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http://sympaticomsn.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060225/army_enrolment_060225
CTV.ca News Staff
In a bid to boost enrolment in the military, Canada's top soldier is promoting a plan to grant citizenship to landed immigrants who sign up to serve.
General Rick Hillier, the chief of defence staff, also wants to make the military more attractive by offering an extra week of leave for soldiers who sign up a new recruit.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper was elected on a platform that pledged to boost the military by as many as 23,000 new soldiers.
One of the big challenges with that plan is finding the manpower, but Hillier says his ideas could provide the incentive needed to bring in the new recruits.
Hillier said the military provides training, job security, exciting work and good pay, and said he is at a loss to explain why more Canadians don't want to serve
Don't the Americans allow landed immigrants to serve?
CTV.ca News Staff
In a bid to boost enrolment in the military, Canada's top soldier is promoting a plan to grant citizenship to landed immigrants who sign up to serve.
General Rick Hillier, the chief of defence staff, also wants to make the military more attractive by offering an extra week of leave for soldiers who sign up a new recruit.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper was elected on a platform that pledged to boost the military by as many as 23,000 new soldiers.
One of the big challenges with that plan is finding the manpower, but Hillier says his ideas could provide the incentive needed to bring in the new recruits.
Hillier said the military provides training, job security, exciting work and good pay, and said he is at a loss to explain why more Canadians don't want to serve
Don't the Americans allow landed immigrants to serve?