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Re: The Sandbox and Areas Reports Thread (August 2006)

  • Thread starter Thread starter GAP
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Canadian CC-130 Hercules crews conduct Dutch troop insertion
http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/8wing/news/releases_e.asp?cat=99&id=1568

Mark
Ottawa
 
Taliban leaders distance themselves from suicide attacks against civilians
Terry Pedwell, Canadian Press, 25Aug06

Faced with a public backlash in the birthplace of their movement, Taliban leaders in Kandahar are distancing themselves from deadly suicide attacks that they blame on a breakaway faction that works with "foreigners."  Suicide attacks aimed at western coalition troops have also killed many Afghan civilians, eroding local support for the Taliban, an extremist group often held responsible.  Published letters from Kandahar province's purported Taliban military council, however, said the group will take action against the attackers who are said to have connections with foreigners - possibly from Pakistan . . . .

 
Reproduced, from the National Post under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act:

http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/editorialsletters/story.html?id=1eb84a61-4a90-436f-a246-f07be75c67a1

Francophone units are 'sharing the burden'

National Post

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Re: Sharing The Burden In Afghanistan, letter to the editor, Aug. 22.

I am extremely disappointed that the letters editor of the National Post either has a short memory or decided to show his ignorance in allowing Quebec-bashing to occur in a national newspaper. This letter calls into question the desire of the Royal 22e Regiment (R22eR) or the 12e Regiment blinde du Canada (12e RBC) to "step up to the plate" on operations in Afghanistan, and also discounted the importance of a bilingual leadership.

I should not have to point out the exceptional record of francophone units that have faithfully served Canadians throughout wars (eight of the 81 Victoria Cross medals awarded to Canadian troops were to Quebec-born soldiers), domestically (in support of the Saguenay floods and the Ice Storm) and recently on peace support operations including in Afghanistan, Haiti, Bosnia and East Timor.

In fact, while I was Commander of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), the 1,700-person-strong battle group that deployed to Kabul, between January and August, 2004, was led by, and was primarily composed of, soldiers from the 5e Groupe-brigade mecanise du Canada (5e CMBG), of CFB Valcartier, Quebec. Thankfully, we lost no CF personnel during that tour.

I also take offence at the implication that the army does not appropriately plan for deployments. We try to ensure that the operational tempo for deployments is shared evenly among different units. In fact, the 1st Battalion of R22eR is currently the lead for our "high-readiness" battle group, should the government decide to commit troops to a second operational deployment in the immediate future. Further, the 3rd Battalion R22eR is scheduled to replace the Royal Canadian Regiment in Afghanistan next August. Regardless of which unit's turn it is to deploy, francophone soldiers serve in units throughout the CF, not solely in 5e CMBG -- a fact that demonstrates the need for bilingual leadership in the Forces.

I am very surprised, and frankly disappointed, that the National Post published a letter that promotes such an anti-francophone sentiment, when CF personnel wear the uniform not solely to protect themselves, their families or their province, but rather to protect and defend all Canadians and to promote Canadian values. Je me souviens.


R.J. Hillier, General, Chief of the Defence Staff, Ottawa.

© National Post 2006​


 
The Crvena Zvezda finds "experts" it likes:

Canadians face `a quagmire,' experts warn
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1156542610777&call_pageid=970599119419

But it buries this near the end of the story:

This week, though, Taliban leaders in Kandahar tried to distance themselves from recent suicide attacks after a backlash from a population angry about the toll on civilians and businesses.

I guess some "backlashes" deserve more prominence than others:

Car bomb kills Canadian soldier
3 hurt in suicide attack in Kandahar
Backlash feared as Afghan child slain

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1156284610681&call_pageid=968332188492&col=968793972154&t=TS_Home

Mark
Ottawa
 
Canadian troops kill Afghan police officer, injure six others 
Donald McArthur, CanWest News Service, 26 Aug 06
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=4a75d9bb-0d2c-413e-86bd-c7d461284a83&k=88985

Canadian troops shot and killed an Afghan national police officer and injured four others Saturday and then shot and injured two other officers riding a scooter 40 minutes later in an incident reminiscent of the fatal shooting of a young Afghan boy by a Canadian soldier Tuesday.  The firefight began about 12:20 p.m., about 25 kilometres west of Kandahar City, when armed Afghan police officers in plainclothes "rapidly approached" a Canadian artillery position and "failed to heed" repeated warnings to stop, said Col. Fred Lewis, deputy commander of Task Force Afghanistan . . . .


Canadian solider mistakenly kills police officer
Graeme Smith, Globe & Mail, 26 Aug 06
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060826.wsmith-afghanistan0826/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

Canadian soldiers killed an Afghan policeman and wounded six others in the dusty flatlands west of Kandahar city today, mistaking their allies for enemies in the increasingly confused battlefields of southern Afghanistan.  The shooting comes just four days after a Canadian soldier shot two youths riding a motorcycle, killing a 10-year-old boy.  The latest incidents happened around a makeshift camp about 25 kilometres west of Kandahar, where a Canadian artillery troop had stopped for the night in the open desert . . . .


Canadians kill police officer, injure six others in Afghanistan shootings
Canadian Press, 26 Aug 06
http://www.recorder.ca/cp/National/060826/n082603A.html

Canadian soldiers have killed an Afghan National Police officer in one of two apparent friendly-fire shooting incidents in southern Afghanistan.  NATO officials say the Canadians fired on a truckload of armed men as they approached an artillery position west of Kandahar.  The men in the truck fired back, sparking a shootout that resulted in the death of one man and injuries to four others.  The Canadians later discovered that the truck was carrying Afghan police officers who were out of uniform . . . .


Coalition Forces Kill Local Taliban Commander In Afghanistan
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 26 Aug 06
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/08/e973fb5d-ae25-4886-b2ea-600a4474a688.html

The U.S. military says coalition forces have killed a local Taliban commander and 15 other militants in a gun battle in southern Afghanistan.  A statement said the fighting took place on August 25 in the central Khod Valley of Oruzgan Province, and the slain commander was a "known Taliban commander."  It did not reveal the commander's name . . . .








 
Articles found 27 August 2006

In Afghanistan, a military milestone takes shape
Nation's army executes its 1st major operation
By David Zucchino, Los Angeles Times  |  August 27, 2006
http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2006/08/27/in_afghanistan_a_military_milestone_takes_shape/

RAMAZAN, Afghanistan -- This remote village in the high desert of southern Afghanistan is home to six mud huts and 70 people. A few miles away, tucked behind two soaring escarpments, the settlement of Qazi contains four huts, 50 people, and a few goats.

More than 100 Afghan army soldiers descended on the two villages one day last month looking for Taliban fighters. After a carefully scripted battle plan, the soldiers sealed the villages and searched every hut, shed, paddock, and fighting-age male.

They found nothing -- no Taliban, no weapons, no documents, no bomb-making material. But in the eyes of the U S military advisers who set the raid in motion, the operation was a milestone.

For the first time in Afghanistan, the Americans said, the Afghan army had conducted a battalion-sized combat operation that combined logistics, mortars, scouts , and infantry from three companies. It is the sort of operation U S troops conduct routinely, but the fledging Afghan army is just beginning to apply its training to real-life battlefields.
More on link

Canada looks for `instant' soldiers
Aug. 19, 2006. 07:19 AM BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH OTTAWA BUREAU
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1155937810971&call_pageid=971358637177

Doctors' notes instead of physicals could fast-track new recruits

OTTAWA—The Canadian military may soon begin accepting recruits who bring along a note from their doctor saying they're fit for military service, says the officer in charge of recruiting for the Canadian Forces.

Medical checks for new recruits currently are slowed by the forces' shortage of physicians, but Col. Kevin Cotten said yesterday that turning to recruits' own doctors may be the solution.

"Let's say we made a requirement to walk in with a questionnaire and a signed letter from a doctor," Cotten said in a telephone interview from CFB Borden. "We would take that at face value as our initial medical assessment."

Gen. Rick Hillier, Canada's top general, has long been frustrated with the time it takes to get new recruits into uniform. So this week, he shook things up with some ambitious new deadlines.

By Oct. 1, Hillier has told military staff he wants 30 per cent of recruits enrolled within a week, and 40 per cent more enlisted within a month. That's down from the 90 days it takes on average now to get a new recruit enlisted and set for basic training.

It's a dramatic attempt to crank up recruiting to meet the Conservatives' vow to increase the armed forces by 13,000 new full-time soldiers and another 10,000 reservists over the coming years.

"We've thrown, if you will, a transformational grenade in the middle of our recruiting process," Hillier said after giving a speech at the annual Canadian Bar Association conference in St. John's, Nfld.

Streamlining the recruiting process, Cotten said, won't lead to looser standards.

Security checks could be done soon after new recruits were enrolled; candidates could be subsequently ditched if a problem were found.

"Maybe we take some risk on the front end," Cotten said. "With a little bit of process, a good interview ... some verifiable background checks and you get a pretty good sense of who you are dealing with."

The military is also attempting to boost its medical ranks by dangling bonuses of up to $225,000, the promise of free tuition and rising salaries to medical school students willing to enrol.

Nick Lischynsky welcomes any move to speed his dream of being in uniform. The 17-year-old Ottawa resident submitted his application a month ago to enlist as a medical technician and was back at the recruiting centre this week to check on its progress.

"It would help," he said. "It can take from three months to a year."

Despite grim news from Afghanistan, would-be soldiers are still flocking into recruiting centres and signing up for duty — more than 25,000 applications are expected this year.
More on link




UK soldier killed in Afghanistan
Sunday, August 27, 2006; Posted: 4:16 a.m. EDT (08:16 GMT)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/08/27/afghan.violence.reut/index.html

Casualty is latest since NATO took over in restive south

KABUL, Afghanistan (Reuters) -- A British soldier was killed in an insurgent attack in Afghanistan on Sunday, the British Defense Ministry said, the latest NATO soldier to die since the alliance took over in the Afghan south from a U.S.-led force last month.

"The Ministry of Defense can confirm the death of a British soldier during contact with insurgent forces in northern Helmand," a ministry spokeswoman said in London, referring to the southern province of Helmand.

British troops in Helmand are part of a NATO peacekeeping force. Six NATO soldiers have been killed in the province since the alliance took command there on July 31.

The province of jagged, mountains, deserts and narrow, fertile valleys is Afghanistan's main drug-producing region and has long been a Taliban stronghold.

NATO said troops used small arms and heavy machine guns to repel the early morning attack but the extent of insurgent casualties was not clear.

Afghanistan is going through the bloodiest phase of violence since U.S. and Afghan opposition troops overthrew the Taliban in 2001.
More on link

Afghan Taliban denies peace talks with NATO
Fri Aug 25, 2006 10:24 AM BST By Saeed Ali Achakzai

SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan (Reuters) - The Taliban on Friday denied secretly talking with the Afghan government and NATO to lay down their arms in the volatile south, rejecting such reports as propaganda by weakened foreign forces.

The guerrillas' military commander, Mullah Dadullah, told Reuters by satellite phone NATO and U.S.-led forces were trying to sow dissent among Taliban fighters and supporters.

"We have adopted the path of jihad and people are joining us in jihad," he said, adding foreign forces were pulling out of areas that have seen heavy fighting, especially in the Taliban's southern heartland, because they did not have the will to sustain heavy losses.


NATO has also denied direct involvement in any talks with the Taliban in southern Kandahar province, which foreign media reports said were led by a government-backed mediation agency as part of the authorities' reconciliation effort with the Taliban.

Some NATO troops were also involved in the talks, the reports said.

Asked about the issue on Thursday, U.S. Major-General Robert Durbin told reporters in Kabul the coalition and NATO fully supported President Hamid Karzai's efforts for reconciliation.

NATO troops have run into heavier than expected opposition from the Taliban in the run-up to and after their July 31 takeover from U.S. forces in the south.

