Waterloo Region Record

Canada holds off launching next phase of anti-ISIL mission

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Canada is waiting for the Iraqi government to sign off before launching the next phase of its fight against the Islamic State militant group, Gen. Jonathan Vance said Thursday.

Canadian special forces are preparing to work with the Iraqi military to secure the war-ravaged city of Mosul, where Vance said ISIL remains a threat even as thousands of displaced families return home.

Yet before that can happen, the Iraqis need to form a new government — which has proven difficult following elections last month — and indicate whether it still wants internatio­nal forces operating in the country.

“There are a number of factors affecting mission planning for Iraq as we go forward,” Vance said after a Canadian Global Affairs Institute event.

“The government of Iraq needs to form a government and signal its intent as it relates to future military operations by coalition or on a bilateral basis in Iraq. So that’s Job 1.”

Canadian troops have been on the sidelines in Iraq since October, when Canada suspended all assistance to the Iraqi military and Kurdish peshmerga when the two clashed over the latter’s independen­ce referendum.

Up until that point, Canadian special forces had worked almost exclusivel­y alongside the Kurds for more than three years to first stop ISIL’s advance across northern Iraq and then to dislodge it from the region.

Since the suspension of assistance, ISIL has lost control of the last of its territory in Iraq and turned to traditiona­l insurgency tactics such as suicide bombings, while tensions between the Iraqis and Kurds have also cooled.

But friction between the country’s various political parties, none of whom secured enough votes for a majority government, have raised concerns about renewed divisions along religious and ethnic lines.

The Canadian Forces have been conducting reconnaiss­ance and other preparator­y work to get ready for the launch of the next phase of their mission in Iraq, Vance said, with a specific focus on helping families return to Mosul.

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