Medicine Hat News

Canada expected to extend anti-ISIL mission

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OTTAWA The commander of the Canadian Forces mission in Iraq and Syria says he expects the government to extend the operation past its scheduled expiry date at the end of the month.

Brig.-Gen. Dan MacIsaac told The Canadian Press that he’s looking forward to seeing a renewed commitment of more than 800 military personnel in the internatio­nal anti-terror coalition as part of Wednesday’s long-awaited defence policy review.

Details of that and other future foreign military deployment­s are expected to be unveiled when Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan and Gen. Jonathan Vance, the chief of the defence staff, release the government’s new blueprint for national defence.

The table for that defence review will be set in a major foreign policy speech Tuesday by Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland. That speech will affirm “multilater­alism and rules-based internatio­nal systems, human rights, gender equality, the fight against climate change, and economic benefits being shared by all,” the government said in a statement.

Freeland’s speech will be the Liberal government’s attempt to define its military, developmen­t, diplomatic and trade priorities, and how Canada plans to navigate a world order thrown into disarray by disruptive events such as the election of Donald Trump and the rise of anti-trade forces, sources say.

The speech is meant to serve as the “umbrella” for Wednesday’s defence review and the release of the internatio­nal developmen­t review later this month, said a source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it was still a work in progress.

Wednesday’s defence review is expected to lay out the military’s priorities for future overseas deployment­s, and outline government’s 20-year plan for spending billions of dollars on military hardware to upgrade warships and fighter jets, among other things.

Sajjan has said the review will also dovetail with the government’s broader innovation agenda and will explain how the military will partner with the defence industry to create jobs by developing of cutting-edge equipment.

For soldiers such as MacIsaac, who is overseeing Canada’s contributi­on to the internatio­nal anti-terror fight, it will bring more clarity to ongoing military operations.

“We’re looking forward to the government releasing the defence policy review, likely in the next couple of days,” MacIsaac said in a lengthy telephone interview Monday from his headquarte­rs in Kuwait.

“I foresee government providing defence further direction, and the government of Canada is committed to contributi­ng to defeating Daesh in Iraq and Syria,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

“We’re definitely here past the 30th of June.”

The government has not formally announced an extension of the mission, which is Canada’s contributi­on to the internatio­nal coalition of more than 60 countries that is trying to degrade ISIL.

MacIsaac said the coalition is continuall­y degrading ISIL’s command and control, weapons making and financing operations across Iraq and Syria, and has reclaimed a swath of land the size of Nova Scotia.

“They’ve had to move many a headquarte­rs and many a leader, and we are tracking those changes,” he explained.

Though he didn’t specifical­ly reference the recent attacks in London, Manchester and elsewhere, MacIsaac said ISIL is losing the ability to direct attacks across the globe.

“There are many Daesh-influenced attacks but I’m not aware of any Daeshdirec­ted attacks,” he said. “So it’s interestin­g to watch them now try to claim when someone does something criminal — They’re on their hind foot.”

 ??  ?? Harjit Sajjan
Harjit Sajjan

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