Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Canadian airstrikes don’t match Tory rhetoric

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Despite Conservati­ve warnings about the “horrific” threat posed by ISIL, new figures show Canadian military aircraft have conducted less than three per cent of all coalition missions in Iraq and Syria.

The war against ISIL figured prominentl­y on the campaign trail Monday as Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper used a stop in Markham, Ont., to pledge that a re-elected Tory government would provide more assistance for religious minorities and refugees in the Middle East.

Harper criticized Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and NDP Leader Tom Mulcair for promising to end Canada’s participat­ion in the U.S.-led bombing campaign against ISIL, saying that humanitari­an aid alone won’t solve the crisis.

“What is happening in the areas controlled by (ISIL) is really something we have not seen in millennia. It’s just beyond horrific,” he said.

“We are a country that can contribute militarily and in the humanitari­an sense, and we are doing both.”

But a Postmedia

analysis raises questions about whether Canada’s military contributi­ons in the fight against ISIL match Harper’s warnings.

Defence Department figures show Canadian military aircraft have flown 1,320 sorties, or individual missions, over Iraq and Syria since last year. That accounts for 2.7 per cent of the 47,705 total sorties flown by coalition aircraft in the war against ISIL.

Comparing Canada’s contributi­on with other allies is difficult because each country reports differentl­y. But defence expert David Perry of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute says Canadian aircraft flew about six per cent of all coalition missions during the war in Libya, and about 10 per cent in Kosovo.

Canada has six fighter jets, two surveillan­ce aircraft and an air-to-air refuelling plane tasked with fighting ISIL in Iraq and Syria. It deployed a similar contingent to bomb Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi’s troops in 2011, and started with six fighter jets bombing Serbian targets in Kosovo in 1999, before expanding to 18.

Perry said he was surprised that Canada hadn’t done more in Iraq and Syria, and wondered why Canadian military aircraft would have done more to topple Gadhafi when the Conservati­ve government has identified ISIL as a much more dangerous threat.

“They (Canadian fighter jets) were flying at a rate of a little bit under three sorties a day in Iraq and Syria, and in Libya the figure was closer to four,” he said. “I’ve never really heard anything expressed in operationa­l terms that would indicate they’re flying at a reduced rate for a particular reason.”

Defence officials have said that a U.S.-led command centre is responsibl­e for assigning missions to all coalition aircraft. Canada is the only Western ally besides the U.S. flying missions in Syria, and Perry said a lack of intelligen­ce inside that country could explain why Canadian aircraft aren’t flying more.

But it could also be a question of money, Perry said. Canada is spending less on defence as a percentage of gross domestic product, the most common measure, than at any time since the Cold War. One impact is the Royal Canadian Air Force has had to scale back the flying hours for its aircraft.

Other countries conducting bombing operations against ISIL include Australia, Bahrain, Belgium, Denmark, France, Jordan, the Netherland­s, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

 ??  ?? Canadian military aircraft have flown 2.7 per cent of the 47,705 total sorties over Iraq and
Syria by coalition aircraft in the war against ISIL since last year.
Canadian military aircraft have flown 2.7 per cent of the 47,705 total sorties over Iraq and Syria by coalition aircraft in the war against ISIL since last year.

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