The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/12/27 at 07:00 EST
Episode Date: December 27, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/12/27 at 07:00 EST...
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from cbc news the world is sour i'm neil kumar ukrainian president volatimer zelensky is coming to canada
to brief prime minister mark carney on his negotiations with the u.s the visit from the war-time leader
is aimed at bringing the conflict in his country to a close to j p tasker reports ukrainian president
volatimier zelensky will meet with prime minister mark carney in halifax a stop over before a high-stakes
with U.S. President Donald Trump in Florida the next day. The visit comes as Zelensky
pushes for a resolution to the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
Telling reporters in Kiev, a deal with Trump is 90% complete, but there are still some sticking
points to iron out when they meet, including what he calls territorial issues. Moscow has
insisted Ukraine give up some of its land in the east, an option Zelensky has long opposed,
Though the Ukrainian president's stance has softened since,
Zelensky saying a demilitarized economic zone in contested areas could be implemented.
The Ukrainian leader also wants security guarantees from Trump and help with reconstruction.
On that, Trump has been non-committal.
J.P. Tasker, CBC News, Washington.
The Canadian Navy is looking ahead to what the future fleet might look like.
And one of the concepts being floated is an all-Canadian ice-capable landing ship to defend the Arctic.
As Murray Brewster tells us, it is just one of the projects being imagined by military planners
as the federal government pours more than $81 billion into defense over the next few years.
U.S. amphibious armored vehicles rolling down the back ramp of the USS Portland off California last summer.
The U.S. Marines able to deploy troops and equipment on a beach anywhere in the world.
It's a capability Canada doesn't have, and the Navy is wondering whether it should.
We examined what would happen if we had a small community in distress in the high Arctic in February.
How could we get capability there?
Vice Admiral Angus Topshi is commander of the Navy.
We sort of realized that some form of Arctic mobile base probably made a lot of sense.
And that is effectively what an amphibious ship is.
Topshi says an amphibious ship would also be useful for humanitarian relief operations overseas.
The best example, during the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, the Canadian Army had to fly all of its equipment over several weeks into the country
because it had no ability to be able to land vehicles quickly through the destroyed port infrastructure.
The concept would solve a decades-old transportation problem for the military,
one that until now it hasn't had the money to address.
Marie Brewster, CBC News, Ottawa.
Boxing Day brought a blast of winter weather with a deep freeze
gripping Canada's north and east.
Snow and freezing rain also left tens of thousands without power in southwestern Ontario.
Angela McKinness reports.
London, Ontario Fire Chief Gary Mossberger says hundreds of calls have been coming into 911 after freezing rain coated the city in ice.
We're incredibly swamped right now with lots of trees down on electrical wires on homes.
The freezing rain started in the morning and kept going into the late afternoon stretching from Kitchener to Windsor.
By the time it stopped, thousands of people across southwestern Ontario were in the dark.
The number of power outages continued to climb Friday night
as more trees cracked under the weight of ice.
Catherine Arnott is with London Hydro,
where the damage was especially bad.
Our lines and forestry crews have been dispatched,
and they're working to isolate the areas.
Emergency crews were also responding to calls for help on the roads,
including rollover crashes near the 401.
Police continued to tell people to stay home,
with temperatures not expected to rise until Sunday.
Angela McKinness, CBC News, London, Ontario.
Venezuelian President Nicholas Maduro wants Washington's attention.
The United States, listen to me.
Maduro's accused in the U.S. of trying to impose colonial domination on his country
to steal natural resources, and he's not having it.
He insists U.S. intervention in Venezuela will fail.
Meanwhile, American military strength in the Caribbean is bulking up,
with U.S. President Donald Trump blockading oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela.
And that is the world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.