Violence across the country is at its worst since the Taliban were ousted in 2001 and the heaviest in the southern and eastern provinces, many of which border Pakistan

End

Detainee Transfer Announced
August 26, 2006 Defense Link News
http://www.defenselink.mil/Releases/Release.aspx?ReleaseID=9869

The Department of Defense announced today that it transferred five detainees from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to Afghanistan. These detainees were all recommended for transfer due to multiple review processes conducted at Guantanamo Bay.

          With today’s transfer, approximately 120 detainees remain at Guantanamo who the U.S. government has determined eligible for transfer or release through a comprehensive series of review processes. Departure of these remaining detainees approved for transfer or release is subject to ongoing discussions between the United States and other nations. The United States does not desire to hold detainees for any longer than necessary. The department expects that there will continue to be other transfers and releases of detainees.
More on link


Coalition soldier killed in Afghanistan
Aug. 27, 2006, 3:36AM By FISNIK ABRASHI Associated Press Writer
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4143982.html

KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgent attacks in southern Afghanistan left one NATO-led coalition soldier dead and seven wounded Sunday, while police killed 10 suspected Taliban militants who struck a government compound, officials said.

The soldier was killed in the southern Helmand province, a NATO statement said. It did not provide the soldier's nationality or details on the clash.
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Taliban militants assault 2 district centers in S. Afghanistan
2 coalition soldiers killed in E. Afghanistan
Saturday August 26, 2006 (2000 PST)
http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.shtml?152496

HELMAND: At least 400 Taliban insurgents launched attacks on two district centers in southern Afghanistan, during which six insurgents, one local official were killed, officials told Xinhua Saturday.
"Some 400 Taliban rebels raided the center of Arghandab district in Zabul province on Friday night," district chief Ali Muradi said.

The police repulsed the attack after a fierce conflict, during which six rebels were killed and 12 others wounded, he added.

The police suffered no casualties, the official said.

Meanwhile, a large number of Taliban militants stormed the center of Moqor district in Ghazni province also on Friday night, spokesman of the provincial government Abdul Ali Fakori said.

He didn’t give the exact number of the attackers.

"One low-ranking official was killed in the assault and two policemen wounded, while three vehicles were set on fire." Fakori told Xinhua.

However, the Taliban’s purported spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi claimed that militants had killed 15 policemen and set ablaze on both district centers in the assaults.

Southern Afghanistan has been a stronghold of Taliban insurgents, who attack government and foreign targets frequently.
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Minister: Afghanistan's peace, security same as that of Iran Tehran
Aug 26, IRNA ran-Defense-Afghanistan
http://www.irna.ir/en/news/view/menu-236/0608261067194300.htm

Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar in a meeting with his Afghan counterpart, Abdul Rahim Wardak, said here Saturday that peace and security in the neighboring Afghanistan is considered as those in Iran.

According to a report released by the Publicity Department of Defense Ministry, he said that based on such a strategy, Iran has always supported promotion of peace and tranquility in Afghanistan.

At the first round of talks with his Afghan counterpart, Najjar referred to Afghanistan's security and reconstruction and given close ties between the two states, declared Iran's readiness to promote security in this country and help expedite its reconstruction process.

Congratulating the anniversary of Afghanistan's independence, the Iranian minister said that Iran's foreign policy gives high priority to expansion of ties with the neighboring Muslim states, in particular the brotherly and friendly country of Afghanistan.

For his part, Wardak expressed satisfaction with his visit to Tehran and appreciated Iran's sincere support over the past two decades.

He added that his government and people will never forget the support, aid and hospitality of the Iranian government and nation.
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Seven Taliban insurgents killed in Afghanistan
date: 26 08, 2006   Bahrain News
http://english.bna.bh/?ID=49494

Kabul Aug. 26 (BNA) Seven Taliban insurgents were killed in a British force attack on a group of militants in Mosa Qala in the Southern district of Helmand.
This was announced by the NATO-led ISAF forces today. Orders for the attack were issued after the target was determined by the British force on reception of intelligence information, said the ISAF statement. The statement pointed out that ISAF forces destroyed seven Taliban vehicles in the attack that took place yesterday afternoon. No ISAF soldiers were harmed in the operation. The frequency of attacks on NATO forces and Afghan forces has increased since they became responsible for security in six southern districts last month. The districts were ran by US-led alliance forces.
End

Afghanistan's Women Along with Pres. Karzai Seek a Way Out
http://www.thinkandask.com/2006/082606-afghan.html

Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai, first appointed by the White House to oversee Afghanistan and later elected as president in December 2004, will not seek a second term.

Less than one year after the United States declared the end to Taliban rule in Afghanistan, President Karzai said that his vision was for a "modern state that builds on our Islamic values, promoting justice, rule of law, human rights and freedom of commerce, and forming a bridge between cultures and civilizations."

President Karzai said that Afghanistan would become a model of tolerance and prosperity based upon the rich heritage of the Islamic civilization, on 12 September 2002, but in the years following his original goal, the president has softened his view on the state of affairs.

In July 2006, President Karzai said, "There is corruption in the whole system" of Afghanistan. He admits to underestimating opium production - a product that accounts for one third of the economy. The 49-year-old President Karzai blamed the international community for not supporting his goals.
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Two French soldiers die in Afghanistan
Saturday, August 26, 2006; Posted: 5:38 a.m. EDT (09:38 GMT)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/08/26/afghanistan.ap/

Clashes leave 13 Taliban fighters dead

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- A roadside bomb and gunfight in eastern Afghanistan left two French soldiers dead and another two wounded as at least 13 insurgents were killed in clashes with police and NATO in the south, officials said Saturday.

The soldiers died when a roadside bomb exploded while they were conducting a combat patrol in eastern Laghman province on Friday, triggering a gunfight between coalition forces and "a group of enemy extremists," the U.S. military said in a statement.

The wounded soldiers were transported to a hospital where they were listed as being in a stable condition
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Mournful lament greets body of slain Canadian soldier
Canadian Press Globe & Mail  27/08/06
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060826.wSoldier0826/BNStory/National

TRENTON, Ont. — The sun disappeared, tucked behind clouds, and a grey pall was cast over CFB Trenton as a military transport returned home Saturday carrying the body of the eighth Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan this month.

Cpl. David Braun, 27, was killed Tuesday when a resupply convoy was struck by a vehicle packed with explosives in Kandahar.

Three other soldiers were injured.

Cpl. Braun's mother, Patty, sister Diana, and brothers Mike and Chris, were joined by Cpl. Braun's friend Terry Braman on the tarmac for the solemn repatriation ceremony as a gentle breeze rippled over the eastern Ontario military base.
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Bullets fly. Ottawa ducks
August 25, 2006 JOHN GEDDES
http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/canada/article.jsp?content=20060828_132392_132392#

How Canada slipped into a war our leaders can't -- or won't -- explain

By now the image of a maple leaf-draped coffin being loaded into the belly of a military transport plane at Kandahar airfield is familiar to any Canadian with a TV set. Troops line the tarmac at attention, except for the recently wounded, who sometimes weep in their wheelchairs. The grimmest day so far for the Canadians was Aug. 3, when three soldiers from Canada's 2,000-plus contingent in Afghanistan were killed in a rocket-propelled grenade attack, and a fourth died when his armoured vehicle hit a roadside bomb. Ten more Canadian soldiers were injured by Taliban insurgents that day. "We've got to be patient," was the reaction of Brig.-Gen David Fraser, the top Canadian officer in Afghanistan. "We've got to be determined to see this through as long as it takes."

A commander in the field has little choice but to adopt a resolute tone when the news is so bad. And in wartime, a general making the case for staying the course might normally expect patriotic citizens back home to be inclined to agree. But recent polls suggest a majority of Canadians no longer support staying in Afghanistan, and misgivings about what it's all about are entirely understandable. Determined to see this through for as long as what takes? How much sacrifice and to what end? Canada's political and military leaders have done little to answer those fundamental questions about what is arguably the biggest test of Canadian military mettle and foreign policy savvy in a generation
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Taliban Commander, 15 Other Militants Killed
WASHINGTON, Aug. 27, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/News/NewsArticle.aspx?ID=581

Coalition soldiers killed a known Taliban commander and 15 other militants in Afghanistan Aug. 25, Combined Forces Command Afghanistan officials said in a news release.

Coalition forces engaged Taliban leaders with joint in the central Khod Valley of Uruzgan province, officials said.

The Taliban commander and his associates were involved in attacks against the Afghan people, as well as Afghan, International Security Assistance Force and coalition forces, officials said.

Coalition forces used deliberate measures to limit the chances of property damage. No damage was reported to a mosque adjacent to the militant’s safe house after a precision coalition air strike, officials said.
No civilians were injured during the operation.

“Coalition forces are actively and aggressively extending the security and the reach of the Afghan government,” Lt. Col. Paul Fitzpatrick, Combined Joint Task Force 76 spokesperson, said. “Through tireless efforts, we continue to pursue terrorists and their leaders in making Afghanistan safer.”
End






 
Articles found 28 August 2006

Cdn. soldier injured in Afghan mortar attack
Updated Mon. Aug. 28 2006 1:47 PM ET CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060828/afghanistan_suicide_bombing_060828/20060828?hub=TopStories

A Canadian soldier was injured by a mortar attack in Afghanistan Monday, just hours after a suicide blast killed 17 Afghans in a crowded market.

CTV's Matt McClure, reporting from Kandahar, said the soldier and an Afghan security force member were injured after several mortar rounds struck the Canadian forward operating base.

The attack came at about 6 p.m. local time at Zhari District Centre, west of Kandahar.

The soldier, who has not been identified, received non-life threatening injuries, but was flown to a hospital in Germany for specialized treatment, McClure told Newsnet.

It's the second time in as many days that a Canadian has been injured by mortars at the base, and the third attack in the last 36 hours.

Early Sunday, a Canadian soldier and six Afghans were injured by mortar rounds.

Suicide attack

The mortar attack came just hours after at least 17 people were killed and dozens injured after a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded market in southern Afghanistan.

Carrying explosives, the bomber walked into a crowed market opposite a police station in Lashkar Gah -- the capital of the southern Helmand province.

A spokesman for the provincial governor told the Associated Press that 17 people were killed and 47 wounded. At least 15 of the wounded were children.

A purported Taliban spokesman claimed the militia's responsibility for the attack.
More on link

17 killed, dozens wounded in Afghan blast
Associated Press Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060828.wafghanblast0828/BNStory/International/home

Link to The Scotsman Same Story
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1269582006

Link to CBS   Same Story
http://keyetv.com/topstories/topstories_story_240053649.html

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — A bomber blew himself up in a crowded market in southern Afghanistan on Monday, killing 17 people and wounding dozens, a hospital official said.

The blast happened across from a police station in Lashkar Gah, the capital of the southern Helmand province, said Ghulam Muheddin, the provincial governor's spokesman.

Hanif Khan, a local hospital official, said 17 people were killed and 47 were wounded, six critically.

Among the dead were the owner of the market, a former Lashkar Gah police chief, his son and a nephew, said Hayatullah Khan, a security guard at the scene.
End

Canadians, Afghans at odds over killing of officer
GRAEME SMITH  Globe and Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060828.wxafghan28/BNStory/International

CTV Link to same Story
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060828/afghanistan_friendly_fire_060828/20060828?hub=TopStories


Local forces ignored warnings: military

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — An angry split emerged between Canadian and Afghan forces in a key district west of Kandahar city this weekend as they disagreed about the circumstances in which Canadian soldiers killed an Afghan police officer and injured six other people.

Soldiers fired twice on Saturday at vehicles they mistook for approaching enemies in the barren desert under the midday sun.

The Canadian military expressed deep regret after discovering that the troops had attacked Afghan security forces, their biggest allies in the fight against Taliban insurgents in the country's violent south.

But Canadian officials said the soldiers had reacted properly to a perceived threat, as the Afghans drove toward a Canadian artillery position about 25 kilometres west of Kandahar city at high speed in unmarked vehicles, carrying weapons but wearing local clothing.
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Bulgaria Boosts Troops in Afghanistan
28 August 2006, Monday.
http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=68738

Bulgaria has vowed to send an additional 200 troops to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan in the middle of next year.

Bulgaria's contingent in Afghanistan now features a 120-strong-squad.

Bulgaria is planning to increase the number of its troops in missions abroad, Defense Minister Vesselin Bliznakov announced during his visit to Romania's Constanza.

At present the country has about 500 soldiers in international missions but this number should increase in 2007. The best option for Bulgaria, according to the minister, is to have about 8% of its land forces at the disposal of international missions, which would bring the total numbers to 1,700 - 1,800.
End

NDP chief says Canada can spare troops for Lebanon
Canadian Press Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060827.wlayton0827/BNStory/National/home

Montreal — Canada has the capacity to contribute as many as 1,200 soldiers to the UN mission enforcing the ceasefire in Lebanon, says NDP Leader Jack Layton.

In an interview Sunday with The Canadian Press, Mr. Layton rejected Prime Minister Stephen Harper's claim that Canada's presence in Afghanistan has stretched the country's military too thin to contribute to the Lebanon mission.

“We have the capacity, but the prime minister hasn't said so,” he said. “We have asked the Harper government to, first of all, tell the truth.”

Mr. Layton said his claims are based on an internal government document obtained through access to information laws that he said shows that Canada has military capacity to spare.
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Military overwhelmed by number of investigations
Mon Aug 28 2006 By Terry Pedwell Winnipeg Free Press
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/subscriber/world/story/3655203p-4225761c.html

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- Military investigators are trying to determine why Canadian soldiers mistakenly shot and killed what may have been an Afghan secret police officer in a weekend of violence.
It was just one of a number of investigations that have overwhelmed Canada's National Investigation Service within the past two weeks, forcing the arms-length body to bring more forensics experts into southern Afghanistan.

Canadian soldiers killed an Afghan police officer and injured four others Saturday in one of two apparent friendly fire shootings.

The shooting was in self-defence, said NATO, after a truck carrying armed men approached a Canadian artillery position about 25 kilometres west of Kandahar.

The men were in an unmarked vehicle, in plain clothes, said Col. Fred Lewis, the deputy commander of Canada's NATO contingent in southern Afghanistan.

"Neither their vehicle, nor their immediate appearance, readily identified them as (police)," said Lewis, who added that several warning shots were fired at the vehicle, sparking a shootout with the men when they returned fire.   
Secret police?

NATO and Canadian officials could not confirm reports from sources yesterday that the men were members of Afghanistan's notorious secret police and intelligence service, the National Directorate of Security (NDS), also known as Amaniyat.

NDS operatives rarely wear uniforms and often travel in unmarked vehicles.

About 40 minutes after the initial shooting, a motorcycle carrying two people approached the same Canadian artillery position at high speed, military officials said.

The Canadians once again opened fire after warning the driver several times to stop, injuring both motorcyclists.

They, too, were later discovered to be Afghan police officers, NATO said. There were no Canadian casualties.

NATO later apologized for the shooting incidents, but maintained that Canadian soldiers acted according to their training.

Now under scrutiny by both Canadian and Afghan officials, the weekend shootings have added to what was already a large workload facing Canadian Forces forensic investigators. The National Investigation Service (NIS) team was to be beefed up from just two investigators to five.

Saturday's shootings took place just days after a Canadian soldier shot and killed an Afghan boy and injured a teenager after a Canadian convoy was struck by a suicide bomber.

NIS investigators were probing the boy's shooting, but also a fatal traffic accident in which a Canadian soldier died, as well as the shooting death of another Canadian at the hands of one of his colleagues.
End

Forces ease security checks on potential recruits
Mon Aug 28 2006 By Alison Auld Winnipeg Free Press
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/subscriber/canada/story/3655247p-4225812c.html

HALIFAX -- The Canadian military has relaxed some of the background security checks it does on potential recruits and is considering easing others as it tries to speed up enrolment and meet ambitious recruitment targets.
The military recently received an exemption from the Treasury Board that allowed it to shorten the period of time it covers when doing an applicant's background check, according to Defence Department officials.

For example, a candidate who would be granted "secret" level clearance once had a background check done that went back 10 years. Checks now only cover the last seven years.

The majority of people in the forces receive "confidential" level clearance, which previously required a check of the last 10 years. The exemption has cut that check by half, down to the last five years.

"It's an acceptable risk given the number of clearances we do," Lt.-Col. David Shuster, a security officer in the Defence Department, said of the policy change that has been in effect for months.

"Obviously, we've got a really big challenge here because we want to increase recruiting, yet we don't want to increase the level of risk in bringing people in faster."   
The military has also relaxed another security probe it does that can cause lengthy processing delays for applicants who have spent time outside Canada, according to a newly declassified document obtained by The Canadian Press under access to information legislation.

The report, signed by Canada's top soldier, Gen. Rick Hillier, recommends easing assessments of recruits who have been in the United States, the U.K. and the original 16 NATO countries prior to applying to the military.

Shuster said those reviews can add months or years to the screening process because they have to solicit help from officials in the country where the applicant spent time. But he downplayed concerns that limiting the checks could compromise security.

"We want to be able to do as much recruiting as we possibly can, but at the same time we don't want to accept more risk than already exists right now," he said in an interview.

"So there's a bit of negotiation going on to make sure we don't accept too much risk."
End

Military bares its emotions; Local widow takes part in memorial service
Bob Weber  /  CP  Saturday, August 26, 2006  Standard Freeholder
http://www.standard-freeholder.com/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentid=168491&catname=Local+News

In a rare glimpse into Canada's grieving military heart, soldiers in two provinces invited the public Friday to share in normally private remembrance ceremonies for their fallen comrades, who were hailed as "new heroes" in the fight for democracy.

One of two memorials was held at CFB Shilo in Manitoba to remember Master Cpl. Jeffrey Walsh, 33, of Regina, who died in what appears to have been an accidental shooting by a fellow soldier.

Taking part was Walsh's widow, Julie, who grew up in Alexandria, and her family.

Master Cpl. Darryl Smith, who befriended Walsh in basic training almost 10 years ago, recalled how Walsh overcame his fear of heights by rappelling with him down the side of Smith's sister's apartment building in Ottawa.

"Before anyone knew what was happening, Batman and Robin were gone." Walsh's father, Ben, an RCMP officer, said his son embarked on this latest mission just a week before he died with a belief in what he was doing strengthened by a previous tour in Afghanistan and an earlier tour in Kosovo.

"He wanted to try to make a change in these countries so people could live in peace, have freedom. He was well aware of the dangers and said, 'Dad, I am very well trained,'" Walsh said.
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Solemn return for Canadian soldiers
By Barry Ellsworth Local News - Monday, August 28, 2006
http://www.intelligencer.ca/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentid=169333&catname=Local+News

CFB TRENTON Twenty five soldiers returned here Saturday, having completed their six-month tour of duty in Afghanistan. But the happiness they should have felt was replaced with the sombre knowledge that also on board was Cpl. David Braun in a casket.

Braun, 27, was killed last Tuesday in a suicide attack in Kandahar, Afghanistan, the area known as the spawning grounds of the enemy, the Taliban, a regressive Islamic extremist group that was ousted from power but fights on. Three other soldiers received non life-threatening injuries.
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Music opens new world to Afghan girls
Sun 27 Aug 2006 9:03 PM ET By Terry Friel
http://today.reuters.com/News/CrisesArticle.aspx?storyId=ISL289638

MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan, Aug 28 (Reuters) - The lilt of a girl singing of homecoming blends pleasantly with a cacophony of different melodies from keyboard, guitar and drums in a music school in northern Afghanistan.

The female students, wearing burqas with their faces uncovered, chuckle and joke as they practice in Afghanistan's first women-only music school, relishing in their new found freedom.

Just a few years ago, music was banned by the hardline Taliban government. Musicians fled the country and women were barred from schools or leaving home without a male relative.

Now, this six-month project at the Nagashand Fine Art Gallery in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif, near the border with Uzbekistan, is teaching 18 girls and women to become music teachers.

The women are taught singing and how to play a range of modern and traditional musical instruments.

"As a child, I liked music -- I wanted to prove women can play music," said 14-year-old Zahra Amiri, the youngest student at the school. "I want to be a musician some day."
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U.S. relatives of terror camp convict denied entry
Sat Aug 26, 2006 4:58pm ET
http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=politicsNews&storyID=2006-08-26T205824Z_01_N26257418_RTRUKOC_0_US-SECURITY-CALIFORNIA.xml&archived=False

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The U.S. government has barred two relatives of a California man convicted of attending Pakistani terrorism training camps from re-entering the country after an extended stay in Pakistan, even though both are U.S. citizens, the San Francisco Chronicle reported on Saturday.

Muhammed Ismail, 45, a naturalized U.S. citizen, and his 18-year-old son, Jaber Ismail, who was born in the United States, are the uncle and cousin of Hamid Hayat.

Hayat, 23, was convicted in April of providing material support to terrorists by attending training camps in Pakistan between March 2003 and June 2005, and of lying about it to the FBI. He faces a possible sentence of up to 39 years in prison.

Hamid Hayat's father, Umer Hayat, was sentenced on Friday to time served and 36 months of supervised release after he pleaded guilty in May to lying about how much money he was carrying on a trip to his native Pakistan from the United States in 2003.


Umer Hayat, 48, told federal officials he was carrying only $10,000 but had $28,000.

The convictions resulted from a federal probe of the Pakistani immigrant community in Lodi, California, a small farm town in the state's Central Valley.

Federal authorities told the Chronicle that although neither Muhammed nor Jaber Ismail has been charged with a crime, they are barred from reentering the United States unless they submit to further FBI questioning in Pakistan.

Julia Harumi Mass, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney who represents the family, said agents want to know if Jaber Ismail attended Pakistani terrorist training camps.

The men tried to return to the United States on April 21 with other family members but were turned away in Hong Kong and forced to return to Islamabad because they were on the government's "no-fly" list, Mass said
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Canadians probing Afghan friendly fire incidents
Updated Mon. Aug. 28 2006 6:58 AM ET CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060813/afghanistan_friendly_fire_060827/20060828?hub=CanadaAM

Fresh details have emerged about a friendly fire incident in Afghanistan that left one Afghan police officer dead, when Canadian troops opened fire on a police vehicle. Some reports suggest the car was clearly marked, contrary to initial reports.


"The Canadians shot at my men," Wali Jan, a local police chief, told CTV News. "When I spoke to their commander, his excuse was, 'We are new here.'"
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British soldier shot dead in Afghanistan
Alex Kumi Monday August 28, 2006 The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1859694,00.html

· Serviceman dies in clash with Helmand insurgents
· MoD confirms inquiry into shootings by UK troops

A British soldier has been shot dead during clashes with insurgents in southern Afghanistan, it emerged yesterday.
Details of the latest fatality came as the Ministry of Defence confirmed that the Royal Military police are investigating six serious shooting incidents involving British troops in the country.

The double blow points to the mounting pressure faced by troops amid an upsurge in fighting as Afghanistan goes through one of its bloodiest periods since the fall of the Taliban five years ago.
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Report: German troops could see action in southern Afghanistan
Aug 27, 2006, 22:43 GMT
http://news.monstersandcritics.com/southasia/article_1195217.php/Report_German_troops_could_see_action_in_southern_Afghanistan

Kabul - German troops could see action before autumn against the persistent insurgency in southern Afghanistan, Deutsche Presse- Agentur dpa has learned from sources in the Kabul headquarters of the NATO-led ISAF mission.

The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) already has German troops serving in the more settled northern regions of Afghanistan.
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Defence Minister O'Connor visits war-torn Kandahar to bolster troops
Canadian Press, 29 Aug 06
http://www.cp.org/premium/ONLINE/member/elxn_en/060829/p082903A.html

Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor is visiting Canadian troops in violent southern Afghanistan.  Brass at Kandahar Airfield greeted O'Connor Tuesday morning as his flight touched down at Canada's main staging area in Afghanistan. O'Connor would only say he was in Kandahar to meet the troops and that he'll talk about his visit when it is over. The Conservative government has been under pressure to better explain the purpose and the duration of the mission amid mounting casualties and flagging public support . . . .


