Canada's forces face daunting mission against ISIS in Iraq - Action News
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Canada's forces face daunting mission against ISIS in Iraq

The CBC's Saa Petricic, reporting from Canada's makeshift military base in Kuwait, notes that the destruction of the militant group ISIS will be neither quick, nor easy. It may not even be possible.

If mission remains an air war, it will neither be quick, nor easy to destroy ISIS

ISIS changes tactics after airstrikes

10 years ago
Duration 2:07
Fighters mix in with general population, making an air war difficult at best

The CBCs Middle East Correspondent Saa Petricic is in Kuwait following Canadas Task Force assigned to fight ISIS. Hes also reporting on the coalition effort in Iraq and Syria, both battlefronts hes covered first-hand.

A small Canadian town forms in the middle of the Kuwait desert. Shovels dig into the yellow sand, prefab huts go up one by one. Six hundred soldiers have moved in, next to the scorching airstrip, their 10airplanes parked nearby: Six CF-18 Hornet jet fighters (plus one spare), two Aurora reconnaissance planes and a Polaris aerial refueller.

Despite the violence against Canadian soldiers at home, two killed by individuals apparently sympathizing with Mideast jihadistsor maybe because of those attacksCanadians here say they are more determined than ever.

"Absolutely,"says Col. Daniel Constable, CF-18 pilot and the commander of Joint Task Force-Iraq. "I dont think its lost on any of the Canadians here how important this mission is, for us to disrupt and degrade and attempt to defeat this threat. That was driven home to all Canadians in the past few weeks, and what this threat could do in terms of motivating others."
A Canadian Armed Forces CF-18 Fighter jet from 409 Squadron taxis after landing in Kuwait last Tuesday. (Handout/DND-MND/Canadian Press)

Canada has pitched its tent with the US-led coalition against ISIS, the radical Sunni Muslim militant group which has seized large parts of Iraq and Syria, terrorizingand often executingthose in its way. Its aim is to topple the governments of both of those countries to create one huge Islamic state that isstricter in its interpretation of the Koran than either Afghanistans Taliban or Saudi Arabia next door. The coalitions aim is to destroy it.

That will neither be quick, nor easy. It may not even be possible.

The coalition itself is awkward. It mostly consists of the United States, with some Arab countries offering token help against ISIS in Syria, and some western countriesCanada, Britain, Australia, France and othershelping in Iraq.

Canada shares its Kuwait base with U.S. forces, but the American military Central Command doesnt seem to have noticed that Canadian planes have arrived. As recently as Sunday, news releases listing coalition activities and members left out any reference to Canada.

No ground troops

The coalitions mandate is also a problem. It says there will be no fighting ground troops in either Iraq or Syria. This will be almost entirely an air war, using missiles and bombs to attack ISIS positions, to disrupt supply lines and back up Iraqi government and Kurdish Peshmerga forces. In Syria, the coalition wont work with Bashar Assad, the president both Washington and Ottawa say they want removed. It also wont work with some other jihadist groups but will support certain rebels, like the ones defending the besieged town of Kobani near the Turkish border.

Canadas mandate only allows missions over Iraq, not Syria. It does not envisage fighting ground troops, though members of Canadas Joint Task Force 2, the elite special forces, have been involved in training Kurdish soldiers in combat zones.
Canadas host, Kuwait, is in a difficult positionunsure just how involved it wants to be in the ISIS conflict. (Sasa Petricic/CBC)

Canadas mission has been approved for sixmonths by Parliament, but even top generals say a year is more realistic. U.S. officials predict a multi-year campaign.

Washington has also rejected putting any "boots on the ground," fearing that a ground war would draw it back into a long presence in Iraq,a country and a conflict U.S. President Barack Obama promised to leave when he became president.

But there is no evidence yet that this war against ISIS can be won from the air. Three months of airstrikes have not defeated the militants. Far from it. Just this weekend, ISIS executed more than 100 members of one Sunni tribe, trying to scare its leaders away from helping the Iraqi government.

ISIS also allied itself with other jihadists in Syria, Jabhat al-Nusra, to defeat and expel a moderate Free Syrian Army wing from a large part of northeast Syria. And ISIS kept up its attack against Syrian Kurds in Kobani, undeterred, despite almost daily air attacks by coalition planes. Heavily armed Iraqi Peshmerga fighters were sent in through Turkey this weekend to try to turn the tide.

ISIS targets get harder to hit

Some even wonder whether the coalition has enough useful targets to hit from the air. U.S. officials have noticed ISIS fighters changing their tactics, hiding more among civilian populations, where theyre almost impossible to hit without casualties that would be politically unpalatable at home.

The coalition already flies far fewer missions daily than it did in Libya, even with plenty of planes in the region now. Canadas CF-18s have gone up daily since last Thursday, armed and ready to attack.Officials saidvisibility was a problem for Canada'slaser-guided missiles before its first airstrikes in the anti-ISIS mission on Sunday. New armaments guided by GPS will soon be arriving.

Canadas host, Kuwait, is also in a difficult positionunsure just how involved it wants to be in this conflict. On one hand, it owes its independence to U.S. forces thathelped push out Iraqi invaders 24 years ago and have helped protect thestate ever since. Its support is important for the Americans, not just for logistics but to show that Arab countries are also opposed to ISIS and its violence.

On the other hand, many here worry that the tiny countryright next to Iraqcould become a target for individual terrorists, if not ISIS itself. There are plenty here who sympathize with the militant groups goals of a more religious state and many who have gone to help. Kuwait may have risen from its wartime past, but no one here is sure its immune to the violence spreading in the Middle East now.