Justin Trudeau faces demands to break promise on ISIS bombing - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 02:31 AM | Calgary | -0.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PoliticsAnalysis

Justin Trudeau faces demands to break promise on ISIS bombing

The prime minister returns from the World Economic Forum in Davos to pleas that he break his promise to recall fighter jets from the air war against ISIS.

Deadly Burkina Faso attack adds to pressure on prime minister to keep Canada in air mission

Canada's fighter jets are still dropping bombs on ISIS targets. But despite popular support for the mission and diverse calls to reconsider, the prime minster is standing by his promise to withdraw CF-18s from the anti-ISIS mission. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Staff Sgt. Perry Aston/Canadian Press)

Justin Trudeau is heading back from Davos and he may soon wish he'd stayed.

As the brand-new prime minister faces a newsession of Parliament, he must confront a growing sense that, on one of his signature promises, his time is already up.

It's not about the refugees or the budget. As those promises have proven flexible, Canadians have shrugged. Nobody's calling for Trudeau's head because the Syrian refugees didn't all get here on time.

But Canada's military allies, the Conservative opposition and arestivepunditocracy all seem to have lost patience with Trudeau's policy or the lack of any policy in Iraq. They have still not heard acoherent explanation of why the Liberals want to pullCanada's six CF-18 fighters out of the war on the so-called Islamic State. Nor have they heard what the government willdo instead.

That Trudeau'spromise is becominga serious political liability was evident in the wrenching phone calls he had to make to the families of six Canadians killed in last week's terrorist attack in Burkina Faso. The husband of one victim hung up on him. The wife of another said she was "ashamed" of the plan to withdraw the fighter planes.

Justin Trudeau told reporters in Davos, Switzerland Friday that Canada would continue to contribute to the anti-ISIS fight militarily - but that Canada's six fighter jets would still be coming home. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Meanwhile, the government stays silent on its rationale if it has one other than simply to keep a promise, come what may.

The questions keep coming. What's wrong with attacking ISIS from the air? Why has the bombing actually kept pace under the Liberals, while they insist it must end?

"Three months in, the silence grows deafening," wrote Michael Den Tandt in the National Post on Jan. 17.

"Leaving Canada's CF-18s in place, while claiming they're doing no good and should be pulled out? Claiming a robust ground mission is in the works, while also abjuring any suggestion that Canada will ever be involved in ground fighting? It's incoherent. As long as it remains so, it will weaken Trudeau, while shoring up the arguments of his critics and opponents."

Shut out in Paris

Well, we can't have some ink-stained pundit running our foreign policy. But how about the U.S., France, Britain, Germany, Italy, Australia and the Netherlands?

They, of course, are running the next phase of the war against ISIS. Canada was not invited to the meeting of their defence ministers in Paris. Those nations, according to U.S. Defence Secretary Ashton Carter, "are playing a significant role in both the ground and air components" of the war.

Ouch. Evidently,Canada is not.

This has provoked ominous signs of rebellion in Liberal ranks. Even the apostle of "soft power" himself, former Liberal foreign minister Lloyd Axworthy, complained that the government had failed to say what its new policy will be.

"It's that lack of direction and certainty that I think is causing other people to wonder," Axworthy told Rosemary Barton on CBC News Network's Power & Politics.

"So Australia gets invited with the same number of aircraft we have still flying but we don't."

Ouch again.

The Conservativespiled on. Former Tory defence minister Peter Mackay saidCanada had been relegated to the "second tier" by its coalition partners.The interim leader, Rona Ambrose, argued that this would never have happened under the Conservatives.

"Six months ago," she said, "we hosted the meeting. Enter Trudeau; we're not even invited to the meeting."

Ambrose says we don't have a clear plan for fight against ISIS

9 years ago
Duration 0:43
Interim Conservative Leader Rona Ambrose says Sajjan is not invited to anti-ISIS meetings in Paris because Canada no longer a full member of the coalition.

Meanwhile, Trudeau's defence minister made his excuses "meetings happen all the time," said Harjit Sajjan. Right.

Interestingly, though, Sajjan has made it clearthat the loss of Canadian planes will mean a reduction in the "capability" of the coalition which he does not want to inflict without due deliberation. He happens to be a military veteran. And it happens that, on a daily basis, the planes still fly and the bombs still drop.

But Trudeaustill sticks to his pledge. He speaks of Canada's expertise in training, while acknowledging theskill of our pilots. Henever says why those pilots must come home.

Pulling out after Paris?

Under bothConservatives and Liberals, public support has been wide and steady for the bombing mission in Iraq and Syria. That support held strong even at the height of the euphoria that followed Trudeau's sunny swearing-in on Nov. 4. He promptly reaffirmed his promise to end the mission but, still,an Ipsos poll found 62 per cent in favour of maintaining the bombing, and more than half of those wanted to increase it.

And after the slaughter in Paris, who didn't? It's not hard to see how Trudeau could have pivoted upon that horrifying news to say, "Look, the circumstances have changed and we must stand with the French. ISIS is going global so we'readaptingour plan to a changing threat."

Instead, Trudeaudug in. As other nations hastened to increase their contributions, Trudeautalkedabout sending more trainers. They've done it; he hasn't.

In Davos, all he would say was that "we are committed to withdrawing our six CF-18 fighter jets and looking for another way to continue in the efforts against these global terrorists."

But they're not global enough, it seems, to make us look a little harder, or faster.Meanwhile, the punditsare ramping up their rhetoric.

On CBC's The National, Rex Murphy demanded, "why on earth do we even have fighter jets?" He urged the Liberals to "break this ridiculous, illogical promise" and raged that "Mr. Trudeau hangs on to a pledge no-one wants him to keep and leaves Canada in the international peanut gallery while the adults are dealing with ISIS."

Rex Murphy | Justin Trudeau's Promises

9 years ago
Duration 3:24
Point of View: Rex is in awe of how Justin Trudeau's Liberals stand to gain credit if they break key pledges of the platform they ran and won on.

And where, exactly, are the equally passionate counter-editorials? The government ministers insisting that this policy makes sense?

Crickets. But someone will have to come up with some answers, and fast.Trudeau will soon be back, and so will Parliament.