Thank you for the question.
I will answer the question in English because it's a somewhat sensitive matter.
It is entirely the decision of the Government of Canada, taking all factors into account, to decide how much it spends on defence. I think, though, that it would be premature at this point in time to make any conclusions about where the U.S. will be in the days and months ahead. I think there's still some ground to go.
Canada has a proud history of deploying and supporting NATO at the budget level that we're at. We are unequivocally valued as a partner, and I think we will continue to be so.
I think there is sometimes an overreliance on a strictly numeric figure. I'm not saying for a minute that I wouldn't support increasing defence funding. Every chief of the defence staff would, of course, but to take a figure and somehow parlay that into the only metric that you use to determine your worth in an alliance, I think, is shallow and false.
There is a great deal of difference between nations as to what they include and what they do not include in their percentage figures. There's a great deal of difference between nations as to how much they contribute when called by NATO to do something extra. There are lots of nations that are spending 2% of their GDP on defence but are not doing the same level of effort that Canada is. There are lots of nations, I think, that are at or approaching 2% GDP that are not part of the enhanced forward presence, for example, but Canada is. In fact, we're not only doing it, we're the leadership of one of them.
I would just caution, from a military perspective, that the metric is not the only metric that can be used and if it is, then it can provide a very skewed and perhaps incorrect view of the value of a country in an alliance.