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Harper says Iraq mission proposal coming to the House of Commons

WATCH ABOVE: The Harper government said it was keeping track of Canadians, who are travelling overseas to fight with militant groups in Syria and Iraq. But as Jacques Bourbeau reports, the plan isn’t working.

OTTAWA – No decision has been made, he said, but Prime Minister Stephen Harper left little doubt Tuesday that MPs will shortly be called upon to approve a government proposal to go to war against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.

A request from the U.S. for Canada to step up its involvement in the military campaign against the extremist group, which has swallowed a vast swath of territory in the war-racked Middle East, was the subject of a flurry of closed-door presentations and a lengthy exchange in the House of Commons.

The contribution – at this stage – would involve a contingent of CF-18 fighters and surveillance aircraft. That would be in addition to the 69 special forces troops committed to the mission in northern Iraq, whose participation is subject to review and renewal by the end of the week.

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READ MORE: Wife of Islamic State hostage makes televised appeal for his release

“If there is a combat mission of any kind, including an air combat mission, there will be a debate and vote in this House,” Harper said in answer to a series of questions from NDP Leader Tom Mulcair.

Harper said a final decision would come within days, but he left little doubt where the government was headed, telling Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau that “whenever we enter a mission that involves combat, including aerial combat,” MPs will be consulted.

And finally, he said: “We will come to the House of Commons with a proposal on that matter and I look forward to a debate and vote on that.”

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For much of question period, the prime minister was peppered with questions as both Opposition parties demanded to know the case for war, how long it would last and what kind of restrictions would be placed on forces involved.

VIDEO GALLERY:

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Harper set the stage for the forthcoming debate with a broad description of ISIS atrocities committed throughout Syria and northern Iraq against minority religious groups – and one pointed, ominous warning for Canadians.

“We have at the present time the establishment of a quasi-state, an Islamic caliphate, stretching from Aleppo almost to Baghdad, up until very recently operating entirely in the open, planning attacks, not just genocide against large populations in the region but planning attacks against this country,” he said.

The notion that ISIS poses an imminent national security threat to Canada stands in contrast to the official position in the U.S., which said late last week that it does not consider the group to be a domestic threat, but rather a major, long-term risk to the West.

U.S. intelligence officials made the comment while attempting to justifying a concurrent airstrike against a separate terrorist network, the Khorasan group, a shadowy splinter of seasoned al-Qaida fighters.

READ MORE: US-led coalition hits Islamic State group in 4 Syrian provinces

In one of its recent propaganda videos, ISIS called on Muslims to rise up and kill not only Americans, but French, Australian and Canadian citizens. It’s not clear if that was what was Harper was referencing in his remarks in the Commons.

WATCH: Residents in southern Baghdad were on Wednesday assessing the damage after a car bomb exploded in their neighbourhood the night before

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson was in Ottawa on Tuesday, where he met with Harper. He described ISIS’s capacity to organize training camps for future attacks as a “serious, potential threat” to both his country and Canada.

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“They’ve demonstrated a willingness to kill innocent hostages for the purpose of making a point in a depraved and public manner,” Johnson said.

“They have a reach that is quite concerning.”

NDP defence critic Jack Harris accused the government of fear-mongering.

Harper said the government is weighing Canada’s capacity to contribute to the existing combat mission – an important consideration given the age of the country’s fighters and the air force’s ability to keep more than one deployment going at the same time.

The air force is heavily committed to North American air defence through Norad and an air defence mission over the Baltic states.

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