ISIS mission gets aid injection as MPs debate air combat role in Iraq - Action News
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Politics

ISIS mission gets aid injection as MPs debate air combat role in Iraq

The Conservatives offered additional humanitarian aid Monday for the battle against ISIS, anticipating opposition MPs' arguments against sending Canadians into combat in Iraq but not managing to stem the criticism. CBCNews.ca is covering the debate live.

House likely to vote Tuesday eve on sending CF-18 fighters and 600 troops to battle ISIS

Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, right, and Iraq's then deputy prime minister Rowsch Nuri Shaways toured a Kurdish bunker in Kalak, Iraq, last month, coming within eyeshot of ISIS's front lines. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

The Conservatives offered additional humanitarian aid Monday for the battle against ISIS, anticipating opposition MPs' arguments against sending Canadians into air combat in Iraq, but that failedto stem thecriticism.

Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird pledged up to $10 million to provide services and treatment for Syrian and Iraqi refugees who have been victims of sexual abuseas he kicked off debate.

The House devoted most of the day Monday to discussingthe government's plan to deploy six fighter jets and 600 troops in a six-monthair combat mission against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, also known as ISIS. The Canadian mission would target ISIS in Iraq but not Syria, something the opposition NDP fears could change.

Baird also announced a joint Canada-U.K. assessment mission in Iraq to identify what else can be done to help victims of ISIS, as well as the deployment of an expert to work with the UN Human Rights Council on a fact-finding mission to Iraq.

NDP LeaderTomMulcairmoved to make changes to the government's Iraq motion, although Baird's announcement covered some of the requests contained in Mulcair's amendments.

The biggest change contained in the NDP amendment would be to block Canadian troops from any kind of combat in Iraq. It would also limit the mission to three months of weapons transportation and require the government go back to the House before extending the mission, whether to make it longer or to include Syria.

The government says the clock started on the six-month mission last Friday.

'Canada protects the vulnerable'

While the Conservatives argued it's impossible to curtail ISIS militancy without directly attacking its members, the NDP argued for a focus on humanitarian aid and the Liberals argued the government hasn't provided enough details on its plan.

Baird called on MPs to treat the issue soberly, but in the same speech made some pointed remarks about the Liberal Party's stance.

"My Canada protects the vulnerable. It challenges the aggressor. My Canada doesnt leave all the heavy lifting to others," Baird said.

"There was a time when the Liberal Party believed in that."

Mulcairspent a significant part of his speech outlining the horrific violence perpetrated by Syrian leader Bashar al-Assadand questioned why Prime Minister StephenHarper had left open the possibility of helping him fight ISIS in his country, should Assad request Canada's assistance.

"Why, Mr. Speaker, would we give credibility to a character like Bashar al-Assad?" Mulcair said.

"That gives him a credibility he doesn't deserve. He's a genocidal maniac and we should not be giving him any credibility at all."

'Across the Rubicon'

Liberalforeign affairs critic Marc Garneausaid Harper hasn't made enough of a case for a Canadian role in the combat mission in Iraq.

"The prime minister is taking us across the Rubicon by deciding on a combat mission," Garneau said.

"Once a country makes that decision, there is no turning back the clock.... It is no simple matter to cross back over, and we all know this conflict is likely to last a long time."

The Liberals are also concerned, Garneau said, that there's no way to limit Canada's role once the country engages in the conflict.

Debate continues Tuesday, with thevote on the mission to fight ISISset for Tuesday at 8:30p.m. ET. The government isn't required to hold a vote on combat missions, but Harper pledged to do so.

Harper outlined last Friday the details of the Canadian contribution: up to six CF-18 fighter jets, two Aurora surveillance planes and one heavy-lift plane to carry equipment. The Canadian deployment will include approximately 600 personnel, and the mission will only fly over Iraq, unless the Syrian government invites Canada to bomb ISIS in its territory, too. The deployment will be limited to six months.