as she called for countries to put boots on the ground. So far, international efforts to provide training and resources to the country's national police force aren't getting the job done, the UN's special envoy to Haiti warned in D.C. Military seeks public input on how to cope with low recruitment and a world of threats.Thorny issues on the table as Biden makes presidential visit to Canada this week.to continue to press Canada on meeting its NATO spending commitments, and reiterate hopes it will eventually agree to take on a leading role in restoring some order in lawless, gang-ravaged Haiti. "Russian aggression and these Chinese balloons now make it politically salient to try and speed things up and make those commitments." "The problem for Norad is it's literally under the political radar - it's difficult to get politicians to commit funds and recognize that it's been the first line of defence for North America for 65 years," Charron said. ![]() Updating Norad has long been a priority for both countries, but rarely one that either side talked about much in public, said Andrea Charron, a professor of international relations at the University of Manitoba. Glen VanHerck called a "domain awareness gap" in North America's aging binational defence system. National security, too, has been top of mind ever since last month's flurry of floating objects exposed what Norad commander Gen. "So when you when you look across the landscape, of course, you think that other people's systems are inherently easier than your own." Security talks "The challenge you have in a democracy is that processes are slow, and are in reality too slow relative to the needs of making the green transition," Miller said. That's just 12 years away, while it can take upwards of a decade to get approval for a mine, let alone raise the money, build it and put it into production, he added.
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