Articles found May 12, 2010
Walking the beat with Canadian police in Afghanistan
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When the paramount concern is death by Taliban suicide attack, the little things go unnoticed.
So small wonder that nobody – not the Canadian police, nor the American MPs, nor even the Afghan cops – was aware of the pungent little plant at their feet Tuesday afternoon as they stepped with considerable relief back inside the bomb-pocked walls of the Afghan Provincial Police Headquarters in downtown Kandahar.
Together, they had just completed an extended foot patrol through the heart of the city the Taliban vows will soon be theirs again. They rubbed shoulders with hundreds upon hundreds of Kandaharis – everyday people far more accustomed to soldiers barging through town in hermetically sealed armoured vehicles.
And from the Toronto Star’s vantage, a good three-quarters of Kandahar was happy to meet them face to face, eye to eye. Better this than being run off the road by a convoy of LAVs. There were many smiles, waves and friendly “Salaams.” Bakers handed out flatbread fresh from the oven to the passing patrol. One woman even reached beneath her burqa, wagging a hand of welcome.
It was a sitting-duck scenario and everyone knew it. But however nerve-ratting the job of dismounting and patrolling on foot – one of the Americans on Tuesday called it a “sphincter-tightener” – it also is crucial to the counter-insurgency strategy NATO is rolling out to bring the population to its side.
And crucially, there were newly minted Afghan police in the mix, all graduates of the Canadian-led training program at nearby Camp Nathan Smith, where RCMP, OPP, even Toronto cops still toil in relative obscurity.
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US air campaign in Pakistan zeroes in on North Waziristan, Bahadar
By Bill Roggio and Alexander MayerMay 12, 2010 12:01 AM
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The controversial US air campaign in Pakistan’s tribal areas has continued unabated in 2010, and is on track to exceed the number of strikes carried out in 2009. So far this year, the US has carried out 35 strikes, just 18 shy of the 2009 total. With six and a half months left in 2010, the 2009 total should be surpassed sometime in July at the current pace. The strikes continue to target top leaders of al Qaeda, the Taliban, and allied jihadist groups based in the tribal areas, as well as the jihadist infrastructure and operatives used to carry out attacks against the Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the West.
Some interesting trends have developed since the beginning of 2010. North Waziristan, the hub for the Taliban, al Qaeda and allied jihadists, has become the primary focal point of the attacks. More than half of the strikes have taken place in the tribal areas controlled by North Waziristan Taliban leader Hafiz Gul Bahadar, while attacks against the Haqqani Network’s sanctuaries have decreased. And the strikes continue to hit a wide variety of targets.
North Waziristan is the eye of the storm
The shift in focus from South Waziristan to North Waziristan that began in September 2009 has continued, with 100 percent of the 35 strikes so far this year occurring in North Waziristan. Miramshah has been the most frequently targeted region within North Waziristan, accounting for nearly more than a third of all strikes so far this year, (13 of 35 strikes, or 37 percent). The Datta Khel region, a known haven for al Qaeda's military and command, is second on the targeting list, accounting for a quarter of the strikes (13 of 35 strikes, or 23 percent).
Hafiz Gul Bahadar’s territory is most hit
So far in 2010, more than half of the Predator strikes (19 of 35 Predator strikes, or 54 percent), have hit targets in territory controlled by Hafiz Gul Bahadar, far more than any other Taliban commander. Looking at the last 10 strikes, eight of those have taken place in Bahadar's areas. And the last seven strikes have hit targets in Bahadar's areas. The concentrated focus on Bahadar represents a significant shift in targeting priorities -- prior to 2010, Bahadar's territory had only been targeted four times in the past 5 years. At the end of 2009, the Haqqani Network was the primary focus of US strikes in Pakistan.
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Afghan secret police chief fired over torture of detainee, top soldier testifies
By Juliet O'Neill and Mike De Souza, Canwest News Service May 11, 2010
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The firing of the "head honcho" of the Afghan secret police at a prison in Kandahar confirmed the allegations of torture that a Canadian-transferred detainee made on Nov. 5, 2007, to Foreign Affairs monitors, Brig.-Gen. Guy Laroche testified Tuesday.
Laroche, then commander of Canadian troops in Afghanistan, said the dismissal and transfer to Kabul of the head of the National Directorate of Security at the unnamed detention facility after an internal investigation "was probably due to the fact that the allegations were founded or at least partially founded."
Laroche told the Military Police Complaints Commission the incident — during which the victim showed Canadian Foreign Affairs (DFAIT) detainee monitors the braided electric cable and rubber hose with which he was beaten unconscious during interrogation — was "disappointing" because he thought progress was being made under a Canada-Afghan detainee transfer agreement aimed at reducing and deterring prisoner mistreatment.
"The fact that people might still be torturing other people was unacceptable and I think that people from DFAIT would agree," he said during questioning by Amnesty International lawyer Paul Champ. "We thought we'd gotten past that and it wasn't the case."
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CSIS watchdog probes spy services role with Afghan detainees
By: Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press 11/05/2010
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OTTAWA - The watchdog over the Canadian Security Intelligence Service will look into the spy agency's role in interrogating Afghan prisoners.
Gary Filmon, chairman of the Security Intelligence Review Committee, said members are planning a report on CSIS involvement with detainees.
The spy agency's role in Afghanistan, where it has been operating alongside Canadian troops since 2002, has recently come under scrutiny amid concerns that prisoners transferred to Afghan authorities were subsequently tortured.
Filmon's comments Tuesday in an appearance before the Commons public safety committee came as CSIS officials defend the spy service's work in Afghanistan.
CSIS director Dick Fadden told MPs on the committee the agency regularly talks with suspected Taliban insurgents to gather information.
"We try and talk to people in Afghanistan who would have some intelligence, some information about threats to both Canada and to our allies. By definition those people are either terrorists themselves — they're Taliban insurgents — or they're people who know something about them," Fadden said.
Early on, in helping the military interview detainees, CSIS was "frequently brought in to ask them questions" — usually to try to determine a suspected insurgent's identity and figure out what they were up to, Fadden said.
"In most cases, these interviews lasted less than 15 or 20 minutes. They were then transferred at the call of the Canadian Forces, or not, to the Afghan authorities."
Fadden said the service's efforts had saved lives.
The CSIS chief said the agency is investigating over 200 individuals in Canada whose activities meet the definition of terrorism.
Liberal MP Mark Holland pressed Michel Coulombe, CSIS's assistant director for foreign collection, on use of information that may have been obtained through torture.
Coulombe reiterated recent comments that it is sometimes impossible to know if information was collected by allies through abusive means.
"When it's possible, we try to find out more about how information was gathered by asking questions of the officials involved."
Asked Holland: "Is it OK to use information obtained by torture in those circumstances?"
Coulombe said when there is doubt, "we don't rely on the information."
Filmon, of the intelligence review committee, said the watchdog has assured itself CSIS does not rely on potentially tainted information without first cross-checking it.
"We are satisfying ourselves that they have clear direction and that their approach to it is clear," said the former Conservative premier of Manitoba.
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Buildup of top Afghan police seen as key for NATO
By JAMEY KEATEN (AP) – 21 hours ago
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KABUL — One by one, the graduating Afghan police cadets marched onto a stage, clicked their heels and shouted vows of dedication to their war-weary country as they proudly hoisted their diplomas overhead.
"I am serving our suffering nation of Afghanistan!" one yelled to the audience, prompting enthusiastic applause from his classmates.
Fifty cadets became lieutenants last week in the Afghan National Civil Order Police, the first alumni of a 22-week program to train a force modeled on European police services such as French gendarmes and Italian carabinieri.
Officials say the graduates of the European Gendarmerie Force program will play a key role as the elite of "Afghanistan's finest" in a country badly in need of reliable, competent and respected police.
The ANCOP, one of six categories of Afghan police, is considered the brightest spot in what is largely an otherwise troubled force beset by an array of ills including corruption, drug use, illiteracy and desertion.
Tanned and wearing blue-gray fatigues, the cadets listened intently as Afghan and allied officials praised their service to country.
"Today is a day for you to stand proud," said Lt. Gen. William B. Caldwell, NATO's head of the Afghan training mission. "Today you join an elite force: the best trained, educated and most professional element within the Afghan National Police — and the most respected by the international community."
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