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ISIS mission opponents 'dismissing Canadian values,' Rob Nicholson says

Opposition leaders Tom Mulcair and Justin Trudeau are "dismissing Canadian values" by opposing the mission against ISIS, Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson says as MPs kick off the debate on expanding the mission in Iraq to Syria.

Foreign Affairs minister accuses Tom Mulcair, Justin Trudeau of 'pious rhetoric'

Jason Kenney on ISIS mission expansion

9 years ago
Duration 3:24
Defence Minister Jason Kenney debates NDP foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau are "dismissing Canadian values" by opposing the mission against ISIS, Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson said Thursday as MPs kicked off the debate on extending it by a year and sending Canadian pilots to bomb targets in Syria.

Nicholson referred to the "rhetoric" of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, also known as ISIS or ISIL, in his speech in the House of Commons.

"ISIL has declared war on Canada," Nicholson said. "By name, it seeks to wage its jihad against our people. No matter how these facts are communicated, Canadians know that the leaders of the opposition parties will dismiss that and with that, they [are] dismissing Canadian values."

He added: "These threats cannot be wished away by pious rhetoric. We cannot speak of supporting the mission and our soldiers in one breath while voting against them in the next."

The New Democrats proposed amending the motion before the House that calls for support for the combat mission.

The prime minister doesn't require the support of the House to authorize a combat mission but Stephen Harper has made it a practice to put a motion before MPs when he deploys the Canadian Armed Forces into combat.

The NDPmotion calls for the government to end the combat and training missions in Iraq and Syria as soon as possible, but continue to contribute through military support for transporting weapons.

Humanitarian aiddebated

The motion also includes calls for the government to:

  • Boost humanitarian aid.
  • Work with Canadian allies in the region to stabilize neighbouring countries andstrengthen political institutions.
  • Increase funding for refugee resettlement.
  • Work to prevent the flow of foreign fighters, finances, and resources to ISIS.
  • "Continue to offer its resolute and wholehearted support to the brave men and women of the Canadian Forces who stand on guard for all of us."

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May acknowledged Canada is one of the largest donors to humanitarian aid forIraq and Syria, but noted it's a drop in the bucket when faced withfourmillion refugees.

She questioned what it was about ISIS that makes the government want to send in troops when Canada didn't respond with itsmilitary during the four-year war against the Syrian regime led by Bashar al-Assad.

"The reality is we have ignored the crisis in Syria, and now we are interested in protecting people from ISIS. Who is going to protect them from Bashar al-Assad?"

New Democrat foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar also pointed to the ongoing conflict in Syria and the risk of new conflicts arising without proper humanitarian aid and development.

The Canadian government had said early in the Syrian civil war thatit wouldn't interfere because there was no clear successor to Assad.

Fears of helping Assad

Dewar quoted University of Waterloo professor Bessma Momani.

"'If you don't provide sustainable institutions that can fill that vacuum, it will just be another acronym that will fill that space,'" Dewar told MPs.

"I couldn't agree with her more. That's where Canada's expertise and Canada's potential lie. We can save lives, we can build peace, to help the people in Iraq."

Liberal defence critic Joyce Murray said the current motion outlines "a pretty open-ended permission slip."

Nicholson and Defence Minister JasonKenney, she said, explicitly compared the anti-ISIS mission to Afghanistan and pledged Canada to be involved for "the longer term."

"In Afghanistan, the longer term meant a decade the longest war in Canadian history," Murray said.

"No clear objective is not good enough. Without objectives or clarity or boundaries in the motion, Canada's war on ISIL in Syria could well result in Syrian president Bashar al-Assad consolidating his grip on power.

"This president oppressed and terrorized his own people. In just four years he bombed, gassed and killed over 130,000 of his own citizens, the vast majority of them civilians. Almost a quarter of the victims were women and children. Enabling Mr. Assad is not in Canadians' interest."

Cotler to abstain again

Liberal MP Irwin Cotler, an expert in international law, did not vote with his caucus but abstained from the original vote on the mission last fall, citing a need to be consistent with his principles.

Cotlersupports the Responsibility to Protect doctrine (R2P), which suggests that when a state like Syriafails to protect its citizens frommass atrocities and peaceful measures have failed, the international community has the responsibility to intervene.

On Thursday, he told reporters he intended to abstain againwhen the House of Commons votes on the extension early next week.

In a statement, Cotler said his main concern was the protection of civilians in Syria and Iraq.

"In October, I was unable to support the governments motion because of the prime ministers statement that Canada would give a veto to the criminal Assad regime. I remain unable to support the government in this matter because its proposed expansion of Canadas mission continues to allow Assad to assault Syrian civilians with impunity.

"Moreover, the governments lack of clarity in October has only been compounded by a lack of forthrightness since," his statement read.