Bomb near Canada troops kills two Afghans
Middle East Times, 29 Aug 06
http://www.metimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20060829-031754-4130r

A bomb exploded near a convoy of Canadian troops serving with a NATO force in southern Afghanistan Tuesday, killing two Afghans and wounding another, the force said.  Police said that the blast was caused by a suicide attacker driving a mini-bus filled with explosives, but the Canadian military said that it was caused by another kind of improvised explosive device . . . .


Suicide Bomber Targets NATO-Afghan Convoy
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 29 Aug 06
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/08/620c698a-839e-4ceb-9056-57cb9669ed94.html

Authorities in Afghanistan say a suicide bomber detonated a vehicle filled with explosives near a joint NATO-Afghan military convoy today in the southern Kandahar Province.  Officials said the bomber killed himself, along with one Afghan civilian who was driving near the blast . . . .


Suicide blast hits Afghan NATO convoy
Reuters, 29 Aug 06
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060829/wl_nm/afghan_violence_dc

At least one Afghan civilian was killed in a suicide bomb attack on a        NATO convoy in the country's volatile south on Tuesday, the latest incident in the worst upsurge of violence since the Taliban were ousted five years ago. Police said it was not clear if the bombing on the road from Kandahar airport, a major foreign military base, into the city was a car bomb or explosives strapped to the attacker . . . .


Two dead in Afghanistan blasts
Agence France Presse, 29 Aug 06
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/060829/1/43362.html

Foreign troops in Afghanistan have been targeted in separate bomb blasts that killed two civilians, a day after one of the deadliest suicide attacks of the year.  The first narrowly missed a convoy of Canadian troops outside the troubled southern city of Kandahar, which has been hit by regular attacks from the extremist Taliban movement . . . .


Afghan, Coalition forces respond to IEDs
COMBINED FORCES COMMAND – AFGHANISTAN COALITION PRESS INFORMATION CENTER KABUL, 28 Aug 06
http://www.blackanthem.com/News/military200608_440.shtml

Afghan and Coalition forces discovered and disabled explosive devices in three locations Aug. 28.  A Coalition unit discovered a landmine placed on the side of a road between Orgun-E and Sharona in Paktika Province . A Coalition explosive ordnance disposal team destroyed the munition in place . . . .


Lashkar Gah suicide bomber kills 17, injures 47 civilians
ISAF News Release #2006-117, 28 Aug 06
http://www.afnorth.nato.int/ISAF/Update/Press_Releases/newsrelease/2006/Release_28August06_117.htm

A suicide bomber exploded in a crowded Lashkar Gah bazaar, reportedly killing 17 civilians and injuring 47 others shortly after noon today. The bazaar was located opposite an Afghan National Police station . . . .


Thirty-nine soldiers from CFB Valcartier, Que., head for Afghanistan
Remi Nadeau, Canadian Press, 28 Aug 06
http://www.cp.org/premium/ONLINE/member/elxn_en/060828/p082817A.html

Although 27 of his fellow soldiers have died in Afghanistan, Regis Berube had a calm air about him Monday in the hours ahead of his own deployment to the Middle East country. Berube is one of 39 headed to Kandahar from Canadian Forces Base Valcartier near Quebec City. "I say, if life wants me, I'll be coming back," he said. "If she doesn't want me, I won't. I'm confident in life and I'm going to do my tour as best I can." The soldiers will be in Kandahar until next March, helping train the Afghan army . . . .


Pakistan struggles to identify Taliban
David Montero, Christian Science Monitor, 29 Aug 06
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0829/p06s01-wosc.html?s=hns

Imadad Ullah isn't afraid to talk about being a Taliban student, even after two of his friends walked away when the topic came up. They might have good reason: Mr. Ullah says that Taliban members are arrested every day in this region.  His friends wandered back into their madrassah, where some 50 other Afghan Taliban study. But Ullah remained seated by the roadside some 20 miles from Quetta, the capital of Pakistan's Balochistan Province. Ullah wouldn't answer if he or his friends had plans to fight jihad in Afghanistan. He only spoke of the prowess of those already fighting . . . .


Our military deserves support
Letter to the Editor, Regina Leader-Post, 29 Aug 06
http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/letters/story.html?id=044de4b9-8fc5-4c24-ab4b-3129defc64bd

The conflict in Afghanistan has cost Canada dearly, not only in terms of lives, but also in the escalating expenses the Canadian taxpayer must bear until a victory can be reached. The third loss we've incurred is the growing dissension among the public who can't decide whether we should fight the Taliban or bring our troops home . . . .
 
Articles found 29 August 2006

FACTBOX-Key facts about suicide bombings in Afghanistan
29 Aug 2006 07:30:47 GMT Source: Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SP16369.htm

Aug 29 (Reuters) - At least one Afghan civilian was killed in a suicide bomb attack on a NATO convoy in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan, on Tuesday. The attack comes one day after a suicide bomber killed 17 people and wounded dozens in a crowded bazaar in the south's restive Helmand province.

Here are some facts on suicide bombings recorded in Afghanistan since January 2005.

KEY FIGURES:

Attacks: 64

Casualties (not including suicide bombers): 181

Wounded: 273

Attacks without casualties: 31/64

Attacks where bombs go off accidentally: 6/64

Attackers pre-empted by police: 2

WORST ATTACKS:

- August 3, 2006: The worst attack to date occurs in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan, when twenty-one civilians are killed when a suicide bomber rams his car into a NATO convoy on the main highway.

- June 1, 2005: The second worst attack occurs, when a suicide bomber wearing a police uniform kills 20 people, including a police chief, in an attack on a mosque in Kandahar.

BLOODIEST DAY:

- At least 26 people die in two separate suicide attacks in Spin Boldak and Kandahar on January 17 2006.

MOST FREQUENTLY HIT AREAS:

- Kandahar: 31 attacks

- Kabul: 7 attacks

- Herat/Khost: 3 attacks
End

Denmark Special Forces to Afghanistan
Tuesday August 29, 2006 Pak Tribune
http://paktribune.com/news/index.shtml?152623

COPENHAGEN: Amid rising Taliban violence Denmark`s Ministry of Defense has deployed an unidentified number of elite Special Forces soldiers to Afghanistan.
The new forces will provide cover for the 122 Danish troops there facing Taliban guerrilla attacks.

The Danish troops are part of the multinational International Security Assistance Force under North Atlantic Treaty Alliance command.

The Copenhagen Post reported on Aug. 24 that Danish ground troops in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan have been targeted by the Taliban forces on a nearly daily basis since arriving in July.

Danish Defense Minister Soren Gade said that the scope of the attacks was interfering with troops being able to conduct patrols, telling journalists, "We have sent a number of special forces out of recognition of the current situation in the camp at Musa Qala."

Since arriving in Helmand Taliban guerrillas have attacked the Danish force 50 times and wounded eight soldiers.

Head of operations Col. Henrik Sommer would not divulge further information, telling journalists, "Since we are dealing with an ongoing mission, we have instituted a restrictive information policy and will not provide details about how many specialists have been deployed."

Meanwhile, the Berlingske Tidende newspaper reported on Aug. 28 that in light of the rising violence the Danish military has withdrawn all of its troops from Musa Qala base in Afghanistan following massive attacks.

End.
 

Duceppe says Afghanistan mission falls short
Kevin Dougherty CanWest News Service; Montreal Gazette Tuesday, August 29, 2006
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=eaf3d2d0-b46a-4b40-bb8b-bfa26f8b44ef&k=85610

QUEBEC - Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe called on the Harper government Monday to address the effectiveness of the Canadian mission in Afghanistan in light of reports regarding the resurgence of the heroin trade in the battle-scarred country.

Quebec soldiers won't take the lead role in the Afghanistan mission until next year, but troops from CFB Valcartier who have served for six months in Afghanistan have returned and a new contingent of 33 members of the Royal 22nd Regiment left Monday to train the Afghan army.

Duceppe questioned whether the international effort is enough, noting the resurgence of regional warlords and resumption of the heroine production.

And he said Prime Minister Stephen Harper has accepted the view of U.S. President George W. Bush that ''it's the devil against God'' an opinion Duceppe does not share.

''Soldiers do a very risky job and they have all my admiration for that,'' he said. The problem is ''the kind of risky policy that the government has.''

''The question is, are the international efforts enough to maintain peace over there?'' Duceppe asked. ''Are we applying the necessary policies to make sure the Taliban is not coming back?

''It seems not to be the case.''

Nelofer Pazira, the Toronto-based, Afghan-born journalist who starred in the film Kandahar, wrote in an article carried by several British newspapers last week from Kandahar that the Taliban and warlords involved in the heroine trade are making gains, saying the poppy farmers have welcomed the Taliban.
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Why it's not working in Afghanistan
By Ann Jones Aug 30, 2006
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/HH30Df02.html

Remember when peaceful, democratic, reconstructed Afghanistan was advertised as the exemplar for the extreme makeover of Iraq? In August 2002, US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was already proclaiming the new Afghanistan "a breathtaking accomplishment" and "a successful model of what could happen to Iraq". As everybody now knows, the model isn't working in Iraq. So we shouldn't be surprised to learn that it's not working in Afghanistan either.

The story of success in Afghanistan was always more fairy tale
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Kennedy Calls for Canada to Leave Afghanistan Unless NATO Changes Mission
Josh Pringle Monday, August 28, 2006
http://www.cfra.com/headlines/index.asp?cat=2&nid=42210

Federal Liberal Leadership candidate Gerard Kennedy is calling on Canada to pull out of Afghanistan unless NATO changes its mission.

Kennedy told young Liberals at Ryerson University that "someone has to pull the plug on this grand illusion that is not working."

Kennedy adds Canada should leave Afghanistan if Canada can't get a mandate that does honour and respect the people of Afghanistan and Canadian troops.
End

Foreign Ministry Confirms the Death of 2 Turks in Afghanistan
By Cihan News Agency Tuesday, August 29, 2006 zaman.com
http://www.zaman.com/?bl=hotnews&alt=&trh=20060829&hn=36083

The Turkish Foreign Ministry on Tuesday confirmed that two Turkish nationals working in Afghanistan were killed in an armed attack in the country.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Namik Tan said that Riza Ozsimsek was found dead in the garage of a construction company near a highway between Kabul and Pul-I-Charki, while Hasan Gedik was killed in a gun attack on a highway between Khandar and Harat. A Turkish security guard was taken hostage in the same attack.

Turkish TV news channels reported on Monday that a Turkish national had been killed and another kidnapped in armed attack.

Spokesman Tan said that they had called on the Afghan authorities to investigate the incident and bring the perpetrators to justice.

Turkish engineers and workers have been exposed to attacks in Afghanistan in the past. Many Turkish companies are working in the construction sector in the country.

A Turkish worker was killed in June in the western Afghan region of Farah
End

British soldier shot dead in Taliban assault on Army base is identified
By Geneviève Roberts Published: 29 August 2006 Independant Online Edition
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article1222348.ece

The sixth soldier killed in Afghanistan this month was named yesterday as Lance Corporal Jonathan Hetherington from 14 Signal Regiment. The 22-year-old was shot dead during an assault on his barracks in Musa Qala, in Helmand province, early on Sunday.

L/Cpl Hetherington, who grew up in south Wales, joined the Army in September 2000 and trained as a radio systems operator. His commanding officer, Lt-Col Steve Vickery, paid tribute to "an outstanding soldier, trusted comrade and valued friend".

