National Post

Canada’s military plans OK with UN

- Lee Berthiaume

• The UN is sending early signals that it approves of Canada’s forthcomin­g plans f or peacekeepi­ng, which are expected to involve several smaller contributi­ons rather than a single specific mission getting all of the government’s available resources.

The Trudeau government is promising to finally open the curtains — at least partly — on Wednesday as to what sort of military personnel and equipment it’s willing to offer to help with the UN’s peacekeepi­ng efforts.

The long- awaited decision comes more than a year after the Liberals first promised to make up to 600 Canadian troops and 150 police available to the UN, and as the government plays host to a major peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver.

Sources have said that rather than focusing on one mission, Canada is offering the UN a veritable grab bag of goodies in the form of helicopter­s, trainers and other assets for a variety of different missions.

While such an approach might seem scattersho­t, it’s preferable when it comes to developed countries like Canada, the UN’s undersecre­tary general for field support told The Canadian Press in an interview Tuesday.

That’s because many missions are short on the type of high- end equipment and personnel Canada can offer, said Atul Khare, who oversees the day- to- day operations of peacekeepi­ng missions in the field.

“It is precisely in these high-technology areas — engineers, hospitals and doctors, strategic airlift and tactical airlift — that developed countries have the largest contributi­on to make simply because they have the capacity,” Khare said.

“And I do see a great advantage of distributi­ng that capacity because through distributi­on of that capacity, the gaps are better filled globally.

“Rather than only making one mission 100 per cent, you improve many missions from, say, 70 per cent to 80 per cent, which is a better way of improving the situation globally.”

In the Philippine­s f or the Associatio­n of South East Asian Nations summit, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday that Canada’s contributi­on would ensure “maximal positive impact, not just for Canadian contributi­ons but for all peacekeepe­rs.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada