Articles found March 3, 2008
Canadian soldier dies days before tour's end in Kandahar
Convoy struck by Taliban bomb
GRAEME SMITH AND COLIN FREEZE From Monday's Globe and Mail March 3, 2008 at 1:09 AM EST
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KANDAHAR — From inside an army outpost carved into a craggy mountainside this winter, Trooper Michael Hayakaze reflected on the smiles of Afghan children. He said that whenever he saw them, it made him feel optimistic.
“When the kids come running up to the road and they smile, it's the best,” the 25-year-old soldier told a Washington Times reporter in December.
“When we first showed up, you know, they used to run and hide, or they would throw stones at our tanks,” he explained.
“And you know they get that from their parents. So if they're not afraid of us, that means it's getting better.”
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Wounded warriors; The U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl has become a crossroad between life and death for soldiers from many nations
Posted By Kathleen Harris
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Every day, they arrive by the busload - broken, bandaged and bloodied from war.
They are American, Canadian and from many other nations - "wounded warriors" delivered from Iraq and Afghanistan with blown-off limbs, severe burns and battle fatigue.
Some arrive fresh from conflict with blood still on their boots. Some come with less visible injuries, such as post-traumatic stress disorder, chronic back pain or severe headaches. Others need medical treatment or tests they can't get in the field.
When Canadian soldiers are injured in combat, they are evacuated here to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, a sprawling, fast-paced American military hospital that is the biggest medical facility outside the U.S. For Canadian troops, it is the gateway between Kandahar and Canada, and a crossroads between the brink of death and life.
Shell-shocked troops confront the grim reality of a future as an amputee, or grapple with the guilt of survival as their comrades return to Canada in flag-draped caskets.
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Colonel keeps promise, brings all his soldiers home safe
Matthew Fisher, Canwest News Service Published: Saturday, March 01, 2008
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KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan -- Before coming to Afghanistan last August, Col. Nicolas Eldouad made a promise to the families of his 450 troops that everything possible would be done to bring all his soldiers home alive.
Against very high odds, Eldouad has achieved that goal. The Van Doo battle group's National Support Element suffered no fatalities during its six months in the province of Kandahar despite having undertaken about 200 combat logistics patrols covering more than 1.2 million kilometres on notoriously dangerous roads seeded with hidden improvised explosives and shared with vehicles sometimes driven by suicide bombers.
"Luck is there, it is foolish to deny that, but we had confidence in each other and in ourselves that came as a result of confidence in our equipment, our training and our leadership," Eldouad said before flying out of Kandahar with many of his troops in the wee hours of Saturday morning. "That was the recipe for success.
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Czech PM wants allies 'more visibly' engaged in Afghanistan
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Visiting Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek on Friday urged NATO countries to play a larger role in routing insurgents from Afghanistan, noting his nation is doubling its troop deployment this year.
"Like Canada, we're calling upon other countries to take their share of responsibility and to participate even more visibly in peacekeeping and peace-building in Afghanistan," Topolanek said following meetings with Prime Minister Stephen Harper and several Canadian ministers.
He also indicated that the Czech Republic will double its number of soldiers taking part in the US-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan this year to about 550.
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Canadian soldiers accused of beating up expat
By Andreas Avgousti
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VIOLENCE unleashed upon the civilian population by foreign soldiers is fast becoming a problem for authorities.
In Paphos on Saturday night, two Canadian army soldiers are accused of beating up Briton James Sanford, 32, a resident of Paphos.
This is the latest of a string of similar events, happening around the island after soldiers hit the town at night.
Sanford was walking down Ayios Antonios road in Kato Paphos with his wife when the soldiers, in Cyprus for decompression following service in Afghanistan, started to make advances on the woman.
“Two of them crossed the street to where we were, one put his hand around her and spat at her feet.”
Sanford reacted, an exchange of words followed, “and then one of the soldiers hit me on the head with a bottle”, Sanford told the Sunday Mail.
Police eventually appeared on the scene, and Sanford was taken to Paphos General Hospital for treatment.
“I have 12 stitches on my face and my left eye is swollen.
“If my wife wasn’t there to shout for help I don’t know what could have happened to me.”
Canadian military police arrived at the hospital too and, according to Sanford,
“showed concern and a willingness to do something about it.”
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Making the mission work
TheStar.com - comment - March 02, 2008 Thomas Axworthy
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With political consensus reached, Canada must now ensure its efforts in Afghanistan succeed
Parliament is convulsed with the issue of whether Canada should commit to three more years of fighting a war in Afghanistan. A more realistic time frame would be to add 25 years to that perspective.
This sober assessment was the major theme of a conference hosted by Queen's University in Ottawa last week. As Parliament next door debated the government's motion to extend the combat role to 2011, speakers with first-hand experience in Afghanistan debated the realities of what it would actually take to protect Afghanistan from predators and to rebuild this shattered state.
The Manley Report on Afghanistan also addressed this issue. Most commentary focused on the recommendations that NATO provide another 1,000 troops in Kandahar. However, the report also had some very pertinent sections on Afghanistan's challenges in rebuilding.
