ISIS seen as growing threat to Canadian peacekeepers in Sinai - Action News
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ISIS seen as growing threat to Canadian peacekeepers in Sinai

A briefing note to Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion, obtained under Access to Information, warns the federal government that the security situation for Canada's largest peacekeeping deployment is deteriorating rapidly.

Documents reveal 'increasing concern' about escalating attacks on observers

Canadian military police officers are shown during a transfer of responsibility parade in the Sinai, Egypt in March, 2015. Canadian members of the multinational peacekeeping force in Egypt face increasing threats from ISIS, according to a government briefing note. (Sgt. Tom Duval, U.S. Army/Combat Camera/DND)

Canada's biggest peacekeeping deployment is at growing risk of attack by a particularly aggressive branch of ISIS, according to a government briefing note obtained by CBC News.

In a briefing note prepared for Foreign Affairs MinisterStphaneDionin early November, officials warn that an "escalation of terrorist activity in the Sinai Peninsula poses new challenges with respect to the security of (Multinational Force and Observer) personnel, and has raised concerns about force protection."

Canada currently leads the MFO mission in the desert peninsula that lies to the south of the border between Egypt, Israel and the Gaza Strip. Seventy Canadian peacekeepers form part of the 1,600-man force, representing a majority of all Canadians involved in peacekeepingaround the world.

The MFO has been present in the Sinai for nearly four decades, since the Camp David accords brought about peace between Egypt and Israel. The last major armed conflict between the two countries was the Yom Kippur War of 1973, fought largely in the Sinai.

But the Sinai Peninsula is also home to an aggressivejihadistinsurgency that has grown rapidly since the Egyptian Revolution of 2011.

In 2014, the largest of the Sinai'sjihadigroups,AnsarBaytal-Maqdis, pledged allegiance to AbuBakral-Baghdadi, the self-appointed caliph of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), and renamed itselfWilayatSinai (the "Sinai Province" of the Islamic State.)

It has since killed hundreds of members of Egypt's security forces. The group is well-armed, and has used a range of heavier weapons, including surface-to-air missiles, mortars, Grad andKatyusharockets and RussianKornetanti-tank missiles.

Its leadership includes a number of former officers of theEgyptianmilitary, and it is thought to have imported tactics and expertise from its mother organization in Iraq and Syria, including in the construction of truck bombs.

Militants target peacekeepers

"Until recently, the MFO had not been the direct target ofjihadistor terrorist attacks," reads the briefing note. "However, the threat environment has changed over the summer months of 2015."

(In fact, there were occasional attacks in the past. Two Canadian soldiers were injured by an IED attack on their vehicle in 2005, but such events were infrequent).

The report details an escalating campaign of attacks against the force led by Canadian Maj.-Gen. Denis Thompson, which includes peacekeepers from 12 nations.

Last June, the northernmost MFO base atal-Gorah, where the Canadian peacekeepers are stationed, was hit by aWilayatSinai mortar attack, with several direct hits on the camp but no injuries.

In August, a U.S. soldier was shot and wounded by a sniper, again believed to belong to the local ISIS chapter. Four weeks later, an IED struck an MFO vehicle carrying two Fijian peacekeepers. U.S. peacekeepers who rushed to assist the wounded Fijians were struck by a second bomb. Although no-one was killed in the incident, all six soldiers required air evacuation for their injuries.

An Egyptian armored vehicle patrols next to a military watch tower on the Egyptian side of the border, seen from the south of the Gaza Strip, last July. (Adel Hana/Associated Press)

The group has also targeted Western civilians in the Sinai, including Croatian engineerTomislavSalopek, who was kidnapped and beheaded last summer.Around the same time, the group detonated a car bomb outside the Italian consulate in Cairo.

In the most serious incident, a Russian passenger jet carrying 224 tourists home from Egypt crashed in Sinai last October. The Sinai branch of ISIS claimed responsibility and although the official investigation continues, both Russian authorities and Egyptian PresidentAbdelFattahel-Sisisaythat it was caused by a bomb.

If confirmed, the downing of KGL 9268 is the single deadliest attack by ISIS outside of its home base of Iraq and Syria.

MFO moves forces to safer area

Not surprisingly, "there is increasing concern among troop-contributing countries regarding the security situation in the Sinai," according toDion'sbriefing note.

Part of Canada's contingent of the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO) in Sinai, Egypt are shown on the rifle range in 2013. Foreign Affairs Minister Stphane Dion has been warned that the security situation for Canada's largest peacekeeping deployment is deteriorating rapidly. (Patrick Blanchard/Canadian Forces Combat Camera/DND)

"The mission has recently abandoned two small observation posts due to the security situation," says the note, adding that the U.S. has reinforced its Sinai contingent with another 75 troops.

Because ISIS is stronger in the north, MFO is moving peacekeepers hundreds of kilometres to a base near Sharm el-Sheikh at the mouth of the Gulf of Suez.

A spokesmanatMFO'sadministrative offices in Rome told CBC that "rebalancingefforts are underway to relocate staff from our North Camp to our South Camp," but declined to provide more specific details for security reasons.

Canada is welcoming the move.

"As a long-time supporter of and contributor to the MFO, we support the work the organization has done torebalanceits forces from the north to the south in response to the evolving security situation. This is a necessary measure to safeguard force protection while ensuring that the MFO remains able to fulfil its mandate," Jordan Owens said in anemailto CBC NewsWednesday.

But a spokesman for the Canadian Forces Joint Operations Command HQ told CBC News Thursday that some Canadian troops will continue to serve at AlGorahin the north, a camp that ISIS has attacked in what he described as "a series of incidents."

Despite the security concerns,Canada agreed to a requestto extend Thompson's term as theMFO'sforce commander due to end this month by another year, to March 2017.

Thompson maintains offices at both the southern and northern camps and travels throughout the Sinai.

The document is a reminder that even as Canada ends its combat mission against ISIS and refocuses its military on peacekeeping, threats remain including the threat from ISIS.

But the 70 Canadian soldiers facing ISIS in the Sinai have received far less attention than the 69 Canadian soldiers training Kurdishpeshmergato fight ISIS in Iraq.

"Media reporting of Canada's contribution to the MFO mission in the Sinai is modest," notes the briefing document.

Corrections

  • This story has been revised from an earlier version that incorrectly identified the Multinational Force and Observers as connected to the United Nations. In fact, the MFO is an independent organization established by Egypt and Israel to carry out peacekeeping in the Sinai.
    Mar 31, 2016 6:59 PM ET