He said: "He will be fondly remembered for his amiable nature and engaging sense of humour and without doubt a very promising military career lay ahead. He was a very bright junior non-commissioned officer who had integrated extremely well into regimental life since his arrival in February of this year.
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CENTCOM Commander Pleased by Afghanistan Security Progress
By Samantha L. Quigley American Forces Press Service WASHINGTON, Aug. 27, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/News/NewsArticle.aspx?ID=588

As NATO forces prepare to take over security operations in portions of Afghanistan, Army Gen. John Abizaid said he’s pleased with the progress he sees in regard to the country’s security situation.
“We’re pretty satisfied with the military situation despite the fact that there’s been a lot of fighting,” the commander of U.S. Central Command told “Fox and Friends” in a telephone interview from Bagram, Afghanistan, yesterday. “There’s nothing we can’t handle militarily out here, although we’re pretty realistic that there’s going to be continued fighting.”

NATO forces recently took over security operations in the southern part of the country and are doing well, the general said. He added that he looks forward to turning over the eastern sector to NATO forces when the political and military conditions are right.

Abizaid said the Taliban is the No. 1 problem in the south, and other groups, some of which are being aided by al-Qaeda, are operating in the east.

“Then you have various other criminal groups that are associated with the drug trade and operating in areas that have not really had much military activity on our part for a while,” he said. “Now that the NATO forces have come in, they’ve allowed us to contest those areas, so there’ll be a lot of security activity going on.”

Abizaid took the opportunity to express his approval of the Afghan National Army, describing it as “developing fairly rapidly.”
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A rebel's killing roils Pakistan
By David Montero | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor August 28, 2006 edition
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0828/p01s04-wosc.html

QUETTA, PAKISTAN – For years, Nawab Mohammed Akbar Khan Bugti battled the Pakistan Army. The 80-year-old renegade hidden in the mountains of Balochistan became a legend in his fight for greater autonomy against what he saw as colonial brutality.
Bugti was both hated and revered. But as a former federal minister and governor, he symbolized a political as well as a violent struggle. And his death this weekend, during a fierce three-day battle that left more than 30 dead, could prove a serious blow to Pakistan's stability.

It could also close a door to a group seen as a counterweight to extremism represented in the region by a resurgent Taliban, analysts say.

"This is not a good sign," says Samina Ahmed, South Asia director of the International Crisis Group. "Just a few years ago [Nawab Bugti] was talking to the government. Keeping that door open was the way to go. Now that door has been slammed shut."

Bugti's death could also reverberate in the region, some analysts say. The Balochis are spread across several countries, with millions living in parts of Iran and Afghanistan that border Pakistan.

"They will provide sanctuary to Baloch militants. There will be a lot of sympathy," says Lt. Gen. (ret.) Talat Masood, a defense analyst in Islamabad.
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Military Capable of Meeting All Its Challenges, Rumsfeld Says
By Sgt. Sara Wood, USA American Forces Press Service Aug. 28, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/News/NewsArticle.aspx?ID=615

NAVAL AIR STATION FALLON, Nev.,  The U.S. military is capable not only of winning the war on terror, but also of fulfilling its other commitments around the world and dealing with unforeseen circumstances, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld told a group of sailors and Marines here today.
“It would be unfortunate if other countries thought because we had 136,000 troops in Iraq today that therefore we are not capable of defending our country or doing anything that we might need to do,” Rumsfeld said at a town-hall meeting.

Rumsfeld noted that the U.S. has a large active and reserve force, as well as the Individual Ready Reserve, and has many allies that provide support to the war on terror. No country can do everything at once, he acknowledged, but the United States has proved its readiness by responding to natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina and the earthquake in Pakistan, evacuating American citizens from Lebanon, and sending National Guard troops to fortify the southwestern U.S. border – all while maintaining troop levels in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Kiwi soldiers injured in Afghanistan
30 August 2006  By NICK CHURCHOUSE
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3780532a11,00.html

Two New Zealand soldiers are in hospital after a four-wheel-drive accident in Afghanistan.

The soldiers were on a routine security patrol in the Waras district when the road under their vehicle gave way about 4.30pm on Monday (1am Tuesday NZ time).

The pair were in an army Toyota 4WD, which tipped when the surface collapsed under one wheel. It then rolled down a 20-metre bank, army spokeswoman Charmaine Pene said.

The soldiers were treated at the scene for cuts and bruising. A United States Army Black Hawk helicopter then flew them to a coalition medical centre in Bagram.

One of the men has been treated for concussion. The other had bruised vertebrae.

The regional patrols were part of the 122-strong contingent's responsibilities as the Provincial Reconstruction Team in Bamyan province.

The patrols could be away from base from three days to more than a week, and were aimed at keeping contact with local villages, Ms Pene said.
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Intelligence official kidnapped in S Afghanistan
One Turk Killed, Another Kidnapped in Afghanistan
Tuesday August 29, 2006 (1315 PST) Pak Tribune
http://paktribune.com/news/index.shtml?152621

KABUL: Unknown armed militants kidnapped a local intelligence official in Afghanistan`s southern Ghazni province, an official at the spokesman`s office of Interior Ministry said.
"An intelligence official who was also the son of Qarabagh district chief was abducted by armed militants Sunday evening," the official told Xinhua but refused to be named.

The incident occurred when the ill-fated man, he added, was on his way home to the neighboring Andar district.

He blamed the enemies of Afghanistan, a term used against Taliban operatives, for the incident.

Taliban-linked militants raided the headquarters of Muqar district late in the week but forced to flee.

Taliban-led insurgency has claimed the lives of more than 1,900 people including the rebels, Afghan and the U.S.-led foreign troops as well as pro-government social figures over the past eight months in Afghanistan.
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KABUL, Afghanistan --U.S.-led coalition troops foiled an insurgent ambush in southern Afghanistan, killing 18 suspected militants, a military statement said Tuesday.  August 29, 2006
http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2006/08/29/us_led_troops_kill_18_in_afghanistan/

Some 60 insurgents attacked the troops Monday with heavy machine-guns and rocket-propelled grenades in the Cahar Cineh district of the southern Uruzgan province, the statement said. There were no coalition casualties.

Three insurgents also were captured for questioning, the statement said.
End



 
Articles found 30 August 2006

Nato allies slow to back UK in Afghanistan
By Our International Staff  August 30 2006 18:59
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/b100648c-384d-11db-ae2c-0000779e2340.html

Britain’s Nato allies are baulking at providing reinforcements for UK troops deployed as peacekeepers in Afghanistan’s southern Helmand province because of the intensity of the fighting in the lawless region.

A British ministry of defence official said on Wednesday the UK had no need of further troops “at the moment”, neither has any formal request been made. But Nato officials continue to study whether deployments in Afghanistan need to be increased.

Germany and the Netherlands may only redeploy soldiers from elsewhere in Afghanistan on an ad hoc basis. The two countries, which maintain 2,700 and 1,400 troops in Afghanistan respectively, have concerns about dispatching troops to areas such as Helmand, where the strength of a Taliban-led insurgency has surprised military planners.

Eight British soldiers have been killed in combat in Afghanistan this month, in what Lieutenant General David Richards, commander of the Nato force, calls the worst sustained fighting the British army has faced since the Korean war during 1950-53.

On Wednesday British officials added that poppy cultivation in Helmand and other turbulent regions would take the Afghan opium crop to a new high, according to United Nations figures expected shortly. The officials also called for Pakistan to “do more” to act against the Taliban leadership in the Pakistani city of Quetta, across the border from Afghanistan.
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Defence minister visits troops in Kandahar
Updated Tue. Aug. 29 2006 11:21 PM ET CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060813/oconnor_afghanistan_060829/20060829?hub=Canada

Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor is in southern Afghanistan today meeting with Canadian troops for the first leg of a trip to the region.

O'Connor's flight touched down at the Kandahar Airfield at about 10 a.m. local time Tuesday. Military brass was there to greet him.

The defence minister, who will later visit Kabul and Pakistan, said he is trying to get "three perspectives" during his trip.

"One is what's happening on the ground here. The other in Kabul for what's happening on the national level, and then I'm going to Pakistan for the international perspective," O'Connor said before sitting down for lunch with military leaders.

His visit comes as Parliament is about to resume, and the Conservative government faces tough questions about the duration of the mission, and mounting casualties.
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The bribe to exit Pakistan: 15 cents
By David Montero | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0830/p05s01-wosc.html

Afghanistan, Pakistan agreed last week to joint patrols of their border, but official crossings remain lax.

CHAMAN, PAKISTAN – For a little more than the price of tea, Abdul Razzak, a trader, says he crosses illegally from Pakistan into Afghanistan every day.
Mr. Razzak, who stood recently near the border, preparing to cross, has no passport or identification documents of any kind. But that doesn't matter: For only 10 rupees (about 15 cents), he bribes the border security forces to let him through. Sometimes he pays 20.

"I bargain for the price. All of these people," he says, indicating the throngs of pedestrians moving toward the border check post, "when crossing the border, don't have documents. They're all paying the Frontier Constabulary [the border security forces]."

Chaman, the main border crossing into Kandahar 60 miles away, is supposed to be a model of border security, symbolizing Pakistan's commitment to containing the Taliban surge. Instead, security measures are breached for mere pennies, bolstering the accusation that Taliban fighters based in Pakistan are infiltrating the volatile Afghan provinces of Kandahar and Helmand.

That accusation was most recently leveled by Gen. John Abizaid, commander of the US Central Command. He told reporters at Bagram air base that militants are using Pakistan as a base from which to infiltrate into Afghanistan. He was quick to add, however, that he did not believe the Pakistani government is conspiring with them.

"I think that Pakistan has done an awful lot in going after Al Qaeda and it's important that they don't let the Taliban groups be organized on the Pakistani side of the border," he told reporters.
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Bomb attacks kill three in southern Afghanistan
AP , KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN Wednesday, Aug 30, 2006,Page 5
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2006/08/30/2003325481

A suicide bomber in a car struck a NATO-Afghan military convoy yesterday, killing one civilian and wounding two others, a day after a bomb at a market left 21 civilians dead and 43 wounded, officials said.

A remote controlled bomb in Helmand Province also killed two police on patrol yesterday, an official said.

Yesterday's suicide bomber hit the military convoy on the main road linking Kandahar with the city's airport, said Colonel Sher Shah, who was in the convoy. No NATO soldiers were wounded.

A civilian driving near the convoy died in the blast, while another civilian and an Afghan soldier were wounded, Shah said. The bodies of the civilian and the bomber laid on the road.

The Taliban have increased suicide attacks this year, borrowing tactics from militants in Iraq. The escalation in the Taliban insurgency has stoked bitter fighting.

A remote-controlled bomb hit a police vehicle on patrol in Grieshk district of Helmand Province killing two officers, said Ghulam Muhiddin, the Helmand governor's spokesman.

He blamed the Taliban.

Another remote-controlled bomb went off in east Kabul shortly after a NATO vehicle patrol drove past, but there were no casualties, said Interior Ministry spokesman Yousef Stanezai.

Meanwhile, Qari Yousaf Ahmadi, who claims to speak for the Taliban, said Monday's attack was conducted with a remote-controlled bomb, and that it targeted a former Lashkar Gah police chief because he had served under the pro-Communist government during the Soviet occupation of the 1980s.
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ADB pours loan to expand Afghanistan's mobile network
August 30, 2006  People's Daily Online       
http://english.people.com.cn/200608/30/eng20060830_297894.html

Asian Development Bank (ADB) Tuesday lent 35 million U.S. dollars to Roshan, a leading Afghan mobile phone operator, to finance its network expansion, as that more Afghans can use cellphones.

An agreement was signed between the two sides during a ceremony held here, at which three other multilateral institutions and commercial banks also announced a total loan of 30 million U.S. dollars to Roshan.

The loan will significantly enhance the network coverage for Afghanistan, officials and businessmen at the ceremony said.

ADB, based in Manila, the Philippine capital, defines its mission as to help Asian and the Pacific countries reduce poverty, and improve their citizens' life.

Roshan, established in Jan. 2003, has 850 thousand subscribers in this country with a population of about 24 million.

The company, which is currently present in over 150 major cities and towns throughout Afghanistan, will be expanding the service to another 70 or more towns and cities after receiving the loan.

