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Rebuilding Afghanistan, one project at a time

schart28

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Globe and Mail: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061216.wxblatch16/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

The other day, a 34-year-old Canadian reservist named Corporal Shawn Denty got to deliver the medical supplies his friends and colleagues in Oakville, Ont., had collected after reading an e-mail about his distressing visit to Mirwais Hospital, the lone civilian hospital in Kandahar city.

“I was shocked,” Cpl. Denty wrote home. “The dirt, the dust... it was a shambles. There I was, standing in the middle of a Third World country.”

Like many of those who came before him, and surely many of those who will follow, all he wanted was to do something for the poor and suffering of this battle-scarred nation.

Back in Canada, in Manitouwadge, Ont., his fiancée, family and co-workers at Xerox Business Supplies beat the bushes, and came up with about 20 boxes of supplies that are like gold in Kandahar: an EKG heart monitor, green surgical gowns and towels, bed sheets, diapers, syringes, and intravenous cannulas.

Everyone involved, but particularly Cpl. Denty, who had seen the gaping need at the hospital while escorting VIPs on a tour, dreamed of helping Afghans and especially children.Instead, what happened was that his treasure trove was given over to a tiny Afghan National Army medical clinic just outside the giant NATO base at Kandahar Air Field, journalists were invited to bear witness to his soldierly good works, and in the end much of the valuable booty was taken to a warehouse, where despite the locks on the doors it may yet disappear to the black market.

Therein lies the lesson of aid, reconstruction and development in this most battered part of Afghanistan: Good intentions are never enough.

Arguably, nowhere has it been better learned than at the Canadian Provincial Reconstruction Team headquarters on the fringes of Kandahar city, the second-largest in Afghanistan, and birthplace of the Taliban.

By the time the PRT crew from the Royal Canadian Regiment arrived last August, weary Afghans here had been promised the moon by the soldiers, aid agencies and various levels of government that collectively make up what's known as “the international community,” and by their own leaders, and yet had very little to show for it.

And, as in broad strokes the international effort here has been much criticized — most harshly in a recent Senlis Council report which announced that the Taliban was winning the “hearts and minds” campaign because of the world's failure to make the lives of the Afghan people even marginally better — so the Canadian PRT, as it was operated under the auspices of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, came in for its share.

That in turn prompted concerns on the Canadian home front that the supposedly three-pronged nature of Canada's role here had turned into a purely combat operation.

But the PRT team in place now has quietly managed in little more than three months to get 75 projects under way, most of them small and Afghan-run and some remarkably innovative.

They have two assets their predecessors didn't: a dedicated “force protection” team which allows them to move about the sprawling city safely and easily, and a squad of 12 combat engineers who act as managers on larger projects and who can, as deputy PRT commander Major Steve Murray says, “write up a contract on a field message pad and do it so it's enforceable.”

With the engineers at the helm, the team found an Afghan contractor who has been able to repair three of four neglected Afghan National Police substations, start building some of five planned new ones and get to work on improving 14 ANP checkpoints, all aimed at improving security in the city, of course, but also at professionalizing a police force that is widely considered inept at best and corrupt at worst.

A platoon of military police and civilian Canadian police, most from the RCMP, meanwhile, continues to train ANP officers.

But it is from the contingent of 14 CIMIC soldiers — the acronym stands for Civilian-Military Co-operation — that some of the most ingenious small projects, most costing under $5,000 (Canadian) each, have come.

Sergeant Ted Howard burbles with enthusiasm about them, particularly the two being run under the auspices of the Afghan Women's Council.

One of them has war widows sewing custom-made winter jackets for the 400 children who live at the frigid, unheated Abdul Ahad Karzai Orphanage that sits off the much-bombed Highway 4 (the building's windows were shattered by the Nov. 27 suicide bombing which killed Regimental Sergeant-Major Bobby Girouard and Corporal Albert Storm). The PRT, with money from the Department of National Defence-Commander's Contingency Fund, will buy the jackets from the widows.

The other project has imprisoned Afghan women, who in many cases are jailed — with their children — for offences under Islamic laws that would not be crimes in the West, busily making blankets for Afghan security forces; again, the PRT will buy the blankets.

In both instances, penniless women and youngsters benefit.

