Articles found March 17, 2012
New Afghan army is marching to a different drum
Slowly but surely, a new Afghan army is taking shape from the ground up
The Telegraph Group Limited, London 2012 March 17, 2012
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Kabul Beneath a leaden sky on a bitter morning on the outskirts of Kabul, hundreds of Afghan army recruits are marching to the sound of a drum.
It is the daily drill lesson at the vast Kabul Military Training Centre (KMTC), once a former Soviet army base, now the main military academy of the Afghan National Army.
The march of choice is the goose-step, one of the many peculiarities inherited from the Russian occupation — and the parade is an impressive spectacle.
The recruits' uniforms might not be a perfect fit and many have yet to master the morning shave, but there is no doubting their commitment. Three years ago, the British Army and other members of the international coalition were right at the heart of the Afghan army training programme, teaching the fundamentals of shooting, map-reading and drills.
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Afghanistan fears becoming `orphan' as international forces withdraw
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By Jeff Davis, Postmedia News March 16, 2012
OTTAWA - The Afghan embassy in Ottawa is calling on Canada to continue supporting the war-torn country, amid fears it could become an ``international orphan'' after Western forces withdraw in 2014.
Afghanistan's top diplomat in Canada, charge d'affaires Mirwais Salehi, said he worries that much-needed support from Western countries may be coming to an end.
``We want a kind of assurance that in 2014 not everybody will close their eyes and go back home,'' he said. ``We want Canadian support very, very long beyond 2014.''
Salehi said Afghans are worried Western countries will abandon them, leaving the country in situation similar to the 1990s, when civil war broke out following the departure of Russian military forces.
The lack of international support during this critical period allowed the Taliban to seize power, he said. ``We don't want to repeat history again and again, because it will cost the lives of many innocent people,'' Salehi added.
Fen Hampson, a professor of international affairs at Carleton University in Ottawa, said Afghanistan became an ``international orphan'' in the 1990s. The current situation, he said, is becoming eerily similar.
``I think there's a sense of deja vu in many, many ways,'' he said.
Hampson said many NATO countries appear to have run out of patience with the country, having decided it is ``mission impossible.'' U.S. President Barack Obama, for example, is coming under increased pressure to accelerate plans to withdraw from the country before 2014, he said.
``I think there's a deep sense of pessimism, quite frankly, about Afghanistan's future,'' he said. ``In NATO the British, the French, everyone is pulling back, getting ready to pull out.''
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Afghan mission's end cuts civilian workers
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Dismantling of massive bureaucratic network leaves many feeling left in dust by government
By Jeff Davis, Ottawa Citizen March 16, 2012
Canadian civil servants who served alongside soldiers in the Afghanistan heat are feeling left in the dust as the federal government embarks on a massive postwar dismantling of its bureaucracy.
At the centre of the cuts is the Afghanistan Task Force, a massive bureaucratic network formed within the Privy Council Office, CIDA, the RCMP and Foreign Affairs to co-ordinate Canada's non-military logistics.
"The reality is this is no longer a priority for the Conservative government," said Emma Welford, a civilian who completed tours in Kabul and Kandahar while working for Foreign Affairs Canada. "So reducing the size of the bureaucratic support system for it is only natural."
The cuts have been thorough. The Canadian International Development Agency's task force section no longer exists, and the Afghan section at Foreign Affairs has lost its task force status. The Privy Council Office's Afghanistan section will be dismantled at the end of March. And the cabinet committee on Afghanistan and the commons special committee on Afghanistan have both been dissolved.
Budgets have been slashed accordingly. The Privy Council Office once devoted up to $4.7 million per year to its Afghanistan Task Force, but this has been cut to zero for fiscal year 2012-2013. Likewise, CIDA devoted $17.5 million to their departmental task force in 2009-2010, but has cancelled funding for 2012-2013.