At present, there are three cellphone operators in Afghanistan, providing services to around 1.5 million customers.

Mobile phone services have improved greatly in this war-weary country in the past five years after the Taliban regime's collapse in late 2001.

During the extremist regime, few people could use cellphones and citizens only had access to very old-fashioned telephones.
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Clash leaves 2 militants dead, wounds 3 in Afghanistan
August 30, 2006 People's Daily Online       
http://english.people.com.cn/200608/30/eng20060830_298179.html

A clash between Taliban-linked militants and Afghan police in Afghanistan's southern Ghazni province claimed the lives of two suspected insurgents and wounded three others, provincial police chief Tafsil Khan Khogyani said Wednesday.

"The incident took place in Mehman Qala village of Andar district when the insurgents raided a police checkpoint Tuesday. The police returned fire, killing two rebels on the spot and wounded three others," Khogyani told Xinhua.

There were no casualties on the police side.

Police seized three motorbikes from the militants, he added.

Meanwhile, Qari Yusuf Ahmadi, who claims to speak for the Taliban, rejected Khogyani's claim, saying two policemen were killed in the firefight.

Taliban-led insurgency has claimed the lives of more then 1,900 people since January this year in Afghanistan.

Source: Xinhua
End

PRODI: WE CANNOT ABANDON AFGHANISTAN
292031 AGO 06 (AGI) - Telese Terme (Bn), Aug. 29
http://www.agi.it/english/news.pl?doc=200608292031-1258-RT1-CRO-0-NF82&page=0&id=agionline-eng.italyonline

"The Italian contingent cannot abandon Afghanistan. We have taken pledges and there are not the conditions to diminish or rise them", prime minister Romano Prodi said at the Udeur party event in Telese Terme today. He replied to Clemente Mastella the day after the minister proposed a possible reduction of the Italian contingent in Afghanistan.
End

AFGHANISTAN: UNESCO helps officials to raise awareness on HIV/AIDS
30 Aug 2006 14:57:44 GMT Source: IRIN
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/ea4c607aa631ddc0e6bde135be38508b.htm

KABUL, 30 August (IRIN) - A two-day United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) workshop designed to help raise students' awareness of HIV/AIDS has been held in Kabul.

Roxanna Shapour, a UNESCO public information officer in Kabul, the Afghan capital, said the workshop aimed to revise the teacher training manual so it provided the tools needed to raise students' awareness about the HIV/AIDS epidemic and improve preventive education.

More than 20 officials from the Afghan Ministry of Education, Kabul Education University representatives and teachers attended the event.

There are 58 registered cases of HIV in Afghanistan, but health officials believe the real number is much higher.

Dr Shokrullah Waheedi, head of preventive medicine in the Ministry of Public Health (MoPH), said a countrywide survey of the virus had not been conducted and it was spreading due to a lack of awareness.
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Afghanistan security will improve, says O'Connor
Updated Wed. Aug. 30 2006 9:29 AM ET Canadian Press
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060813/afghanistan_oconnor_060830/20060830?hub=Canada

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor predicts the security situation in Afghanistan will improve over the next year.

The retired general also says public support for the mission in Afghanistan remains steadfast, despite recent polls that say support is lagging.

He says the public is getting only part of the story of what Canada is doing in southern Afghanistan because the recent upswing in violence is dominating headlines.

He says Canadians must remember the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States, which also killed Canadians, were launched from Afghanistan.

O'Connor is in Kandahar on a visit to assess the situation and help give troops a morale boost.
More on link



 
O'Connor lands amid attacks in Kandahar
Donald McArthur, CanWest News Service. 30 Aug 06
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=ec355a40-7809-40a7-aa14-15feadfdd810

Attacks on Canadians bookended the first day of Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor's latest visit to southern Afghanistan as one soldier -- a mechanic -- complained his crew was struggling to keep battered vehicles on the road with "bubble gum and Band-Aids."  Just hours before Mr. O'Connor came down the stairs of a Hercules aircraft, outfitted in desert fatigues and boots, a suicide bomber targeted a Canadian convoy near Kandahar, killing two civilians and injuring another. No soldiers were injured but a logistics vehicle was damaged in the blast . . . .

SPINNING THE WHEELS ON AFGHANISTAN
Ceri Au, maisonneuve.org, 30 Aug 06
http://maisonneuve.org/index.php?&page_id=12&article_id=2379

Defense Minister Gordon O’Connor’s surprise visit to southern Afghanistan yesterday certainly grabbed the Big Seven’s attention. Arriving at the end of the bloodiest month for Canadian soldiers in the region since troops were first deployed back in 2003, the minister tried to put a positive spin on an otherwise grisly news cycle for the military. The PR move, however, was undermined somewhat when hours before O’Connor touched down, a Canadian convoy was targeted by a suicide bomber who ended up killing two civilians . . . .



Allies balk at more troops for Afghanistan
Financial Times, 30 Aug 06
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/b100648c-384d-11db-ae2c-0000779e2340.html

Britain’s Nato allies are baulking at providing reinforcements for UK troops deployed as peacekeepers in Afghanistan’s southern Helmand province because of the intensity of the fighting in the lawless region.  A British ministry of defence official said on Wednesday the UK had no need of further troops “at the moment”, neither has any formal request been made. But Nato officials continue to study whether deployments in Afghanistan need to be increased . . . .

Debate on additional Bundeswehr deployment to South Afghanistan
German News (English Version), 28 Aug 06
http://www.germnews.de/archive/dn/2006/08/28.html#5

The Bundeswehr forces in Afghanistan are facing a possible additional deployment: according to sources for the German TV station ARD, the international protective forces, ISAF, are considering a possible move of German soldiers to include the troubled Southern Afghanistan region. With that move, the Bundeswehr faces possible involvement in the bloody fighting between ISAF soldiers and the strengthened Taliban rebels. . . . .



Peril British troops face in Afghanistan 'was underplayed'
Brian Whitaker, The Guardian, 31 Aug 06
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1861430,00.html

Britons were probably not aware of the daunting problems ahead when the government sent additional troops to Afghanistan this year, the Ministry of Defence conceded yesterday. "The difficulty was perhaps not communicated properly," a senior defence official told journalists . . . .

MoD revises Reid’s Afghan claim
Michael Stettle, The Herald (UK), 31 Aug 06
http://www.theherald.co.uk/politics/69119.html

John Reid, the former Defence Secretary, "probably insufficiently communicated" the level of threat to British troops in their mission in the highly-volatile Helmand province of southern Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence admitted last night.  Twenty-one British soldiers have been killed in Afghan-istan - six of them in the last month. Taliban losses have been put at "several hundred" . . . .

Public 'not told of real risk to troops in Afghanistan'
Graeme Wilson, Telegraph, 31 Aug 06
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/08/31/nreid31.xml

John Reid failed to give the public enough warning of the dangers British troops would face in Afghanistan, a senior Ministry of Defence official claimed yesterday.  In an unusually candid assessment, the official conceded that the former Defence Secretary had "insufficiently communicated" the risks soldiers would face in the lawless Helmand Province . . . .

Afghan danger deliberately played down, official claims
James Kirkup, The Scotsman, 31 Aug 06
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1284672006

MINISTERS failed to fully inform the public about the dangers facing British troops before sending them to Afghanistan, a senior defence official said yesterday.  In an echo of the controversy over the decision to invade Iraq, the official even suggested that John Reid, then the defence secretary, omitted a crucial caveat about the dangers when talking about the mission before it began . . . .



NATO in Afghanistan: A Test of the Transatlantic Alliance
Paul Gallis, Congressional Research Service, 22 Aug 06
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL33627.pdf

(....)

Although the allies agree on ISAF’s mission, they differ on how to accomplish
it. Some allies do not want their forces to engage in combat operations. None wants
to engage directly in destruction of poppy fields in countering the drug trade; how to
support the Afghan government in this task — largely through training the police —
is proving to be a difficult undertaking. In the wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal and
criticism of U.S. practices at Guantanamo, the allies are insisting on close
observation of international law in dealing with prisoners taken in Afghanistan . . . .



Obscure Neo-Taliban Group Claims to Join Afghan Insurgency
Amin Tarzai, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 30 Aug 06
http://www.afgha.com/?q=en/node/966

A statement in the name of the Council of the Secret Army says it has joined forces with Hizb-e Islami, which is led by renegade former Afghan Prime Minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Peshawar-based Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) reported on August 28. "Until now we have carried out our activities using the name Secret Army...[but taking] into account the current situation in our country, we deemed it beneficial to join Hizb-e Islami," the statement noted. "We expect others to follow our example and join Hizb-e Islami to prevent division in the ranks of the mujahedin," the statement added, without naming the "others." . . . .

Foreign fighters join Taliban
TV New Zealand, 31 Aug 06
http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/411319/824345

Foreign fighters are starting to appear among Taliban forces fighting British troops in southern Afghanistan, a senior British official said on Wednesday.  The official also said that neighbouring Pakistan could do more to disrupt the activities of the Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan until ousted by US-led forces in late 2001 . . . .

Taliban seek ‘huge compensation’ for North Waziristan peace deal
Iqbal Khattak, Pakistan Daily Times, 30 Aug 06
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\08\30\story_30-8-2006_pg7_24

PESHAWAR: Negotiations between Taliban leaders and a tribal jirga in North Waziristan have reached an impasse over the formers demand for a “huge compensation”, sources told Daily Times on Tuesday. “The peace talks are hostage to the issue of compensation, which militants say the government should pay them for damages suffered in military operations,” said the sources. They said the ceasefire was extended because of “differences” between Taliban commanders and jirga members over the issue. “The sum they are demanding is quite large. It is in billions,” they added. Around Rs 50 million was paid to key Taliban commanders in South Waziristan in 2004 after they surrendered following a peace deal with the government, but the Taliban in North Waziristan, according to the sources, are demanding Rs 200 million as compensation. “We are trying to convince the Taliban commanders to reconsider their demand. We know about the damages, but the militants are trying to exploit the situation,” a senior jirga member told Daily Times over the telephone from Miranshah. He said the government saw the militants’ demand as “beyond justifiable”.

 
Articles found 31 August 2006

Home, with healing parts and heavier hearts
CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD
http://www.theglobeandmail.com//servlet/story/LAC.20060831.BLATCHFORD31/TPStory/Front

EDMONTON -- Yesterday came the moment that the magnificent Ian Hope was most dreading, when he would be face to face with his wounded men, in their wheelchairs and on their crutches and with their healing broken parts and hearts, and see the holes in the ranks where once, some of the 19 Canadian soldiers who have been killed in Afghanistan this year would have stood, but are now gone forever.

The moment arrived at the Edmonton Garrison at a welcome home and medals parade for the just-returned soldiers of the 1st Battalion Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, the regiment whose soldiers were the core of the battle group there and bore the brunt of the casualties until they were replaced during August by the Royal Canadian Regiment.

For so long as young warriors have gone into battle, the commanders who send them there have wrestled with the beast that is at its healthiest responsibility and at its most gnawing guilt.

A student of military history, Lieutenant-Colonel Hope knew well what was coming.

It was not long ago that his Regimental Sergeant Major, Randy Northrup, received an e-mail from one of those badly injured in March, Master Corporal Mike Loewen, Lt.-Col. Hope's first crew commander.

MCpl. Loewen wrote that for all that he had been practising with his shattered elbow, he feared the only kind of salute he would be able to muster might land him in jail because it was pretty much indistinguishable from an awkward flip of the finger.

"Tell him," Lt.-Col. Hope said to the RSM, "I don't care what he musters, I'll be honoured to take his salute."

And thus did the CO and the men, each wanting to make things easier for the other, manage with grace and humour the day that marks the end of their exhausting and life-changing time in that

faraway land and which, after a

period of leave, soon will see many of them move on to new jobs or new postings across Canada.