Similarly, inspired by Mohammed Niaz, a PRT interpreter who lost both legs in a May 24 battle and who is back at work at the compound, the “cobbler program” is about to get started.

A cobbler paid by the PRT will come to Kandahar from Kabul, teach amputees how to make custom dress shoes on equipment bought by the PRT, and the amputees will set up shop at markets at the PRT and perhaps later at the much-bigger air field at Kandahar, with their captive audiences of foreigners looking for bargains.

Well under way, too, is the “canal and culvert cleaning” cash-for-work project.

At the behest of the Kandahar mayor, desperate to get his city moving again and to offer his business taxpayers a functional city service, the PRT hired a local contractor, who in turn is hiring as many as 200 local fighting-age men a day, to clear out six years of garbage. In October, the PRT paid for 1,800 “man days,” last month 2,250 — meaning several thousand unemployed, illiterate men, who “sign” for their wages with a fingerprint, had a little cash in hand and were at least in theory less vulnerable to Taliban recruiters.

“What we're doing,” Major Murray says, “is buying time” for the big aid players, such as the Canadian International Development Agency, which has major dam, bridge and irrigation projects in the offing, but still can't get them going until the security situation in the region improves.

As for Cpl. Denty, he's not giving up. There's a girls' school he wants to help, and even as he heads home this weekend, he'd like to come back to Afghanistan one day.

And Sgt. Howard has a little of the dreamer in him, too. By next spring, he says, he hopes to put flowers along volatile Highway 1, improve the park by the soccer stadium, and plant a few trees.

“Trees in downtown Kandahar,” he says with a smile. “Can you imagine?”

 
It is good to see the PRT get the recognition and for these soldiers to have a chance to tell us what they are doing. Keep up the good work !
 
Her is an article from today’s (18 Dec 06) Globe and Mail by Christie Blatchford (reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act) which points out that the Canadian PRT is doing the right thing – making it possible for Afghans to rebuild their own country in their own way, and doing things right, too – keeping a low profile, letting Afghans see Afghans doing the rebuilding.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061218.wxafghanwoman18/BNStory/Afghanistan/home
Courage and ruin in Afghanistan
Women's director who faces down fear gets a quiet boost from Canadian team

CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD
From Monday's Globe and Mail

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — For a woman whose immediate predecessor was assassinated -- shot four times as she sat in a Kandahar city taxi -- Rona Tareen is remarkably sanguine.

"It's not acceptable to be scared in this country," she said with a grin recently, speaking through an interpreter. "We are too proud." Besides, she said, due to the long hours she puts in, "I'm out early in the morning and home late at night. I don't get time to be afraid. The one thing we are scared of is that we will not be well-educated."

When she took over as the director of women's affairs for all of Kandahar province shortly after the slaying of Safia Ama Jan in September -- a killing that shocked even the violence-inured citizens of Afghanistan's second-largest city -- the office was closed, the small staff scattered to the winds and the government budget of about 100,000 afghani a year (about $2,350) woefully small.

Ms. Tareen, who knew Ms. Ama Jan chiefly as the woman who had taught her from Grade 1 through 12, didn't let these little difficulties get in the way. On virtually her first day on the job, she marched off to the Canadian Provincial Reconstruction Team compound on the outskirts of the city, introduced herself, and soon enough had a quiet partner to help her.

It is PRT funds that are behind a number of Ms. Tareen's programs -- notably, two cash-for-work projects which see war widows and women prisoners being paid to respectively make winter jackets for orphans and bright cotton quilts for the members of the Afghan National Army.

While the PRT team keeps a deliberately low profile, partly out of watchfulness that their arrival too many times at any given location could inadvertently turn it into a target for the Taliban, and partly because the theory behind their mandate is to build Afghan capacity not dependence, Ms. Tareen was quick to credit them for being "the first people who supported those women who had nothing."

One of the first projects they worked on together was a day-long conference on violence against women, a term which has unusually broad application in Afghanistan.

"I would say 50 per cent of women living in Kandahar have experienced violence of some sort," Ms. Tareen said. "The problems of poor security, not being able to go to school or being stopped from going to work [during the Taliban reign] -- all this I consider forms of violence."

Asked where she was and what she did during the repressive Taliban years, the Kandahar-born and raised Ms. Tareen smiled and said, "I was in Kandahar, staying at home, jobless."

