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Harper plays politics with ISIL mission, says ex-Grit minister Marchi

In this FILE photo, Sergio Marchi questions the Reform Party's patriotism in response to a question in the House of Commons in Ottawa Wednesday March 17, 1999. The Canadian Press/Tom Hanson

OTTAWA – A former Liberal cabinet minister says his party and the NDP had no choice but to refuse to support Canada’s combat mission against Islamic extremists.

Sergio Marchi, trade minister under Jean Chretien and former ambassador to the World Trade Organization, blamed Prime Minister Stephen Harper for backing the opposition into an untenable position.

Marchi says Harper stonewalled requests for information from the opposition and didn’t bother to meet and brief opposition leaders, as is the custom when a country is on a war footing.

READ MORE: Liberals might’ve supported ISIS mission if government dropped Assad, consulted opposition, says Cotler

Marchi is defending the Liberals after former foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy slammed the party for not supporting the mission, and for turning their backs on the UN’s responsibility-to-protect doctrine.

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READ MORE: Canada sends advance team to the Middle East ahead of ISIS airstrikes

In a speech at the University of Ottawa, Marchi says the debate over Canada joining the U.S.-led mission in Iraq is one more example of how Harper has used foreign affairs issues for domestic political gain.

He says Harper has politicized international affairs far beyond what previous Liberal and Progressive Conservative prime ministers have done.

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