Cdn troops won’t return to Iraq without Iraq’s explicit approval, Champagne says
ALI AL-SALEM AIR BASE, Kuwait — Canada’s troops are eager to get back to work training Iraqi security forces but it won’t happen unless Canada is certain of their safety and Iraq invites them to return, Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said Monday.
Champagne was in Kuwait with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for a surprise visit to bring greetings and show appreciation for Canada’s troops at the Ali Al-salem Air Base. Some of them were relocated there last month as tensions escalated following a targeted U.S. drone strike that killed a top Iranian general in Baghdad.
“You’ve all had a volatile few weeks in this part of the world,” Trudeau said, speaking to more than 100 Canadian soldiers in “Camp Canada” on the base, about 40 km east of the Iraq border. “It’s been a complex start to 2020.”
Camp Canada is the centre for Operation Impact, a Canadian Armed Forces mission with operations in Jordan, Lebanon, Kuwait and Iraq. About 250 of the 850 Canadians deployed in Operation Impact were part of a NATO mission in Iraq to train national security forces and build up military education institutions with the goal of preventing the return of the Islamic State group, sometimes referred to as Daesh.