As Lt.-Col. Hope, who now has handed over the regiment to incoming CO Lt.-Col. Dave Anderson, remembered yesterday in his farewell speech, that seminal tour -- seven months and 1,500,000 kilometres long at a cost of 19 dead and 75 wounded -- by its end saw the young troops put in three months of the most ferocious and sustained combat Canadians have seen since the Korean War.

These soldiers won 100 gun battles; they were beset by improvised explosive devices and suicide bombers at every turn; they literally rode to the rescue of British paratroopers and stranded U.S. Army forces; they made it sufficiently safe that Dutch troops could make their way to Uruzghan Province without taking a hit.

On this, the last time they will ever be together in their desert camouflage, not intact but as close to that as is possible now, the occasion was solemn and joyful, sweet and bitter, the way life at its furthest edges is always.

The regiment's gorgeous Colonel-in-Chief, 82-year-old Lady Patricia herself, flew from England to present some medals, meet the injured and tell them all how proud she is of them. The 1PPCLI colours, which Lt.-Col. Hope took to Kandahar against pointed suggestions he leave them at home, were proudly marched in. The wounded struggled to rise from their wheelchairs. Babies squawked, young wives and family members took pictures.

On the faces of the soldiers, skinny from weeks at a stretch of baking sun and hard rations and the great appetite-suppressants that are adrenalin and fear, was a look civilians might recognize.

Most of us have seen a version of it during that curious lull on Christmas morning, when the presents under the tree all have been opened and youngsters realize the grand adventure is suddenly over, and the sensitive ones struggle to hide from their parents the disappointment, if there is any, and the relief, if there is any, and the funny loneliness which is so often present.

So the boys got their medals, the South-West Asia Service Medal, which is a beauty, and gave various salutes (royal, regimental, general), and listened to the speeches. I expect that aside from Lady Patricia's remarks, which meant a great deal to these men and women who are such saps for tradition, two other speeches mattered most.

The informal one came when the ceremonies were over, when Chief of the Defence Staff Rick Hillier gathered them around in the middle of the parade square, and spoke to them privately, away from reporters' ears. His remarks always count because he is a Newfoundlander with the unique gift for plain talk that stamps that group of Canadians, and because it is under his leadership that the Canadian Forces have entered a new era.

The formal one was the address from Lt.-Col. Hope.

He matters because he led from the front, if not the front lines only because there are none of these in an insurgency. He matters because even when he probably should not have been in the thick of it, in the thick of it he was. And though he is not a Newfoundlander, he talks so bluntly he might as well be.

He thanked them for what they accomplished, for the "three months of hard pounding, hard fighting" that was their lot in the second half of the tour. He exhorted them not to fall victims, either to the political winds that swirl about the Afghanistan mission or to their memories, but to make the choice to become better citizens because of what they saw and learned. He spoke of seeing their wounded, and some of the families of the dead (including Corporal Tony Boneca's dad, who was enveloped by the members of his dead son's platoon and taken into all that warmth), then said, "The cost has been great, and you need to know why it happened," and urged anyone with questions to e-mail him.

He told them to stay in touch with one another, asked them to talk everywhere they go in order to "educate every single person we can of the importance to Canada of this fight."

He went to bed the night before, he said, with no words written, and woke up at 2:16 yesterday morning, to the alarm "that is not an alarm that anyone else can hear or see," but that always wakes him now.

From a Dolby-sound, Technicolor dream, he wakes, and woke yesterday, to the steady beat of the 25 mm cannon of the light armoured vehicle, the justly famous LAV.

"Boom-boom-boom," Lt.-Col. Hope said. "Boom-boom-boom." He said it in the way that anyone whose ears have ever welcomed the rolling thunder of the cannon would know in an instant.

He wakes, and woke yesterday, to the "zip-zip-zip of the .762 guns," to the tremendous boom of rocket-propelled grenades, to vivid colours and to, "thank God, the soft dark green of the LAV."

"I know you have it too," he told his soldiers. "The dream was better last night. It woke me up to find some words . . . dreams fade. The sounds will fade."

With his wife Karen and two youngsters, Ian Hope moves on to serve as a Canadian liaison officer to U.S. Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Fla., where perhaps the ocean, the muffled roar of moving tides, will fill his head.

[email protected]
End

Toys for Afghan children
Aug, 30 2006 - 6:50 AM
http://www.630ched.com/news/news_local.cfm?cat=7428545912&rem=46416&red=80154523aPBIny&wids=410&gi=1&gm=news_local.cfm

EDMONTON/630 CHED - Employees of an Edmonton company want to build wooden toys to ship to Afghanistan in memory of Canadian soldiers killed over there.
The idea was hatched earlier this month after the death of Master Corporal Raymond Arndt, a reservist with the Loyal Edmonton Regiment. Artistic Stairs service manager Trevor Klein saw Shop Foreman Chuck Howe making a wooden cross for Arndt.

Klein already had permission to make wooden toys out of shop leftovers and now he has bigger plans.

With full support of Artristic Stairs management and the blessing of Ray Arndt's family, Klein and Howe hope to make wooden toys and dolls for children in Afghanistan to preserve the memories of our fallen troops. Each toy will be branded with a Canadian flag and a heart. The military will ship them and you can help by making a donation to buy additional supplies or by making clothing for the wooden dolls.

You can contact Artistic Stairs at 489-5591 or stop by at 17320 - 108th Avenue.
End


Defence minister promises to boost Afghan forces
Updated Thu. Aug. 31 2006 8:39 AM ET CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060813/afghan_oconnor_060831/20060831?hub=TopStories

Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor said Thursday that Canada needs to do more to help rebuild Afghanistan's army and police, and the federal government is prepared to put more military equipment into their hands.

"This contribution will help the Afghan government take control of their own security," said O'Connor, on the last day of his two-day visit with Canadian forces in Kandahar.

He also said Ottawa intends to increase its contribution to the provincial reconstruction team in Kandahar in an effort to win over hearts and minds in the war-ravaged region.

"Canada can do more," said the defence minister.

"I've asked (the army) to develop a plan to increase Canada's contribution to the provincial reconstruction team."

O'Connor said the army will draft recommendations for both plans, and he didn't specify Thursday whether the boost would be in the form of troops, money, or both.

He also didn't elaborate on exactly what kind of military equipment would be given to Afghan forces.

O'Connor's visit comes amid a security situation in southern Afghanistan that has rapidly deteriorated. Eight Canadian soldiers have died in August alone. Twenty-eight Canadian soldiers have died since 2002.
More on  link

Afghanistan mission must be questioned
The News-Record Wednesday August 30, 2006
http://www.clintonnewsrecord.com/story.php?id=251565

Clinton News-Record — As a general rule of thumb, it's never a good idea for a student to question a music teacher when it comes to reading music.
Yet, and sadly too often, the same tact is often taken by duly elected politicians when it is time to face questions they'd rather not answer.
Take, for instance, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's ongoing refusal to open up the issue of Canada's role in Afghanistan to proper debate in the House of Commons.
Instead, Harper seems to be employing the tactics honed by leaders before him by either accusing or insinuating those who question the effort of having less than noble intentions.
Fortunately, Harper has not gone so far as U.S. President George Bush Jr. Specifically, he is not repeatedly questioning the character of those who question the Afghanistan mission. Perhaps more tellingly though, he is not addressing the issue either.
Recent media reports reveal the Prime Minister's Office has received thousands of letters from ordinary Canadians, pleading for an end to Canada's involvement in Afghanistan. Given the fact most of those are Canadians acting on their own, and are not being organized by any one lobbying group, it is easy to discern the public is less than keen on the seemingly never-ending Afghanistan mission.
It's true Canada did the right thing when it stepped up following the terrorist-driven attacks on the eastern U.S. seaboard on Sept. 11, 2001. But, times have changed. It is interesting to note, for example, that the U.S. has called off its search for Osama Bin Laden.
As Canadian servicemen and women continue to fight, with what is often called inadequate equipment, and some of them are killed in the line of duty, it is important and necessary for the country's leaders to justify why Canadians are there in the first place.
Anything less pays a disservice to the men and women in uniform who were ostensibly sent there on a peacebuilding mission but are finding themselves in ever increasingly hostile environment.
In the interim, Canada is continuing in a capacity that has drastically changed since it first landed on Afghanistan’s soil five years ago.
Simply put, Canada, with approximately 30 million people in a vast country that is the world’s second largest, does not have the resources -- or the will -- to engage in an never-ending war with terrorists.
As history has shown, Afghanistan is not inclined to become a democracy, and democracy, as a rule, cannot be forced upon a country.
End

Scientist studies soldiers 'outside the wire'
Updated Sun. Aug. 27 2006 CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060826/military_anthropologist_060827/20060827?hub=QPeriod

It's important for Canadians to know what our soldiers are going through in Afghanistan, says a University of Calgary anthropologist who just finished spending three months with Canadians in a combat platoon.

News reports, although they present accounts of specific battles or dramatic events, can't depict what life is like for a soldier in a war theatre, Dr. Anne Irwin told CTV's Question Period in Montreal on Saturday.
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Afghanistan's "Devil's Garden" Blooms Again
Unexploded land mines, munitions cleared from former battlefield
30 August 2006 By Lea Terhune Washington File Staff Writer
http://usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/display.html?p=washfile-english&y=2006&m=August&x=20060830164954mlenuhret0.8767359

Washington – It was called “The Devil’s Garden.” Planted with land mines, booby traps and unexploded ordnance, leftovers from fierce battles that raged there for more than two decades, the fertile lands around Bagram, Afghanistan, were considered the most dangerous minefields in the world. A walk through it could cost a life or limb.

Now, after five years of painstaking work by HALO Trust, thousands of the deadly weapons have been cleared from a significant stretch of land, once a section of the front line between Northern Alliance and Taliban forces.

According to Cameron Inber, Central Asia desk officer for HALO Trust, 4.9 million square meters of Bagram Junction have been made safe. He told the Washington File that 9,140 mines and 12,180 pieces of unexploded ordnance and other explosive remnants of war have been removed from the land.

That makes at least part of the Shomali Valley, famous for its vineyards, safe to farm. But there is more work to do. While the Bagram clearance is an important success, “This isn’t the end of mine clearances,” Inber said. “We are still talking about another decade at current levels of funding.”
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U.S. officials grapple with worsening narcotics trade in Afghanistan
By Philip Dine Wed, Aug. 30, 2006 St. Louis Post-Dispatch
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/politics/15400252.htm

WASHINGTON - The illicit Afghan narcotics trade is taking a sharp turn for the worse despite major efforts by U.S. and Afghan forces over the past year, continuing to fuel an insurgency that is increasingly killing American soldiers and destabilizing the country.

In light of dramatic figures expected to be announced in Saturday by the United Nations, U.S. officials plan a shift in policy including getting tougher with regional Afghan officials who fail to meet new goals for destroying poppy fields in their areas, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch has learned.

The United States could urge that local Afghan officials who don't act aggressively enough be fired, while those who reduce poppy cultivation would get money for economic development. The U.S. action is spurred by concerns that a record of 375,000-400,000 acres might be under cultivation, up from 267,000 acres last year.

And a push is likely in Congress next week for aerial spraying of poppy fields - a highly sensitive matter bitterly opposed by Afghan President Hamid Karzai because it recalls the specter of the Soviet occupation and could spark social unrest among impoverished farmers.

Opium extracted from Afghan poppies is turned into the bulk of the world's heroin supply, with profits helping fund the Taliban resurgence, four years after its U.S.-led overthrow. The tyrannical regime provided a haven for Osama bin Laden to train al-Qaida terrorists and plan the Sept. 11 attacks.
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Terror suspect 'was trapped in Afghanistan after 9/11 attacks' 
AP Australia Published: 08/31/2006 12:00 AM (UAE)
http://www.gulfnews.com/world/Australia/10063882.html 

Canberra: The first suspect to have his movements restricted under tough new Australian counterterrorism laws said he had trained with the Taliban out of curiosity, but had been trapped in Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

In an exclusive interview broadcast yesterday, Joseph Thomas, nicknamed "Jihad Jack" by Australian media, told Seven Network TV that curiosity led him to Afghanistan, where he had seven months of weapons training before the attacks.

