Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
International

Beyond Bombing, Critics Ask: What's The Plan To Defeat The Islamic State?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Mar, 2015 03:46 PM
  • Beyond Bombing, Critics Ask: What's The Plan To Defeat The Islamic State?
OTTAWA — A decision by the federal cabinet on renewing Canada's combat mission against the Islamic State is expected soon, but calls are getting louder for the Harper government to present a comprehensive war strategy beyond the military campaign.
 
It's widely expected that the federal government will deliver a motion to the House of Commons within the next couple of weeks, to renew and possibly reshape the commitment of warplanes and special forces against extremists in northern Iraq.
 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has recently cast the conflict in wider terms, saying the terrorist organization and its affiliated jihadists have "declared war on Canada specifically."
 
But analysts and opposition critics say he and his ministers rarely discuss what diplomatic, development and humanitarian measures are needed to tackle the instability and sectarian divisions that feed the conflict.
 
Harper is not alone in facing that criticism.
 
In the U.S., Barack Obama receives the same strident calls for clarity as his war resolution grinds its way through Congress.
 
"Warfighting is necessary, but it is only a means to an end and can only provide marginal benefits unless there is some meaningful strategy to bring broader stability in politics, governance, and development," said Anthony Cordesman, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
 
In Iraq, he says that "any meaningful and lasting form of victory means that it must emerge from the current conflict with some solution to the deep divisions between Arab and Kurd, and Sunni and Shiite."
 
The marginalization of the Sunni in the post-Saddam Hussein Iraq is one of the factors that contributed to the rise of the Islamic State.
 
Dave Perry, a senior analyst at the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, said the extremist organization is not gobbling up more territory, has been turned back in some places and political pressure needs to be applied to the root cause of the conflict.
 
"So, this is the point at which there is the need to have a coherent thought about how you actually do that," he said. "Trying to bridge the sectarian issue needs to be part of that. Seriously increasing the capacity of local security forces needs to be part of that too."
 
Across the border, it's a different story. 
 
"Syria is far worse and presents the additional problem as to whether Iraq can ever be secured if Syria remains caught up in one of the modern world's civil wars," Cordesman wrote in a recent paper.
 
"Unlike Iraq, however, Syria shows no signs of moving toward any military progress or solution."
 
 
There is rising concern in Washington, the Gulf States, and even in Canada, to the increasing role Iranian-backed militia are playing in pushing back the extremists in Iraq. Cordesman warns there must be a functioning government in Baghdad that provides security and the ability to move toward some workable path of development.
 
"A Shiite-led occupation of Sunni areas may be better than an Islamic State occupation, but it will not solve Iraq's political, governance, security, and stability problems," he said.
 
Nipa Banerjee, who ran Canada's aid program in Afghanistan, says post-war planning needs to be done now and not —  as in both Iraq in 2003 and Afghanistan — after the fighting ends.
 
"There has to be a very, very intensive analysis of the situation before you get involved, and that was not done (in Afghanistan)," said Banerjee who now teaches at the University of Ottawa.
 
Canada's involvement in the Afghan war was dominated by the military mission until a blue ribbon panel, led by former deputy prime minister John Manley, set some clear goals and expectations.
 
While the Harper government may not be able to drive coalition strategy against the Islamic State, analysts say it can diplomatically set the tone and encourage thinking and debate.
 
Banerjee said it's important that Canada set itself apart from the U.S.-led coalition in the eventual postwar Iraq because American credibility is still deeply undermined by the 2003 war and occupation.
 
"What the U.S. had done in Iraq, that is not forgotten by the people and they don't distinguish between U.S. and Canada that much," she said.

MORE International ARTICLES

G20 endorses India's concerns on black money

G20 endorses India's concerns on black money
Endorsing India's concerns about black money and tax avoidance, G20 leaders Sunday promised to modernise international tax rules....

G20 endorses India's concerns on black money

'IS seven times bigger than Western estimates'

'IS seven times bigger than Western estimates'
The West may have severely underestimated the strength of the Islamic State (IS) Sunni radical organisation, which may have raised an army of at least 200,000 fighters...

'IS seven times bigger than Western estimates'

Men detained outside Obama's hotel in Brisbane

Men detained outside Obama's hotel in Brisbane
Two men have been released after police detained them Sunday for more than an hour near the US president's hotel in Brisbane....

Men detained outside Obama's hotel in Brisbane

Qatar sheltering Al Qaeda financiers: US official

Qatar sheltering Al Qaeda financiers: US official
A top US official has accused Qatar of sheltering two financiers of the global terror network, Al Qaeda, media reported Sunday....

Qatar sheltering Al Qaeda financiers: US official

After Brisbane, euphoric reception awaits Modi in Sydney

After Brisbane, euphoric reception awaits Modi in Sydney
The Indian diaspora in Sydney is awaiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's quick-fire, high-energy visit Monday....

After Brisbane, euphoric reception awaits Modi in Sydney

Prime Minister Narendra Modi Looking Forward To Fiji Visit

Prime Minister Narendra Modi Looking Forward To Fiji Visit
India Prime Minister Narendra Modi says he is excited ahead of his visit to Fiji, home to a large ethnic Indian population, next week.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi Looking Forward To Fiji Visit