Hillier Requests Gov't Commitment To Military

Posted on Tuesday, February 15 at 11:39 by Armageddon
As soon as he was sworn in earlier this month, Hillier urged the Liberal government to remember the military when it brings down the budget. And on Sunday, he reiterated that he would like the government to follow through to help its Canadian troops in the Feb. 23 budget...... http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1108319442830_11/?hub=Canada

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  1. Tue Feb 15, 2005 10:54 pm
    Go Hiller. But don't call us peacekeepers. We're the best warriors in the world.

  2. Tue Feb 15, 2005 11:07 pm
    Before they throw money around, they should decide what kind of military we want and NEED. Is it for making peace and home defence, or for foreign adventures?

  3. Wed Feb 16, 2005 1:06 am
    Well, I think he first wants the 3 steps to happen, and there is a new foreign policy to be debated (I think), which might include plans for our revamped military.

    ---
    Freedom is the right of all sentient beings

  4. Wed Feb 16, 2005 2:15 am
    Denmark Invades Canada
    Published on 03/30/04 at 16:38:30 EST by Craig Pichach


    Adrian Humphreys
    National Post


    Tuesday, March 30, 2004

    Canada's top remaining diplomat in Denmark was called before the
    Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday to discuss the
    disputed territory of Hans Island, a barren rock in the high Arctic.

    Brian Herman, charge d'affaires of Canada's diplomatic mission in
    Copenhagen, was asked by officials about his country's intentions in
    the spat, recently inflamed by Danish sailors occupying the island
    during regular Arctic patrols.

    Mr. Herman's response was that "it is not Canada's intention to stir
    up a tempest in a teapot," said Reynald Doiron, spokesman for
    Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs. "We want to keep an open
    mind on this and yes, we would be ready to resume discussions on the
    issue but there has been no definite agenda set," he said.

    Peter Taksoe-Jensen, head of international public law with the
    Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the issue is not in danger
    of becoming an international incident. "The solution of the dispute
    over Hans Island is not going to be a military solution in the sense
    that Denmark is going to post military on the island or anything of
    that kind," Mr. Taksoe-Jensen said from Copenhagen.

    "It is going to be a negotiated solution where Canada and Denmark
    sit together at the table at some stage when we come to this issue
    and find a solution."

    Although he played down the presence of a Danish warship -- which
    has made repeated visits to the island with its sailors occupying
    the island and even unfurling the red and white flag of Denmark over
    it -- Mr. Taksoe-Jensen could not rule out further visits.

    "Since we think of it as part of Danish territory, we feel officials
    have that right. It is only natural that Danish officials go there
    from time to time."

    He said Copenhagen would take issue if Canada also landed soldiers
    on the island.

    Canada has not had an ambassador in Denmark since Alfonso Gagliano
    was recalled by Paul Martin in the wake of the advertising scandal
    involving Mr. Gagliano's former government ministry.

    The National Post has highlighted the dispute between Canada and
    Denmark over the tiny, desolate, ice-bound island as one of four
    international boundary disputes prompting concerns over the nation's
    ability to maintain sovereignty of its vast northern region.

    The issue was also raised in Parliament, with Stockwell Day, the
    Conservative party's foreign affairs critic, calling on the
    government to fill Mr. Gagliano's post and for the restoration of
    military funding to help retain Arctic sovereignty.

    "The nation of Denmark has laid claim to Canadian territory. Its
    military, from its warship, hoisted its flag on our Arctic territory
    without permission, without warning, and without any fear of being
    stopped," Mr. Day said on Friday.

    "The government's utter disarray is underlined by the fact that the
    scandal has led to the recall of our ambassador to Denmark, the very
    nation that is challenging our sovereignty," Mr. Day said.

    Aileen Carroll, Minister for International Co-operation, said Canada
    will continue to defend its interests.

    "Hans Island constitutes part of the national territory of Canada.
    No assertion by the Danish ambassador or other Danish officials
    detracts from the absolute sovereignty that Canada enjoys over Hans
    Island," she said, repeating the official statement of Foreign
    Affairs.

    Mr. Day said the issue highlights the military's weakness.

    "This embarrassing situation shows that the Prime Minister was wrong
    when he was underfunding our national defence while he was finance
    minister ... and he is wrong today in leaving Canada exposed and
    embarrassed," he said in Parliament.

    David Pratt, the Minister of National Defence, defended the
    government's record.

    "A significant amount of money has been put into the navy over the
    last number of years. Since this government took over, significant
    investments have been made in the armed forces overall.... We are
    continuing to rebuild the Canadian Forces," he said.

    © National Post 2004

  5. Wed Feb 16, 2005 3:38 am
    'foreign adventures' - like WWII? or Peacekeeping in the Sinai?

  6. Wed Feb 16, 2005 3:41 am
    maybe the UN will pay us back for years of support with a dozen resolutions against Denmark, that will teach them!

  7. Wed Feb 16, 2005 3:46 am
    We should tell the Danish to piss off, and blow them out of the water if they disagree. They can try and use the E.U. for cover, but who cares about Denmark anyway.

  8. Wed Feb 16, 2005 4:05 am
    Sink the Danish ships to see what they'd do. :)

    ---
    The best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter --

    Winston Churchill

  9. Wed Feb 16, 2005 4:45 am
    No like Iraq or Iran or Syria or lebanon or Saudi Arabia and on and on and on and on.

  10. Wed Feb 16, 2005 4:17 pm
    And the Sudan? (a 'Rwanda act II')?

  11. Wed Feb 16, 2005 5:28 pm
    warmonger

  12. Thu Feb 17, 2005 11:09 pm
    Oh.

  13. Fri Feb 18, 2005 12:28 am
    Canada should care, if a shipping lane opens up.

    With the territorial claim, Denmark is a nation on *our* side in the dispute over an Arctic passage.

    The U.S., British and Japanese are leading the charge to have a seasonally open waterway declared "international waters", which of course the U.S. will monopolize and of which Canada will have no right to sovereign defence or commercial advantage.

    Canada and Denmark argue (together) that because the passage freezes seasonally it represents territorial waters. Other Arctic nations like Russia and Norway make similar claims to their arctic waters.

    Be cautious when it's the pro-american National Post and Stockwell Day trying to make a mountain out of a molehill, and divide and conquer the Canada-Denmark position by trying to provoke a schoolyard fight. No one in Canadian/Danish diplomatic circles actually gives a crap about the island.

    It's sovereign vs. international, not Canada vs. Denmark. This is another typical strategy by our friends on the far right whose interests are most profitably served by american gunboat control of the waterway.

  14. Fri Feb 18, 2005 1:26 am
    a little off topic...but the national post bitches and whines about the justice system, and yet they break a story that calls into question the credibility of a witness in the jonathan murder case. The case was a slam dunk for the crown. the evidence was obvious, those little monsters killed that boy - it was all on tape. now the national post goes and blows it all because the star witness was probably just a little ashamed or embarrassed to disclose to the court her past vampire talk. So what. She taped the call and had the good sense to report those little devils to the police. thanks national post. you'e done a great service for justice.



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