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Stephen Harper condemns ISIS audio urging attacks on Canadians

Canadian government condemns extremist group audio recording distributed widely on social media that encourages attacks on civilians in member countries of the U.S.-led coalition opposed to violent spread of ISIS through areas of Syria and Iraq.

Coalition members among those targeted in latest ISIS propaganda speech

Since a U.S.-led coalition began striking ISIS positions in Iraq, the organization has stepped up its online propaganda effort in an effort to intimidate rivals and recruit fresh fighters. (Reuters)

In an audio recording distributed widely on social media Sunday, Islamic extremist group ISIS urgedattacks on civilians in member countries of theU.S.-led coalition opposed to their violent spread through areas of Syria and Iraq.

In the nearly 42-minute long meandering propaganda speech uploaded to Twitter, ISIS spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani encourages Muslims to kill disbelievers in countries, including Canada, currently supporting American and French-backed military action against the group in Iraq in any manner.

Abu Mohammad al-Adnani, seen in this image taken from a video on July 8, 2012, issued fresh threats against Westerners in a speech released on audio. (CBC)

If you can kill a disbelieving American or European especially the spiteful and filthy French or an Australian, or a Canadian, or any other disbeliever from the disbelievers waging war, including the citizens of the countries that entered into a coalition against the Islamic State kill him in any manner or way however it may be, said Adnani.

In a statement released Sunday evening, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's spokesman condemned the recording and said Canada will continue to support efforts to defeat ISIS.

"ISIS represents a threat not just to stability in the Middle East, but to global security," said Jason MacDonald, the prime minister's director of communications.

"We will continue to work with allies to push back against this threat.Like our allies we will not be cowed by threats while innocent children, women, men and religious minorities live in fear of these terrorists."

The Canadian government has not said whether it views the recording as authentic, but the French government appeared to be treating it as authentic, as did SITE, a Washington based think-tank that analyzes terrorist groups.

The Harper government has taken a hard line against ISIS. Last week Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird compared the fight against ISIS to the struggles against communism and fascism.

Threats mirror those in beheading videos

"In this video what ISIS is doing is encouraging its supporters to kill Canadians because Canada is a part of the coalition and the military alliance with the Americans," said CBC News reporter Hannah Thibedeau.

Canada has announced it's sending 69 special forces personnel who will serve as advisers to Iraqi forces struggling to combat ISIS militants. Canada has also given $28 million in humanitarian aid to fight ISIS.

Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau told CBC News he believes if there is an expansion of the ISIS campaign the subject needs to comeback to the House of Commons for debate, saying Canada has the expertise to help from experiences in Afghanistan.

"Over the past eight years in Afghanistan we have developed a capacity to support and train local military in terms of how it engages and this non-combat training role that seems to be what we're engaged in seems to be right for Canada," he said.

Threats made in the audio recording mirror those ISIS has made in other propaganda releases, including during the grisly beheading videos of two American journalists, James Foley and Stephen Sotloff, and British aid worker David Haines.

The United States is building an international coalition to combat the radical Sunni Muslim group, which has seized swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria and proclaimed a caliphate in the heart of the Middle East.

U.S. and French warplanesstruck Islamic State targets in Iraq and on Sunday the United States said other countries had indicated a willingness to join it if it goes ahead with airstrikes against the group in Syria too.

Adnani blamed Western allies for instigating a war against the group, and said the air incursions against ISIS positions in Iraq will be the final campaign of the crusaders.

France's top security official saidmilitants from the Islamic State group hadthreatened to kill civilians in the coalition of countries arrayed against the extremists, but that he isconfident in the country's security.

Interior Minister BernardCazeneuvesaid Monday "this threat to kill civilians, added to the execution of hostages and to the massacres, is yet another demonstration of the barbarism of these terrorists, justifying our fight without truce or pause."

He added that "France is not afraid because it is prepared to respond to their threats."

Address mocks Western leaders

Unlike other militant organizations such as al-Qaeda, ISIS has established a widespread presence on social networks, using sophisticated videos and audio recordings in an effort to recruit new fighters from abroad and intimidate those opposed to their agenda.

In his statement, Adnani mocked Western leaders over their deepening military engagement in the region and said U.S. President Barack Obama was repeating the mistakes of his predecessor, George W. Bush.

"If you fight it [Islamic State], it becomes stronger and tougher. If you leave it alone, it grows and expands. If Obama has promised you with defeating the Islamic State, then Bush has also lied before him," Adnani said, according to the transcript.

Obama, who has spent much of his tenure extracting the United States from Iraq after its costly 2003 invasion and occupation, is sensitive to charges that he is being drawn into another long campaign that risks U.S. soldiers' lives.

While Obama has ruled out a combat mission, military officials say the reality of a protracted campaign in Iraq and possibly Syria may ultimately require greater use of U.S. troops, including tactical airstrike spotters or frontline advisers embedded with Iraqi forces.

Adnani also condemned Saudi Arabia, whose senior Muslim clergy have denounced Islamic State and whose ruling royal family has joined other Arab states in a pledge to tackle militant ideology as part of a strategy to counter the group.

Adnani slammed Western inaction over the conflict in Syria, where President Bashar al-Assad's forces have been embroiled in a three-year-old civil war with mainly Sunni Muslim fighters. He said the West had "looked the other way" when barrel bombs were dropped and chemical weapons were used against Muslim civilians.

"So know that by Allah we fear not the swarms of planes, nor ballistic missiles, nor drones, nor satellites, nor battleships, nor weapons of mass destruction," he said.

With files from Reuters and The Canadian Press