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Royal Canadian Air Force ground crew perform post flight checks on a CF-18 fighter jet in Kuwait after a sortie over Iraq on Nov. 3, 2014.

The commander of Canada's combat operations in the Middle East says they're in the final stages of preparing to launch strikes into Syria and bombs could be falling on Islamic State positions within days.

Brigadier-General Dan Constable, speaking by conference call from Kuwait, says the country's allies are "excited" that the CF-18s will expand their operations beyond Iraq, where they have carrying out missions for six months.

The United States and at least three Persian Gulf allies have been carrying out strikes against extremist targets in Syria, which has been engaged in a four-year-long, brutal civil war, since last September.

He says pilots are being briefed on the new territory and reviewing the potential threats in specific areas.

Earlier this week, Parliament approved a motion that extended the country's combat mission to the end of March, 2016, and opened up the campaign to include missions in Syria, where the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant hold sway over a vast swath of territory in the eastern and northern portion on the country.

The CF-18s have conducted six bombing missions in Iraq over the past 10 days, but none of them involved supporting the major offensive in Tikrit, where Iranian-backed Shia militias and the Iraqis army have fought a bloody, protracted battle.

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