Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Canadian Centrist's avatar

Honestly I thought much the same thing when I read the policy update. Given the way the political winds are blowing, any commitment by the present government to spend money past October 2025 is a promise they can easily make because they know they won’t have to keep it while in Opposition.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again - what Canada needs above all else is a political consensus that defence is important, and that the CAF cannot be used as a political football. If we can get the major parties to agree on a set of priorities and how to achieve them, then that will go a long way towards having a defence policy and a procurement program that actually works.

Expand full comment
Forrest K's avatar

Canadian Defence and also National security will only be a political priority for either the cons or libs when the voters deem it important. For decades the typical Canadian voter has not given much attention to this. The question is, how can this attitude change sooner before it’s too late???

Note: External pressure from the US/Nato to date has not been that effective. However, That may change in the near future, but that may open also up the possibility of political games being played with our sovereignty

Expand full comment
6 more comments...

No posts