As an interesting contrast to the original question about Canadians caring about the military, I was in Scotland last week when the announcement was made that the Black Watch were heading to Fallujah. I took a cab that night in Edinburgh, and the cabbie happened to be the father of a Black Watch soldier, so I thought it was natural we talked about the deployment. When I walked into the pub, I was rather surprised that everyone around the bar was talking about it. (OK, it was halftime of the football match, but they were still discussing military matters in a place where you wouldn't normally see that happen in Canada.) And it was not an isolated incident- for a few days, every pub I walked into (and there were a few, in Edinburgh and elsewhere) people were talking about the Black Watch. It was really impressive.
From what I've seen, the Canadian public cares more about the military than they did a decade ago, but there's still a long way to go.
(And for the record, the prevailing attitude was essentially: "The bloody Yanks have over 100,000 troops in Iraq, and they still can't clean up their own mess- they need the Scots to do it for them...")