Ottawa: Senior officials from the US-led coalition battling Daesh forces will meet in Canada this week to discuss how to improve the effectiveness of the campaign, two sources with knowledge of the meeting said on Monday.

They said those who will take part in the closed-door gathering in Quebec City on Thursday include retired General John Allen, appointed by US President Barack Obama to build a coalition against the militant group.

A spokesman at the US embassy in Ottawa said he could not comment.

Earlier this month Allen urged Turkey to do more to stop jihadists crossing its border with Syria. Turkey and the US are now working on plans to jointly sweep Daesh fighters from a strip of land along the Turkish border.

The Quebec City meeting of the so-called anti-Daesh Coalition Small Group will focus on all aspects of the struggle against Daesh, both military and political, the two sources said.

Fighter jets from the US and Canada are striking against Daesh targets in Iraq and Syria and both nations are also training Iraqi fighters.

Western powers say their efforts alone will not defeat the group, insisting Iraq needs to do more, and the Quebec meeting will assess Baghdad’s actions.

Foreign ministers from the Coalition Small Group last month met Iraq’s prime minister, who complained the coalition had not done enough to tackleDaesh, which holds about a third of the country.

The Small Group comprises about 20 nations, including Australia, Bahrain, Egypt, France, Germany, Italy, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.