Ottawa to pull jets from Syria and Iraq but instead will triple number of special forces training Iraqi Kurdish forces.
Following up on campaign promises he made last year to withdraw Canada's jets, Trudeau said on Monday that his country's contribution to the fight against ISIL would be extended until the end of March 2017 - but would be "a non-combat mission".
"We will be supporting and empowering local forces to take their fight directly to ISIL so that kilometre by kilometre they can reclaim their homes, their land and their future."
Training support
Trudeau
said Canada will triple the number of special forces deployed to train
Iraqi Kurdish forces on the ground over the next two years.
The number of elite Canadian commandos helping to train Kurdish Peshmerga fighters in northern Iraq will also jump from 69 to 230, bringing the total of Canadian soldiers deployed in the region from about 650 to about 830.
Canada will also provide $CAD840m ($609m) in humanitarian assistance over three years, and has allocated $270m to "build local capacity" in Jordan and Lebanon, which are hosting more than two million Syrian refugees.
While the country will pull its six CF-18 Hornet fighter jets from the bombing mission, it will keep its aircrew and support personnel for one CC-150 Polaris aerial refuelling aircraft and up to two CP-140 Aurora spy planes.
'Step backward'
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Trudeau promised to put the new policy to a debate in parliament when the House of Commons resumes next week.
Rona Ambrose, leader of the official opposition and interim leader of the Conservative Party, denounced the plan to withdraw the fighter jets as "a step backwards for Canada".
Helene Laverdiere, foreign affairs spokeswoman for the left-wing New Democratic Party, said Canada should focus on stopping the flow of arms, funds and foreign fighters, including improving anti-radicalisation efforts at home
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