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In Afghan killings case, questions over alcohol
Posted: 03/16/2012
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KABUL, Afghanistan—The U.S. military bans alcohol for its troops in Afghanistan, but that doesn't stop some soldiers from having a bottle or two stowed away in their gear—a fact highlighted by investigators' probe into whether alcohol played a role when a U.S. sergeant allegedly carried out a killing spree that left 16 Afghans dead.
U.S. investigators have determined that the suspect had been drinking alcohol prior to leaving the base the night of the attack, a senior U.S. defense official said Friday. How much of a role alcohol played in the attack is still under investigation, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because charges have not yet been filed.
Like many rules in a war zone, the U.S. military's General Order No. 1 forbidding alcohol in both Afghanistan and Iraq is not always followed to the letter. Even in these strictly Muslim countries, there are ways to access liquor. Amid the tight-knit camaraderie of a stressful battlefield, officers sometimes turn a blind eye—or even partake themselves.
In Iraq, booze was easy to come by in Baghdad's Green Zone and on some bases. In Afghanistan, soldiers from many other NATO countries are allowed to imbibe. That means there's some "alcohol spillover" to American troops on large multinational bases. In both countries, foreign contractors dealing with the U.S. military—most of whom were not covered by the order—bring in their own supplies and are a source that soldiers can turn to.
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Outcry, veterans’ support make Ottawa fast-track visa for Afghan interpreter
Published On Sat Mar 17 2012
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VANCOUVER—After 19 months trying to reach safety in Canada, Afghan battlefield interpreter Sayed Shah Sharifi is finally being processed for a visa.
Ottawa agreed to quickly approve a visa for Sharifi, praised by Canadian troops as a brave comrade who saved lives during combat in the Taliban heartland, after Toronto lawyer Lorne Waldman withdrew a Federal Court case.
For months, Immigration Minister Jason Kenney bucked mounting public pressure and refused to rescue Sharifi from Kandahar after Canadian officials decided his claims that the Taliban would kill him for aiding their enemies weren’t credible.
The breakthrough came after an outcry from Toronto Star readers and Canadian veterans of the Afghan war moved Prime Minister Stephen Harper last month to force Kenney to reconsider Sharifi and scores of other rejected Afghans.
Waldman said Friday he is confident, following assurances from the justice department, that Sharifi has won his long fight with the Harper government.
“He’s going to be getting a visa fairly soon. I would say by the summer,” Waldman said.
“In the case of Sayed, I’m comfortable because we have a written statement from them saying he meets the requirements for processing.”
Sharifi must still pass medical, criminal background and security checks required of all immigrants to Canada, but Waldman doesn’t expect any problems.
In September 2009, Kenney announced a special program to grant visas to Afghans “who face exceptional risk or who have suffered serious injury as a result of their work for the Canadian government in Kandahar province.”
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Military helicopter crashes into house
by The Canadian Press Mar 16, 2012
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A Turkish military helicopter crashed into a house near the Afghan capital Friday, killing 12 Turkish soldiers on board and two girls on the ground, Turkish and Afghan officials said.
It was by far the deadliest incident involving Turkish soldiers in Afghanistan, where they have a noncombat role.
The helicopter, a Sikorsky, was on a mission for U.S.-led NATO forces when it went down near Kabul, the Turkish military said in a statement.
"Twelve of our military personnel on board were martyred," it said.
There was no enemy activity in the area at the time of the crash, NATO said.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the helicopter was one of two that took off on Friday.
"Unfortunately, the one in front came down for an unknown reason," he said.
He said there were officers and noncommissioned officers on board.
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters it appeared that the helicopter crashed while trying to make an emergency landing and that the pilot tried to avoid houses.
"It is a grave accident. Our grief is deep," he said.
The helicopter clipped one house and then crashed into another, said Sayed Qayum, an Afghan resident who witnessed the aircraft go down.
The crash blew several large holes in the three-story brick house that was hit. Parts of the building were scorched black by fire, and wreckage of the helicopter was scattered outside. One piece had a red and white Turkish flag painted on it.
The Afghan Interior Ministry said the two people who were killed on the ground were young girls. A woman and another child were wounded, it said.
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