Progress has been made but the problems, as the conference speakers reiterated, are vast, and the international community is poorly motivated and poorly organized to meet them
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Now This Is How I Like To See The Troops Return
Sunday, March 2, 2008
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All 450 accounted for. An incredible record, as these soldiers finished a six month tour of duty in the most dangerous region of Afghanistan with 12 hour shifts patrolling an area of over 1.2 million kilometres. The Van Doos battle group [Royal Vingt-Deuxième Régiment] were sent on convoys to forward operating bases at all hours of the day and night amid breakdowns and the constant need to check for lethal IEDs. Canadians have seen definite progress in Kandahar since last year, with fighting between Canadian Forces and the Taliban dropping off to nil.
In fact, the only evidence the Canadians have had of a Talban presence in the new year are the IEDs which continue to be a deadly threat to civilians and soldiers alike. Lt.-Col. Gauthier says that this "announces the end of the reign of the Taliban." Citing initiative on the part of the Army, and cutting supply lines, Canadian Forces have effectively quietened the Taliban in Kandahar. The Van Doos have lost 10 soldiers during the six months combat tour, but only one died in direct combat. Seven were killed from planted mines.
This good news comes amid warnings that the Taliban are undergoing new tactics to fight ISAF troops, using suicide bombings and IEDs as the central part of that strategy. The Taliban destroyed a communications tower in Kandahar yesterday in an attempt to hide their transmissions. The success Canadian soldiers have had in 2008 in Kandahar comes as a contradiction to the gloomy picture the media continues to write:
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Bush seeks troops to aid Canada
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Urges NATO nations to do more in Afghanistan 1,000 more fighters needed in south
CRAWFORD, Texas -- U.S. President George W. Bush urged NATO members Saturday to come to Canada's aid in southern Afghanistan, promising to join the effort to convince European allies to meet Ottawa's demand for another 1,000-soldier strong battle group by early 2009.
Following a summit here with Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Bush said his main goal at next month's NATO summit in Bucharest will be to press for the deployment of more troops in southern Afghanistan.
"I understand there's certain political constraints on certain countries. And so I am going to go to Bucharest with the notion that we're thankful for the contributions being made, and encourage people to contribute more," Bush said at a news conference on his Texas ranch. "The United States is putting in 3,200 additional Marines. We are trying to help Canada realize her goal of a thousand additional fighters in the southern part of the country."
Bush's remarks could provide Prime Minister Stephen Harper with some added negotiating power with nations like France, which last month signalled its desire to help Canada meet the military goal.
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Most military suicides follow tours abroad
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By CP
MONTREAL -- A Montreal newspaper reports that in the past decade, the Canadian military recorded between 10 and 14 suicides a year among its troops.
Montreal La Presse reports that 132 Canadian soldiers have committed suicide since 1997.
At least four cases involved soldiers committing suicide while they were serving in Croatia, Bosnia or Afghanistan.
The statistics show the majority of the deaths occurred after soldiers returned from missions abroad.
In the past five years, the numbers also show that the number of Canadian soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder has skyrocketed to 6,500 from 102.
The newspaper obtained the statistics from the Canadian military.
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2nd mobile phone tower destroyed in S Afghanistan
www.chinaview.cn 2008-03-02 20:54:33
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KABUL, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Following Taliban outfit's threat to target mobile phone companies' towers in Taliban-held areas, the second boasting tower of ROSHAN mobile phone firm was destroyed in Afghanistan's troubled Helmand province, locals said.
"Taliban destroyed the boasting tower of ROSHAN company in Sangin district Saturday night and since then there is no telephone facilities," an elder of the district told Xinhua but refused to be identified.
However, Mohammad Hussain Andiwal, the police chief of Helmand province, when approached by Xinhua scribe confirmed the event, and adding "We cannot contact our men in Sangin as ROSHAN tower has been damaged."
He did not say if Taliban insurgents were behind the attack.
Feda Mohammad, who claims to speak for the Taliban militants in talks with media outlets, claimed responsibility for destroying the mobile company's tower in Sangin district.
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Suicide Bomb Hits US Base in Afghanistan
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KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A suicide car bomber attacked a U.S. base in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, collapsing a guard post with American soldiers inside, an Afghan official said. Three NATO soldiers were wounded, a U.S. military official said.
Two Afghan policemen were wounded in the attack, said Lutfullah Babakarheil, a district chief.
The attacker in the eastern Khost province rammed the explosives-laden car into the gates of the U.S. military base in Yaqoubi district, said Babakarheil.
"There are American soldiers inside the collapsed guard room, but we do not know whether any are wounded or killed," he said.
Sgt. 1st Class Brian Lamar, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan, said three soldiers serving under a separate command — NATO's International Security Assistance Force — were wounded in the explosion and evacuated for medical care.
Lamar would not disclose the soldiers' nationalities because of strict rules set by NATO. However, the majority of international forces in Khost province are American
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