Sunday, May 31, 2026
ADVT 
National

Role of special forces in Iraq "evolved" since being deployed: Lawson

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jan, 2015 11:36 AM

    OTTAWA — Canada's top military commander is trying to clear up an apparent contradiction about special forces soldiers directing air strikes in Iraq.

    Gen. Tom Lawson, the chief of defence staff, said publicly at end of October that the elite troops would not accompany Iraqi or Kurdish forces into battle, nor would they pinpoint targets for coalition warplanes.

    Opposition critics have pointed to those remarks and others from Prime Minister Stephen Harper last September as proof the government misled people about the mission, but Lawson says things have changed since then.

    "To be clear, the situation on the ground has evolved since I offered those remarks and we have increased our assistance with respect to targeting air strikes in direct correlation with an increased threat encountered by the (Iraqis)," Lawson said in a written statement.

    "Our personnel are not seeking to directly engage the enemy, but we are providing assistance to forces that are in combat."

    The Iraqi government, throughout the fall, pressured the U.S.-led coalition to step up the bombing campaign to help contain Islamic State extremists as they overran swaths of the country's north and west.

    Brig.-Gen. Mike Rouleau, the commander of Canada's special forces, said Monday his troops have guided 13 bombing missions from the front lines since the end of November.

    National Defence has held several briefings since then, but did not reveal the expanded role, which Rouleau denied was an escalation.

    Defence Minister Rob Nicholson, in a conference call on Thursday, suggested that guiding air strikes was a possibility considered when the deployment was approved in September and that the government was careful not to tie the hands of soldiers in the field.

    "We didn't put limits on their ability to advise and assist the Iraqis," Nicholson said after a meeting of members of the anti-Islamic State coalition in London. "The special forces were there to provide advice and assistance and that's what they've done."

    The meeting of 21 countries involved in the fight against the Islamic State covered a broad range of issues outside of the military campaign, which has been the main focus of the Harper government's public comments.

    Nicholson reiterated how much humanitarian aid Canada has contributed and spoke in general terms about allied efforts to cut off the flow of funds and foreign fighters bound for the battlefields of Iraq and Syria.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian shot by U.S. border guards after pointing gun is charged in Windsor, Ont

    Canadian shot by U.S. border guards after pointing gun is charged in Windsor, Ont
    DETROIT — A 22-year-old Canadian man who was shot by U.S. border guards after pointing what appeared to be a gun at them is facing weapons-related charges in Windsor, Ont.

    Canadian shot by U.S. border guards after pointing gun is charged in Windsor, Ont

    Heather Forsyth named Alberta Wildrose interim leader, party hopes to rebound

    Heather Forsyth named Alberta Wildrose interim leader, party hopes to rebound
    CALGARY — Alberta's Wildrose party has named an interim leader after Danielle Smith and eight other caucus members bolted to the governing Progressive Conservatives.

    Heather Forsyth named Alberta Wildrose interim leader, party hopes to rebound

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?
    TORONTO — Smoke it, toke it, vape it, eat it — marijuana, it seems, is going mainstream.

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?

    Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

    Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses
    Maegan Richards asked a Vancouver provincial court judge to impose a conditional discharge for Allan Bosomworth, who was the co-owner of Two Chefs and a Table restaurant where he hid a camera in the coed washroom in December 2012.

    Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

    Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them

    Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them
    An Egyptian-Canadian journalist who has spent the last year in a Cairo prison sounded the alarm about his network's approach to Egypt's precarious security situation months before he and his colleagues were arrested, documents obtained by The Canadian Press suggest.

    Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them

    Jurors in Magnotta trial begin seventh day of deliberations

    Jurors in Magnotta trial begin seventh day of deliberations
    MONTREAL — Jurors deciding the fate of Luka Rocco Magnotta have begun their seventh day of deliberations.

    Jurors in Magnotta trial begin seventh day of deliberations