Tag Archives: Legion Magazine

U.S. calls on Canada to ban China’s 5G networks 🇺🇸–🇨🇦–🇨🇳

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Military Milestones
The Grey Cup in Lahore

The Grey Cup in Lahore

Story by Sharon Adams

In late November 1965, Canadian peacekeepers at an air base in Lahore, Pakistan, received an early Christmas present—a film recording of the Grey Cup game.

Nearly 100 Canadians had been deployed on a United Nations mission supervising a ceasefire between warring India and Pakistan in the fall of 1965. The Canadians provided air transport and reconnaissance with three RCAF Otters and three Caribous. They were led by Major-General B.F. Macdonald and located at a base along the India-Pakistan border between Lahore and Amritsar, India.

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Campfire Mugs
Campfire Mugs
Front Lines
U.S. calls on Canada to ban China’s 5G networks

U.S. calls on Canada to ban China’s 5G networks

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

The national security adviser to the president of the United States has warned Ottawa against allowing Chinese telecom giant Huawei to install its 5G network in Canada, saying the technology would be used as a “Trojan Horse” to undermine national security and threaten the country’s trusted position among its allies.

Speaking at an international security conference in Halifax on Nov. 23, Robert C. O’Brien didn’t mince words during his assessment of China’s intentions in the North American telecom market.

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Winter Birch Pack
This week in history
This week in history

November 30, 1918

Major W.G. Barker of Dauphin, Man., is awarded the Victoria Cross after
fighting dozens of enemy aircraft and downing three on Oct. 27.

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SafeStep Walk-In Tubs
Legion Magazine

War graves commission launches virtual tours of remote sites

An item from the Legion Magazine that we featured this past week.


Front Lines
War graves commission launches virtual tours of remote sites

War graves commission launches
virtual tours of remote sites

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

For more than a century, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission has tended war graves the world over, beginning with the First World War and, since 1945, the Second, as well. That’s some 1.7 million war dead in 150 countries.

There are 110,000 Canadians among them—the vast majority buried close to where they fell. It wasn’t until the 1960s—and notably, during the Afghanistan war—that Canada started bringing its war dead home.

Many others, however, died as the result of war wounds, illnesses and other war-related causes and are thus buried in Canada—almost 19,000 commission-administered graves, in fact, located in nearly 3,000 cemeteries across the country. About 1,900 of those cemeteries have just a single war grave.

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Silk Tie - Commemorating Canada and the Great War
Military Milestones
The sinking of U-536

The sinking of U-536

Story by Sharon Adams

In an irony of war, a German U-boat meant to harry the eastern coast of Canada came to its bitter end in the mid-Atlantic, its surviving crew rescued by Canadian sailors.

U-536 was commanded by Kapitänleutnant Rolf Shauenburg, who had joined the navy in 1934, and was already an officer when war was declared. He had served aboard a German destroyer that sank nine vessels at the beginning of the war. The young officer became a prisoner of war, escaped and was recaptured. After his release was negotiated, he returned to Germany, served on minesweepers, then was given command of a U-boat in January 1943.

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FLASH SALE
This week in history
This week in history

November 21, 1950

A westbound train carrying members of the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery
collides with an eastbound train east of Canoe River, B.C.; 17 die.

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Medipac Travel Insurance
Legion Magazine