a real risk that the perpetuation of discriminatory culture in college will slow the momentum of cultural change undertaken by the CAF. Sufficient evidence that military colleges are not fulfilling their mission. I believe that alternatives must be explored with an open mind. "

Air said the military needed to" accept "Arbor's recommendations.

"We must look calmly. It is a suitable institution for the purposes of the 21st century and produces what we need," he said.

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"Many people are proud of the higher education institution they were born in, but when they move forward Has an open mind and must emotionally look at what is best for Canada and what is best for our army to create the leaders we need for the future. "

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