Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hollande Gives Trudeau A Pass On Pulling CF18s From Anti-ISIL Bombing Campaign

The Canadian Press, 29 Nov, 2015 02:18 PM
    PARIS — French President Francois Hollande appeared to give his blessing to Canada's proposed withdrawal of its fighter jets from the bombing campaign against Islamic militants after meeting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Sunday at the Elysee Palace.
     
    The fight against the Islamic State in Syria and the Levant, known variously as ISIL, ISIS and Daesh, has taken on new urgency in France after terrorists claiming to be inspired by the movement killed 130 people earlier this month in Paris in seven co-ordinated attacks.
     
    Hollande has been travelling the world drumming up support for a massive military response, including more air strikes by more countries, at exactly the same time Trudeau's government says it will remove Canada's six CF18s from Iraq and Syria and step up military training instead.
     
    The issue threatened to create some turbulence as Trudeau arrived in Paris for the start of UN-sponsored climate negotiations that formally get underway Monday.
     
    "Canada must stand shoulder-to-shoulder with France," Conservative critic James Bezan said in a release Sunday.
     
    "Prime Minister Trudeau has not yet explained how withdrawing Canada's CF18s from the air combat mission will help our coalition partners defeat ISIS. None of our coalition allies asked us to leave the air combat mission."
     
    It's a valid question, but Hollande very publicly declined to roil those waters.
     
    Standing at a podium beside Trudeau in the ornate Elysee, Hollande said the two had spoken about the security situation, the battle against radicalism and diplomacy.
     
     
    "But we also have to act militarily, " said Hollande, adding Trudeau had affirmed Canada's solidarity in the global fight and that each country should contribute "within their own means."
     
    Trudeau, in turn, responded that "we will make sure that we all play a role in order to curb this terrorist threat."
     
    He told reporters outside the Elysee that Hollande was "very reassured and happy" that Canada is remaining "deeply committed" to the military coalition.
     
    "We talked about some of the close collaboration between Quebec specifically and France on counter-radicalization and talked about the various things Canada can continue to do and will continue to do in the fight against terrorism," said Trudeau.
     
    The anti-terrorism front has become inextricably mixed with Trudeau's foray to the COP21 climate conference.
     
    Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau joined a Quebec delegation Sunday morning that visited the Bataclan concert hall, the scene of the worst terrorist carnage on Nov. 13.
     
    On Monday at the climate conference proper, Trudeau has scheduled bilateral meetings with King Abdullah of Jordan and Lebanon's Prime Minister Tammam Salam, where the issue of Canada's resettlement of Syrian refugees from Jordanian and Lebanese camps will dominate.
     
     
    Trudeau also sits down with Benjamin Netanyahu, the hawkish Israeli prime minister, where anti-terrorism and security should also be front and centre, and meets with the heads of the European Union and European Council.
     
    That's a lot of security-related diplomacy on a day supposed to be dedicated to climate change.
     
    Trudeau said Saturday the shadow of the terrible terrorist attacks has actually made world leaders eager to show up in solidarity at the Paris climate talks, and that he was optimistic of a positive outcome despite the absence of credible emissions-cutting plans to stop global warming.
     
    Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion and Catherine McKenna, the new Liberal environment and climate change minister, held a news conference Sunday at the government-run Canada Cultural Centre where the unbridled Canadian optimism briefly foundered on the question of whether a Paris climate deal will be legally binding.
     
    "To be clear, this agreement does have to be legally binding but there may be aspects of it that won't be legally binding," including the actual emissions cuts, McKenna said at one point, to howls from reporters.
     
    Steven Guilbeault, a long-time climate science reporter with the group Equiterre who's been a burr under the saddle of successive Canadian governments, later told reporters that McKenna is correct.
     
    The UN has no power to enforce national emission targets and past enforcement measures failed miserably, he said.
     
    The proposal for legally binding five-year reviews of countries' climate targets built into a new treaty is gaining traction and could be a key element in any Paris deal. The Liberal government endorses that model.
     
     
    "It's such a weird feeling to be in agreement with my government again on things related to climate change," said Guilbeault, who has been attending international climate conferences for two decades. 
     
    "We're emerging from some dark ages."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's Sikh Community Offers Support To Syrian Refugees

    Canada's Sikh Community Offers Support To Syrian Refugees
    The Sikh community in Canada came together to offer services to support the Syrian refugees who are expected to arrive in the area over the next few months.

    Canada's Sikh Community Offers Support To Syrian Refugees

    B.C. Finance Minister Forecasts Budget Surplus Decline By $19 Million, But Stable Economic Growth

    B.C. Finance Minister Forecasts Budget Surplus Decline By $19 Million, But Stable Economic Growth
    B.C.'s budget surplus was forecast at $284 last February, but now it's projected to be $265 million, down $19 million.

    B.C. Finance Minister Forecasts Budget Surplus Decline By $19 Million, But Stable Economic Growth

    Ban On Willing Sex Between Underage Teens And Adults Ruled Constitutional

    Ban On Willing Sex Between Underage Teens And Adults Ruled Constitutional
    TORONTO — A cornerstone law aimed at protecting teens from sexual exploitation by adults is constitutional, even if the sex is clearly consensual, Ontario's top court has ruled.

    Ban On Willing Sex Between Underage Teens And Adults Ruled Constitutional

    B.C.'s Child Poverty Rate Tops Federal Average, Prompts Demand For Improvement

    B.C.'s Child Poverty Rate Tops Federal Average, Prompts Demand For Improvement
    A coalition of 95 British Columbia groups says the provincial government is failing to help its youngest and poorest citizens.

    B.C.'s Child Poverty Rate Tops Federal Average, Prompts Demand For Improvement

    UBC Response Makes 'mockery' Of Gravity Of Sexual Assault: Women's Group

    UBC Response Makes 'mockery' Of Gravity Of Sexual Assault: Women's Group
    Universities become part of the problem if they fail to support women who come to them with reports of sexual assault, says the head of a Vancouver women's group.

    UBC Response Makes 'mockery' Of Gravity Of Sexual Assault: Women's Group

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules
    An employer's cash shortage is no reason to short-change a wrongfully dismissed employee, Ontario's top court ruled Monday.

    Cash Crunch No Excuse For Cut Severance Pay For Axed Employees, Ontario Court Rules