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This, from today's Globe and Mail, is interesting. (See: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20050213.wafgha0213/BNStory/International/ ) If I understand what I hear and read doubling our troop strength in Afghanistan will mean that the very NCOs who are needed to staff training establishments to help train the new 5,000 will not be available for another year or so. Is that how others read it?
Canada to nearly double number of troops in Afghanistan
Sunday, February 13, 2005 Updated at 1:14 PM EST
Associated Press
Munich â †Canada will nearly double its troop strength in Afghanistan to about 1,100 by this summer, Defense Minister Bill Graham told The Associated Press on Sunday.
Canada currently has 600 troops serving in the Afghan capital of Kabul with NATO's International Security Assistance Force and plans to put a provincial reconstruction team, or PRT, in the southern city of Kandahar by August, Graham said.
The PRT, which aims to boost stability by working on humanitarian projects such as building schools and clinics, would be part of an overall expansion of peacekeepers into the southern region later this year.
"Canada will be there for establishing a PRT in Kandahar in August, that will be the first step," Mr. Graham told the AP on the sidelines of an international security conference in Munich. "We will have the 600 in Kabul still, so that means we'll be up to the 1,000 to 1,100 range."
At a NATO defense ministers' meeting in France on Thursday, Canada expressed willingness to take a leading role in the Kandahar area. That could include adding a brigade of 700-1,200 troops to the region in spring 2006, ready to participate in combat operations, in addition to the PRT, Graham said.
A final decision on whether to send the brigade has not yet been made.
"If we were to put the additional brigade in, obviously it would be part of Operation Enduring Freedom," he said, using the name of Washington's military operation in Afghanistan.
If the combat brigade is sent in, Mr. Graham said the Kabul-based peacekeepers would likely come home, although those being sent to Kandahar would remain.
He emphasized, however, that the exact Canadian role in Kandahar will depend on many factors, including the stability of the region, and it "is something that is being fleshed out at this time."
Canada supports the U.S. push to integrate the NATO mission in Iraq with the U.S.-led mission currently fighting remnants of the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan but is still studying how closely the two forces should be fused, Graham said.
"We would favor what's appropriate for the region," he said.