Raising an ironic eyebrow, she added wryly, "The one thing I will say is that during the Taliban time, security was not an important issue."

Though she dresses in modest Islamic fashion, she uncovers her face in the presence of Westerners and offers a hearty, enthusiastic handshake to everyone she meets.

Though her work has her in intimate contact with her country's unluckiest citizens, she finds it inspiring. Yesterday, for instance, she was handing out donated clothes freshly laundered by Afghan women who would otherwise be unemployed to the offspring of female prisoners at the Kandahar Central Jail because in this country youngsters often end up behind bars with their mothers.

"When I see the situation of other women," she said, "I forget about my own problems."

Ms. Tareen, who ran for a reserved women's seat in Afghanistan's Wolesi Jirga (the lower house of the National Assembly) in the country's first elections, was leading the race, but mysteriously, five days from the end of the voting, lost to a candidate who was at the bottom.

"This is the thing that makes people hopeless," the interpreter volunteered, referring to Afghanistan's deeply entrenched culture of tribalism and corruption.

But Ms. Tareen appears undeterred and unshaken. She still has no proper office, though one is allegedly under construction, only three staffers -- all men, ironically -- out of its theoretical component of 12 and the sure knowledge that the last woman who did her job was slain after ignoring a Taliban "night letter" warning her she was in danger.

"As Muslims," Ms. Tareen said, her brow serene, "we have no fear from death."

See also: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/53964.0.html Maybe Ms. Blatchford is going to correct the mainstream media’s myopia.  We understand, from the Good Grey Globe’s Arts/TV expert John Doyle, than the effete, ever so trendy Yorkville latté sippers in the chattering classes only want ‘news’ from Afghanistan which supports their Laytonesque world view but, perhaps, the Globe’s editors are made of sterner, firmer stuff.

Kudos to Christie Blatchford for reporting on more than just Canadian casualties.

 
We say that Layton, Duceppe and Co. are playing politics off of our soldiers backs - but at least soldiers can, and have, speak for themselves.  It is people like this that will pay the ultimate price for the policies of the anti-war crowd.  Cheers to Christie Blatchford for giving them a voice and showing that, although not as attention-grabbing as combat, the full spectrum of our operations in Afghanistan is worth reporting.
 
More from Christie Blatchford in today’s (19 Dec 06) Globe and Mail, reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061219.wxblatchford19/BNStory/Front 
Laughter, outrage and a call to battle
Canadians find their way amid the noise of what may be the craziest little battleground on the planet, CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD writes

CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD
From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

PANJWAI, AFGHANISTAN — It is perhaps the craziest little battleground on the planet.

In one corner of it yesterday, Canadian Sergeant Nathan Ronaldson sat cross-legged on a carpet for almost three hours with about 15 grape-growers engaged in the insane negotiations that are the norm in this country -- all theatre, with the actors variously feigning outrage and storming out of the joint, then making jokes and roaring with laughter.

At one point in the series of such meetings, which have stretched over at least a month and show no sign of coming to a halt, Sgt. Ronaldson, a dimpled reservist with the 48th Highlanders in Toronto, actually had his Afghan interpreter carefully translate "greedy prick" into Pashto.

Yesterday, Sgt. Ronaldson was content merely to tell the farmers, who are seeking (and getting, though not as much as they want) compensation from the Canadians for grape vines that were destroyed during the building of a security road, "You let your wallets control your heads." Haji Agha Lalai, a local leader, acidly replied with a brief harangue on the importance of land to Afghans such that there is an ironic saying here that the man who sells his property "has sold his father's bones."

"If you asked me if that was a success," Sgt. Ronaldson, an emergency room nurse by training, said with a wry grin afterward, "I'd say yes. If you asked me what happened, I'd say absolutely nothing."

In another corner, just one small hill and less than a dusty kilometre away, the soldiers of 1st Battalion, the Royal Canadian Regiment Battle Group, were "getting ready to launch back on operations and back to do the business," as Lieutenant-Colonel Omer Lavoie put it at a promotion ceremony, and join other NATO forces in Operation Baaz Tsuka -- in English, Falcon's Summit.

That operation, still somewhat cloaked in secrecy, started last weekend with a leaflet drop aimed at persuading part-time Taliban to lay down their bombs and arms and is optimistically intended to be what the military calls a "less kinetic" mission -- that is, with less fighting.

