To be blunt and short, I would certainly look somewhere else, and I would use the current experience in Afghanistan to make the point.
I think after we return home and we look at all the successes we have had—and I use the word “we” in the broadest sense possible. We, as a NATO alliance, have had some difficulties in trying to mobilize everybody to pay their fair share there. Canada certainly has, and has punched above its weight, as the saying goes. But in the final analysis, 100,000 troops total that we have deployed in Afghanistan is far short of the mark to make the counter-insurgency operation not only a success but an indubitable success.
So why would Canada, small forces that we have, want to undertake a risky, perilous activity again? And you have to ask whether or not this is in the national interest and what we are getting out of it when, on the continuum of war-making or war-fighting missions, that's only one of them. I don't think Canada has the armed forces, size-wise, or the appetite on the national basis to engage in another of this type of operation. If we do, I think we will want to make sure we come to battle with not most but all of our allies, so we pay our fair share, but no more than that.
So I'm not a fan of equipping or providing missions to our future forces for counter-insurgency operations. That would be at the bottom, not at the top, of my list of things to do.