The Niagara Falls Review

Trudeau unveils mission in Iraq

Chrystia Freeland dismissed suggestion of link between Trump’s rhetoric and Iraq mission

- LEE BERTHIAUME With files from Teresa Wright in Brussels

Canada is taking the lead of a new NATO training mission in Iraq, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau revealed Wednesday, stocking up his political armoury should U.S. President Donald Trump try to cast doubt on his Liberal government’s commitment to the global military alliance.

The Iraq endeavour marked Trudeau’s second announceme­nt involving Canada’s military in as many days; on Tuesday, he declared that the Canadian Forces would continue to lead a NATO battle group in Latvia through 2023.

Both were delivered in advance of what’s been billed as a tense meeting of NATO leaders — including Trump himself, statements in recent days have fuelled expectatio­ns that he will excoriate Canada and other allies for not spending enough on defence.

Trump wants NATO members to spend two per cent of their GDP on defence by 2024, a target agreed to by the alliance’s members in 2014. Canada’s defence spending is only expected to reach 1.4 per cent of GDP. Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, however, dismissed the suggestion of a link between Trump’s belligeren­t rhetoric and the Iraq mission, insisting that it’s simply a case of doing the right thing.

“Canada is a country that believes in democracy, that believes in good governance, that believes in good institutio­ns,” Freeland said at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels, where the summit is taking place. “This NATO mission in Iraq is about having mostly won the war against (the Islamic State group), and now is the time that it is absolutely essential to secure and to win the peace.”

The Liberal government has insisted repeatedly that spending alone isn’t sufficient to measure a country’s commitment to NATO and has quietly acknowledg­ed that the announceme­nts were aimed at underscori­ng Canada’s contributi­ons.

Basing a NATO endeavour in Iraq may also be by design, since Trump has made fighting the Islamic State group a key focus of his foreign policy — and has demanded that NATO step up its operations there.

Either way, the actual number of Canadian troops deployed abroad will increase only marginally with the two new commitment­s: the 250 service members assigned to the new training mission will be drawn from the 850 that the government had already allocated for Iraq operations.

The only true growth will be in Latvia, where the government plans to add 80 new soldiers to 450 already there. And the $40million cost of Canada’s training efforts in Iraq will come from previously approved funds, one senior official said, speaking on condition of anonymity given the sensitivit­y of the talks.

The NATO training mission will build on a smaller program that since November has seen 20 Canadian military engineers, working out of a base near Baghdad, teach about 150 Iraqi soldiers how to defuse roadside bombs, improvised explosive devices and other forms of the deadly traps that are the hallmark of the Islamic State group, also known as ISIL and Daesh.

Canada plans to provide a senior general to oversee the NATO mission, which will see hundreds of military trainers teach their Iraqi counterpar­ts to counter IEDs, maintain armoured vehicles, work with civilian authoritie­s and provide emergency medical aid.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, middle, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan, left, and Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, middle, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan, left, and Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland.

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