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Canada’s top soldier defends military contributions to NATO

Chief of Defence Staff Jonathan Vance speaks with the media in Ottawa, Tuesday May 24, 2016. Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press

OTTAWA – The country’s top soldier says measuring a country’s military contributions to NATO solely in terms of defence spending is a shallow approach.

Gen. Jonathan Vance‘s comments to the House of Commons defence committee come amid expectations that Canada will face pressure from the U.S. to increase its defence budget in the wake of Donald Trump’s election.

Trump was critical of NATO during the presidential campaign, stressing that many members do not spend enough on their own defence.

READ MORE: NATO’s Canadian-led battle group beginning to take shape in Latvia

Vance says there is sometimes a tendency to look only at spending, but Canada is pulling its weight with NATO in many other ways.

He says Canada’s promise to lead a NATO force in Latvia is one example.

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Vance also says his soldiers have fired on ISIL forces pre-emptively in Iraq.

But he is adamant they have only fired in what he describes as a defensive mode, which includes stopping an attack against Kurdish allies or civilians before it starts.

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