"It was a Taliban training camp. That was where the Taliban took soldiers to fight the Northern Alliance," said Thomas, 33.

By the time of the attacks he'd "had enough," he said.

"I was trapped and basically stranded," he said.

A Victoria state court in February convicted Thomas of accepting $3,500 and a plane ticket to Australia from an Al Qaida agent in Pakistan, and of having a false passport. He was sentenced to five years in prison.
More on link

Musharraf to visit Afghanistan next week for talks 
Islamabad, Aug 31:
http://www.zeenews.com/znnew/articles.asp?aid=319216&sid=SAS

Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf will travel to Afghanistan next week for talks with his counterpart, Hamid Karzai, an official said.

Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam confirmed Musharraf's trip to Kabul, but refused to go into further details.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are allies of the United states in its war on terror, but Kabul often accuses neighboring Pakistan of not doing enough to prevent the Taliban and other militants from sneaking into Afghanistan.

Pakistan, which used to support the Taliban but switched sides after the Sept 11, 2001, attacks in America, has deployed about 80,000 troops in its tribal regions near the Afghan border and says it is doing everything possible to curb militancy.

Bureau Report
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Taliban Militants Attack Southern Afghanistan Town 
Thursday, August 31, 2006
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,211429,00.html 

KABUL, Afghanistan — Taliban militants attacked a southern town Thursday, sparking intense fighting with Afghan troops that left two insurgents dead, the defense ministry said.

A NATO airstrike pushed back the militants, who used mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns in the morning attack on Naw Zad, in volatile Helmand province, said Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Zahir Azimi.

He said that the fighting between the Taliban and Afghan army troops was "intense."

CountryWatch: Afghanistan

In Zabul province, a suicide attacker plowed his explosives-filled car into a police convoy traveling on the main road, wounding three officers, said Jailan Khan, provincial police chief.

A purported Taliban regional Zabul commander, Mullah Nazir, claimed responsibility for the blast and said the bomber was an Afghan man from Khost province. His claim could not be independently verified.
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Bombs kill civilian, 2 police in Afghanistan
Associated Press
http://www.wilmingtonstar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060830/NEWS/608300467/-1/State

Kandahar, Afghanistan | A suicide bomber in a car struck a NATO-Afghan military convoy Tuesday, killing one civilian and wounding two others, a day after a bomb at a market left 21 civilians dead and 43 wounded, officials said.

The dead civilian was driving near the convoy.

Another bomb, detonated by remote control, killed two police on patrol in Helmand province, an official said.
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Suicide attack wounds three policemen in Afghanistan
AFP August 31, 2006
http://www.metimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20060831-090251-6592r

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan --  A suicide blast in Afghanistan wounded three policemen Thursday while NATO forces reported that they had bombed rebel strongholds after a base was attacked.

Police blamed the suicide attack in the southern province of Zabul on Taliban fighters, who have been waging an increasingly sophisticated insurgency since being driven from government in late 2001.

The attacker rammed his vehicle into a police convoy on the highway linking the capital Kabul and the main southern city of Kandahar, provincial police said.

"The initial reports we have is three police were wounded after a suicide attacker hit his explosives-laden car into an Afghan police convoy," deputy provincial police chief Ghulam Jailani Khan said.
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'Try not to kill people. You will feel better'
Kandahar doctor dispenses medicine along with a dose of the surreal, GRAEME SMITH reports
GRAEME SMITH From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060830.wafghanclinic30/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — Abdul Rahim Halimyar, 48, runs the only psychology clinic in Kandahar. He sits in a barren room with concrete walls and listens to the noises wafting up from the ancient bazaar at the heart of the city.

He hears terrible stories from the people who climb the narrow staircase to his office. The market is quieter these days, as people flee the fighting in southern Afghanistan, and nearly every visitor to Dr. Halimyar's clinic is suffering the effects of the renewed war.

"Day by day, it gets worse," he says.

Many of his visitors say they don't understand why they feel anxious or depressed. But the reasons emerge as they describe how their lives have been destroyed by this year's rising insurgency: dead relatives, smashed homes, harrowing escapes. Some patients would be unstable at the best of times, he says, but in a city rife with threats, conspiracies and rumours of violence, it's hard to distinguish sensible caution from paranoia.
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What happens to the wounded when they come home?
On the long road to recovery
KATHERINE HARDING From Saturday's Globe and Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060826.wxsoldiers26/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

EDMONTON — While the country has stopped to mourn 27 young Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan, the sacrifices of dozens more quietly continue at home, as they slowly recover from their battle wounds.

Edmonton has emerged as a key hub for treating the returning wounded: The University of Alberta and Glenrose Rehabilitation hospitals are becoming this country's version of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the U.S. military hospital that treats hundreds of soldiers.

A small army of military and civilian medical staff in Edmonton have had to come to terms with this new reality very quickly due to the jump in battlefield casualties since Canada's combat duties increased earlier this year.

Doctors say those who return on stretchers are also coming back with devastating head injuries and damaged or lost limbs -- wounds more severe than military medical staff have seen in previous conflicts. Modern body armour is saving the lives of soldiers who would have died in battles of yesteryear.
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Fallen Sask. soldier remembered as being passionate about the work he did
Canadian Press, via Macleans, 31 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/ls9zv

Cpl. David Braun was remembered Thursday as a passionate soldier with a strongly held view that the Canadian military should do its part to promote stability abroad.  Braun was killed in Afghanistan last week when the convoy he was travelling in was hit by a suicide bomber. Based in Shilo, Man., the 27-year-old had been with the military for four years, but had been in Afghanistan for less than a month . . . .



Pakistan joins ISAF in Afghanistan
Hamid Mir, canadafreepress.com, 31 Aug 06
http://www.canadafreepress.com/2006/mir083106.htm

The USA, UK and Canada have finally convinced Pakistan to send its Army officers to Afghanistan for a "well coordinated war against terror" in the region. For the first time after 9/11, the Pakistan Army will join International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. The Pakistan Army will provide its officers to be deployed in ISAF Headquarters in Kabul. They will act as liason officers and will also coordinate their actions with the Afghan National Army. This significant development was revealed to me by a senior ISAF Commander in Kabul, Brigadier General N.A.W. Pope who is from the UK. He said that the number and time for the deployment of Pakistan Army officers in the ISAF Headquarters is not yet confirmed . . . .

Tripartite Commission of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Coalition agrees on Patrols
Pakistan Times, 24 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/mjevl

The Tripartite Commission, composed of senior military and diplomatic representatives from Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Coalition Forces in Afghanistan, and the NATO International Security Assistance Force, held its 18th meeting here on Wednesday.  Delegates included Gen. Ahsan Saleem Hayat, Vice Chief of Army Staff of the Pakistan Army; Gen. Bismullah Khan Mohammedi, Chief of Staff of the Afghan National Army; Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, commander of Combined Forces Command Afghanistan; and Lt. Gen. David Richards, commander of NATO-ISAF.  The 18th meeting consisted of several briefings to update the participants on issues of mutual interest.  In order to co-ordinate the movements along the border areas, the participants discussed and agreed to a proposal to conduct coordinated patrols by the Afghan National Army, Pakistan Army, Coalition Forces and NATO-ISAF forces based in Afghanistan, on their respective sides of the border, simultaneously . . . .



NATO-ISAF aircraft crash
ISAF News Release #2006-120, 31 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/s3o4g

An ISAF military plane crashed at around 7 a.m. after a distress call but no reported enemy action. The pilot was found dead at the crash site. A joint rescue and recovery operation was launched almost immediately and continues, in coordination with Combined Forces Command, Afghanistan (CFC-A). On receiving news of the incident Canadian Major General Angus Watt, head of ISAF air operations said, "Our pilots are doing a magnificent job providing crucial support for ISAF's ground forces. This is a tragic loss and we extend our deepest sympathies and condolences to the family, friends and loved ones of the pilot. However, his sacrifice was not in vain and we all take comfort in knowing he died in support of a noble cause. We will continue with the mission undeterred. On behalf of COMISAF I would also like to extend ISAF's deepest thanks to CFC (A) for the outstanding support that they provided for the search and rescue operation."  The Netherlands have confirmed the aircraft as a Dutch F16. The location of the crash site is being withheld for security reasons.  Further details, including results of the investigation, will be released by the nation when they are available.

Dutch pilot killed in F-16 crash in Afghanistan
Xinhua (China), 1 Sept 06
http://tinyurl.com/qmaf2

A Dutch F-16 fighter plane of ISAF crashed on Thursday in Afghanistan, killing the pilot, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.  The Netherlands confirmed the aircraft is a Dutch F16, it said, adding the location of the crash site is being withheld for security reasons.  The plane crashed at around 7:00 a.m. (0230 GMT) after a distress call but no reported enemy action, the statement said, adding the pilot was found dead at the crash site . . . .

Dutch F-16 crash in Afghanistan
BBC Online, 31 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/rexnb

A Dutch F-16 fighter pilot has died after his plane crashed in southern Afghanistan, officials say. They said that the plane was flying at a "great height" when the accident occurred, which meant that it was unlikely that it was shot down . . . .



Afghan Schools in Peril
Hafizullah Gardesh, Institute for War and Peace Reporting, 16 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/oehwk

Extremists are increasingly targeting schools in Afghanistan, threatening the education of thousands of children who only recently returned to the classroom following the fall of the Taleban. More than 100 schools have been set ablaze in recent months and dozens of others closed because of bombs and threats, according to the Afghan education ministry. Teachers have been killed and UNICEF claims that six children have died. Schools for girls have been hit particularly hard . . . .



ISAF helps jumpstart school construction in the west
ISAF News Release #2006-119, 30 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/rzgb3

ISAF's Civil Military Cooperation personnel from the Italian-led Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Herat earlier this month participated in a "first stone ceremony" to begin the construction of a female school in the Jebrail village of Injil District.  The project, developed by the PRT, is part of a wider initiative of school construction stemming from the Educational Department of Herat Province . . . .



New NATO Senior Civilian Representative in Afghanistan
NATO News Release #2006(098), 24 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/ofc8g

The NATO Secretary General, Mr. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, is pleased to announce the appointment of Ambassador Daan Everts of the Netherlands to the position of NATO Senior Civilian Representative in Afghanistan.  Ambassador Everts (. . . . ) has a long and distinguished career in the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, including senior positions as Head of the European Community Monitoring Mission for the former Yugoslavia, Head of the OSCE Tirana Office in Albania, and Head of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo . . . .



Taliban tortures two kidnapped Afghan soldiers to death
People's Daily Online (China), 1 Sept 06
http://tinyurl.com/obbm7

Taliban extremists brutally tortured two abducted Afghan soldiers to death in southern Afghanistan, and even called one of the soldiers' comrades to show him the thrilling torture process, coalition forces said Thursday. "The U.S.-led coalition strongly condemns the act as a heinous crime," the forces said in a statement. The two soldiers, an officer and a sergeant from the 203rd Corps of the Afghan National Army, were apparently kidnapped in Qara Bagh district of the southern Ghazni province on Monday, the statement said . . . .



NATO allies balk at reinforcing UK in Afghanistan
Afghan News Net, 31 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/pnv5n

Britain's NATO allies are balking at providing reinforcements for UK troops deployed as peacekeepers in Afghanistan's southern Helmand province because of the intensity of the fighting in the lawless region.  A British ministry of defence official said yesterday that the UK had no need of further troops "at the moment", neither has any formal request been made. But NATO officials are continuing to study whether deployments throughout Afghanistan need to be increased . . . .



Musharraf to visit Afghanistan next week
Hindustan Times, 31 Aug 06
http://tinyurl.com/r8z5h

Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf will travel to Afghanistan next week for talks with his counterpart Hamid Karzai.  However, no dates were given for Musharraf's trip because of security concerns, Dawn said.  "I can only say that this visit is planned, but we cannot release any other details because of security reasons," said an official . . . .
 
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