Vancouver Sun

Andrew Coyne

Combat role: Liberal leader in favour of mission, but thinks Canada should stay home

- Andrew Coyne

So we are agreed. ISIS, ISIL, the Islamic State, call them what you will, is a genocidal menace; a metastasiz­ing cancer rapidly spreading across much of the Middle East; a terrorist proto-state with the resources and the capacity to wage open-field war, to take and hold territory, and to project influence beyond it; a threat to neighbouri­ng population­s, to the stability of the region, and, through the jihadists it attracts and sends abroad, to countries half a world away — including, by its own declared intent, our own. No one seriously disputes any of this.

So we are all agreed. Now: What are we going to do about it? As of today we know.

The Conservati­ve government will send six fighter jets, two surveillan­ce craft and a refuelling plane, to supplement the 69 special forces personnel it has already committed, whose operations will be restricted to those countries that have expressly permitted them to enter, namely Iraq, and whose mission will be limited to six months. That is as much as the government dares. It is probably as much as we are capable of.

And the NDP? And the Liberals? Nothing. Or to be more precise, nothing. No, I’m sorry, it’s true. Humanitari­an aid, refugee tents, blankets, even the NDP leader’s call to help “the people of Iraq and Syria to build the political, institutio­nal and security capabiliti­es they need to oppose these threats themselves” — these are all perfectly lovely things. They will no doubt prove helpful in addressing other problems, or in the long run.

But they are of no use whatever in addressing the immediate objective, which is to stop the spread of this extremist group, and the slaughter that inevitably follows.

The prime minister’s statement in the House of Commons was notably clear on this point. He did not promise that the internatio­nal air campaign in which Canada will participat­e would eradicate or even defeat Islamic State. There will be no surrender ceremony, no victory parades. The objective for the moment is simply containmen­t — as the prime minister put it, “to significan­tly degrade the capabiliti­es of ISIL … to either engage in military movements of scale, or to operate bases in the open … (to) halt ISIL’s spread in the region and greatly reduce its capacity to launch terrorist attacks outside the region.”

Nothing in this prevents us from also providing humanitari­an assistance, taking in refugees, or helping in other ways. So the question is not, why is the government choosing a combat role over a humanitari­an one? It is: Why does the opposition rule out any combat role, even so carefully circumscri­bed a one as the prime minister has proposed?

We know why the NDP is opposed. It has consistent­ly opposed any Canadian participat­ion in any military action since the Second World War. Tom Mulcair’s speech to the Commons was a feast of red herrings, irrelevant historical anecdotes and pointed mentions of “the U.S.,” but what it boiled down to was: We say this is war and we say the hell with it.

But the Liberal leader, Justin Trudeau, has taken a rather different position — or rather positions. When the idea of an internatio­nal military campaign against Islamic State was first proposed last month, he spoke in favour of Canadian participat­ion; now he is against it, having spent the intervenin­g weeks saying he was undecided.

Fair enough. Positions evolve. Only he still is not opposed to military interventi­on in principle: only to Canada taking part in it. And he has not begun to explain why.

There are any number of reasons one might question the wisdom of military interventi­on, at least as currently envisaged. Perhaps you doubt the efficacy of air strikes — though they are intended mostly to buy time until ground forces can be assembled from within the region, and though they have already succeeded in keeping Islamic State from taking, for example, the Mosul dam. Maybe you worry it will simply encourage more jihadis to enlist — though nothing has proven more potent recruiting material for Islamic State and other such groups than the promise of victory.

Likewise there are valid questions to be asked about the risks of indirectly propping up the vicious Bashar Assad regime in Syria, the costs in civilian lives, the dangers of being sucked into still deeper interventi­ons, and so on. Maybe all of the government­s from all of the countries that have agreed to take part in the mission, and all of the political parties, of every ideologica­l hue, that have supported it, have it wrong. Maybe they and all of their military advisers have failed to take into account objections that seem so obvious to posters on Twitter. Maybe there is some other way of stopping Islamic State’s advance that no one has yet proposed.

But that is not the position the Liberal leader is taking.

Go ahead and put your own forces at risk, is his message to our allies. We’ll be over here making coffee.

The closest he has come to justifying this utterly discredita­ble position is to suggest that in fact, the best contributi­on we could make to the fight was to stay out of it: that a strictly noncombat role was, as it were, our comparativ­e advantage.

I cannot imagine our allies are likely to see it that way. When it comes to sharing the burden of military interventi­on, the sacrifice that counts lies in the willingnes­s to take casualties.

As the prime minister put it, “being a free rider means you are not taken seriously.”

This is not the position that previous Liberal leaders have taken. I’m happy to debate the Iraq war again, and Jean Chretien’s decision at that time, but the situations are not remotely comparable — which is why so many critics of the 2003 campaign, France among them, are on board for this one. And in any case, Chretien did put our troops into Afghanista­n: far more of them, and at far greater risk. If the Liberal party cannot support this Canadian mission — small in scale, time-limited, in concert with the internatio­nal community and at the invitation of the sovereign state in question — what mission would it ever support?

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? NDP leader Tom Mulcair’s stance against a Canadian combat role in Iraq is in line with his party’s traditiona­l opposition to military action. The Liberals’ Justin Trudeau, however, isn’t opposed to military strikes on Islamic State, just Canadian...
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS NDP leader Tom Mulcair’s stance against a Canadian combat role in Iraq is in line with his party’s traditiona­l opposition to military action. The Liberals’ Justin Trudeau, however, isn’t opposed to military strikes on Islamic State, just Canadian...
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