Thus far, to judge both by the minimal information released yesterday by NATO and by unconfirmed reports from a local source considered reliable, the operation appears to be heading in the right direction.

The source said that NATO and Afghan National Army forces moved almost 10 kilometres southwest yesterday, as far as Kosh Tak, and that women and children were seen leaving the tiny villages in cars and on motorcycles -- the usual indicator of the Taliban preparing to do battle, and that although there was some fighting, the bulk of the insurgents instead made a tactical retreat to a nearby stronghold.

In addition, the source said, nine Taliban commanders meeting two nights ago in a keshmeshkhanu, or grape-drying hut, were killed in a NATO air strike. The report, which couldn't be confirmed, said that four of the Taliban leaders were senior commanders.

Thus, in one corner of the battleground, reports of actual warfare; in another, meetings alternately jovial and tense but with all the principals knowing their roles and playing them as diligently as actors; in yet another, the soldiers of the infantry purring in the warm winter sun and waiting, with that mix of dread and anticipation which only the combat-hardened know, the call to battle -- or as Private Daniel Rosati, a 27-year-old Light Armoured Vehicle gunner from Woodbridge, Ont., who has seen plenty of action, put it, "Part of you wants it, part of you doesn't."

And over this one small slice of the volatile south that is Canada's area of operations, up and down the gorgeous Arghandab River valley and in the small mud-walled villages dotted throughout it, were the clashing noises that make up the soundtrack of modern Afghanistan -- choppers circling in the air over forward operating bases as the muezzin attempts to call the faithful to prayer, the groans of construction vehicles involved in the building of the new road vying with the occasional boom of test fires or flares that briefly light up the black night skies, the roar of planes over the omnipresent crunch of boots on the gravel that covers the ground of the makeshift bases.

Playing what could be a vital role in Operation Baaz Tsuka is the newest, smallest and least well known of Afghan security forces, the fledgling Afghan National Auxiliary Police, or ANAP.

The brainchild of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, and thus grounded in hard-nosed local pragmatism, the ANAP is the honey in what NATO hopes is its trap -- a practical way of legitimizing and taking advantage of the violent Afghan culture, recently honed to a sharp edge in more than three decades of war, insurgency and occupation but centuries old for all that, of being armed to the teeth and protecting what's yours.

The ANAP, as Canadian Brigadier-General Tim Grant told reporters yesterday, is part of NATO's effort to persuade local elders to "take responsibility for their own security." Ideally, what these young men, armed as they likely would be in any case but trained to a veneer of professionalism by Canadian Military Police for two weeks, will do is help villagers give hard-line Taliban the boot and keep them at bay.

"Canada is very intimately involved in training them," Brig.-Gen. Grant said. "We're trying to encourage village elders to have their sons enroll in the ANAP." The hope is that the young auxiliary policemen could be involved in protecting their villages, and would be less susceptible to recruitment from the Taliban.

Mr. Karzai spoke to 100 Panjwai elders last week, Brig.-Gen. Grant said, encouraging them to encourage their young men to join the ANAP. The elders were receptive, he said, if for no other reason than the people of the area are weary of fighting and tired of bunking in with friends and relatives or at the displaced persons camps that have recently sprung up during the fighting that has gone on here since July. The first ANAP classes graduated just last month.

But if all is relatively calm thus far, as Brig.-Gen. Grant reminded his listeners yesterday, "Only time will tell. The enemy has a vote in all of this."

And the enemy is smart and vicious: The Globe and Mail's local source reported that the Taliban yesterday hanged an alleged spy from a tree. As Master Corporal Max Smith, the RCR's own unofficial soldier poet, wrote in Fallen Comrades, "In the face of an enemy that is more like a ghost. But in this place, they are the host."

cblatchford@globeandmail.com

Maybe some Canadians, especially the friends and playmates of Gilles, Duceppe, Taliban Jack Layton and the Globe and Mail’s John Doyle, can figure out the ‘Three Block War’ from this.

 
Wouldn't hurt as a training aid for our own use.  Good real-life description of most of the "full spectrum" of ops.
 
Ummm... yes
His name is on the DWAN
Can't give it to you but, if you send me a document, I can try to get it to him......
 
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