National Post

It’s a move Matthew Fisher says can’t come fast enough,

- By Mat thew Fi sher

Scores of young women forced into sex slavery, hundreds of mass executions and thousands of other gross human rights violations of every imaginable kind, especially against Shiites, Christians and Iraqi minority groups such as the Yazidis.

For Canadians such as Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau who are still in a quandary over whether Canada should join the internatio­nal coalition trying to stop the ghastly march of Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham (ISIS), a report issued Thursday by the UN Human Rights Office provided an abundance of stark evidence.

Canadians, and especially those who vote Liberal or New Democrat, have become reluctant in recent years to take military action overseas without the UN’s imprimatur. Well, there it is: an unofficial call to arms to end this scourge from a UN body that investigat­es only such outrages.

Still, Mr. Trudeau remains unswayed. A staunch member of the Kumbaya choir, no matter who the foe or what outrages they have perpetrate­d, he wondered Thursday, “Why aren’t we talking more about humanitari­an aid?”

That was an easy partisan shot that demonstrat­es he is not yet able to speak without his usual tired partisan script.

UN officials living this nightmare every day in the Middle East say the Harper government consistent­ly has been one of the most responsibl­e and generous donors to the massive internatio­nal aid effort that began when the civil war in Syria suddenly created an almost biblical wave of refugees into Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan.

Ankara may have made the debate a little easier for wavering Canadian parliament­arians Thursday, when the Turkish parliament voted overwhelmi­ngly to join the U.S.-led coalition fighting ISIS.

That decision could be a crucial boon to the Royal Canadian Air Force, because Turkey also has said for the first time foreign nations could use its airbases, which are of NATO standard and only a few minutes by fighter jet from where the extremists are still operating with almost total impunity.

As I wrote Thursday, if Canada becomes the newest country in the air coalition, it may

There aren’t many no-brainers in internatio­nal affairs

stage the operations from Turkey. Or, although not quite so convenient, from Jordan or Cyprus.

Yet, as Mr. Trudeau and others in Canada have said, despite the Harper government’s now-habitual strident rhetoric, it has not made it easy for Canadians to grasp what role their country might play in confrontin­g ISIS in Iraq or Syria.

Even at this late hour, the government has provided little informatio­n about what its modest intentions are or what the thinking is behind its strategy.

For example, it has not explained Canada will contribute only about 4% of the aircraft (six of 150 fighter-bombers) that are or will be part of this air war.

This simply i sn’ t good enough, particular­ly since Canada’s peers, such as Britain, France and Australia, and minnows such as the Netherland­s, Belgium and Denmark are so much further along in their decision-making process they are already intensely involved militarily, or will be within the next 48 hours.

Notwithsta­nding how little leadership or guidance Ottawa has provided, I am hugely puzzled as to why many Canadians somehow think they can sit this one out or get away with signing a few more cheques to feed and house millions of refugees in neighbouri­ng countries.

Why have so many Canadians remained disconnect­ed, despite ISIS’s joy at repeatedly showing the world the war crimes it has committed in Iraq and Syria?

What incident of mass murder or mass rape might be one that finally tips the moral balance for those Canadians who blithely choose to remain unmoved?

Have they not thought about the risk to western societies posed by the growing exodus of homegrown jihadis who have been coming to Iraq and Syria to gleefully join the mayhem?

At dinner with a British couple long familiar with conflict zones, I mentioned Canada was still debating the merits of a modest military commitment that will amount to no more than 200 men and women and half-a-dozen vintage fighter jets.

“Why even have a debate?” the woman asked. “There aren’t many no-brainers in internatio­nal affairs. But this is a no-brainer.”

There was even more disbelief Thursday night at the big park across the street from where I am staying. With Eid, which is akin to the Christian Christmas, falling Saturday, it was even more crowded than usual with Christian and Shiite refugees who were among the first wave who fled ISIS’s pell-mell offensive in May and June.

One woman enjoying a warm fall evening with her husband and a swarm of children put it this way.

“Nothing will stop [ISIS] except to meet their violence with violence. We lack the military means to do this ourselves.

“We need help. We need not only your pilots. We need your soldiers.”

 ?? BULENT KILIC / AFP / Get
y Images ?? A Syrian Kurdish girl holds her sister in the southeaste­rn town of Suruc in Turkey’s Sanliurfa province after they crossed the border Thursday from Syria.
Turkey’s parliament Thursday approved a resolution calling for the NATO member to join the...
BULENT KILIC / AFP / Get y Images A Syrian Kurdish girl holds her sister in the southeaste­rn town of Suruc in Turkey’s Sanliurfa province after they crossed the border Thursday from Syria. Turkey’s parliament Thursday approved a resolution calling for the NATO member to join the...

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