"We need to look wider than the current threats that we face in Syria and Iraq," Harjit Sajjan said during a conference call from Arbil, the capital of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, where he met with Kurdish commanders and Canadian special forces.
"I have to get a good sense of where the evolution of the mission is going and the evolution of the mission is going to be based on where Daesh is going to go," Sajjan said, using an Arabic acronym for the IS group.
Canada was involved in the multinational force that ousted the dictator in 2011. Since then a political deadlock in Libya has allowed jihadists and people-smugglers to flourish.
Ottawa has welcomed an agreement among some rival Libyan factions to form a national unity government aimed at stemming chaos in the country.
The deal, however, faces an uncertain future, with some Libyan tribal or regional groups rejecting it in advance.
Canada's new Liberal government has said it will withdraw its six CF-18 fighter jets from US-led coalition airstrikes in Iraq and Syria, but has not said when.
But Sajjan said the troop training mission is "being run by other nations currently," so Canada must wait its turn.
Canada, he said, could also offer battlefield medical training, more development aid, intelligence sharing, and flying of its military refueling aircraft and spy planes over Iraq and Syria.
"Once we have that better understanding of the social fabric that includes the radical groups, the political situation, the economic (situation)... And how it links together, that's going to allow us to figure out what type of capabilities to bring to the table," Sajjan said.
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