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The Sandbox and Areas Reports Thread May 2010

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Articles found May 13, 2010

Fungus hits Afghan opium poppies
By Bethany Bell BBC News, Vienna
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US soldiers on patrol near a poppy field in Shahwali Kot district, Kandahar, 11 May
A fungal disease is thought to have infected 50% of the country's poppy crop

A serious disease is affecting opium poppies in Afghanistan, Antonio Maria Costa, the head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has said.

Mr Costa told the BBC that this year's opium production could be reduced by a quarter, compared with last year.

He said the disease - a fungus - is thought to have infected about half of the country's poppy crop. Afghanistan produces 92% of the world's opium.

Mr Costa said opium prices had gone up by around 50% in the region.

That could have an impact on revenues for insurgent groups like the Taliban which have large stockpiles of opium, he added.

The fungus attacks the root of the plant, climbs up the stem and makes the opium capsule wither away.

It was affecting poppies in the provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, the heartland of opium cultivation and the insurgency in Afghanistan, he said.

Nato 'blamed'

Some local farmers believe Nato troops are responsible for the outbreak, but Mr Costa denied that this was the case.

"I don't see any reasons to believe something of that sort," he said. "Opium plants have been affected in Afghanistan on a periodic basis."

Mr Costa also said this was an opportunity for the international community to bring in support to try to persuade farmers to turn away from planting opium.

He said the amount of opium produced by one hectare (2.47 acres) had almost doubled to 56kg (123lb) in the five years to 2009.

"Nature really played in favour of the opium economy; this year, we see the opposite situation," he added.

Mr Costa said that farmers now grew opium poppies in only five or six Afghan provinces, as opposed to all 34 five years ago.
end

Total Force Airlift Delivering in Afghanistan
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CAMP BASTION, Afghanistan – At a place where Operation Moshtarek, a NATO-Afghan joint offensive involving 15,000 Afghan, Canadian, American and British troops is still in full swing, military aircraft come in like clockwork.
Story by Tech. Sgt. Oshawn Jefferson Date: 05.12.2010 Posted: 05.12.2010 09:43

Airmen from across the force are showing the power of combat airlift and delivering supplies to warfighters on the frontlines of freedom in Afghanistan.

"MATVs are one of the most common things we deliver here," said Lt. Col. Melissa Coburm, a C-17 Globemaster III pilot from the 732nd Expeditionary Airlift Squadron at the Transit Center at Manas, Kyrgyzstan. "I feel important bringing better technology to our troops on the ground. It is good to know that we're making a difference," added the Colonel who is a reservist deployed from McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J.

Airlift keeps Airmen from the 451st Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron's Detachment 1 here busy. The unit's air traffic operations center and ramp operations have uploaded and downloaded more than 40,000 short-tons of cargo from almost 3,000 aircraft moving in and out of the airfield here since January 1. Moving cargo off of airframes such as C-17 Globemaster IIIs, C-130 Hercules, Russian-made IL-76s and DC-8s, aerial port Airmen are ensuring Coalition Forces get equipment and supplies they need.
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The Dutch, it seems, are having second thoughts. Will we?
Last Updated: Wednesday, May 12, 2010
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For more than a year now, the Canadian government has been relying on the Dutch to help ease our own military exit from Afghanistan next year.

The Dutch are scheduled to start pulling out this fall, nine months ahead of us, and have been seen as a comforting advance guard.

But when Canadians officials, including Prime Minister Stephen Harper, were in Holland last week for the Second World War ceremonies, they were clearly told that the Dutch may now dodge such a controversial advance role.

In fact, there is now growing sentiment that the Netherlands will leave behind military or police trainers, along with hundreds of combat troops to protect them.

In other words, the Dutch will do what Harper is adamant Canada won't — bow to urgent appeals from NATO and especially Washington for a continued military presence in Afghanistan.
So polite

This Dutch shuffle at the door — "No, after you, Canada" — will now leave our government as the only alliance member planning to completely abandon the current fight.

It also brings with it a chilling message for our prime minister: that the Dutch are clearly concerned about some kind of NATO-wide opprobrium cascading down on those nations who want to leave the battlefield at this critical juncture.

After all, this change of heart is really quite dramatic (and likely disappointing for Harper). It was only this spring that the Dutch coalition government fell upon the suggestion that the Afghan mission be continued.

Labour bolted the coalition with the Christian Democrat's Jan Peter Balkenende in protest, and an election was set for early June.

But the conservative Balkenende is now trying to build new alliances to return him to power and the biggest surprise in recent days is that both the Green party and a moderate liberal alliance known as D66 have reversed themselves and now favour a significant Dutch training mission backed by hundreds of combat troops.
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Returning troops see 'real progress' in Afghanistan
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By RICHARD LIEBRECHT Edmonton Sun Last Updated: May 12, 2010

Improving conditions in Afghanistan have bolstered the spirits of Edmonton’s latest returning soldiers.

“This rotation, I can definitely say I’ve seen an improvement in how the local nationals treat us over there. More children waving at us, less rocks being thrown at us,” said Cpl. Beau Smith, arriving home at Edmonton International Airport Wednesday evening.

Lt. Col. Jerry Walsh added a broader perspective.

“My soldiers tell me, they say sir, this is the hardest tour I’ve been on, but it’s the first tour we’ve seen real progress in Afghanistan. Where people did not live, they’re now living, and we’re talking about tens of thousands. It’s a real change.”

After seven months abroad, 92 Edmonton-based soldiers returned from Afghanistan.

Among them were members of Canada’s battle group and some soldiers who helped train the Afghan National Army.

It was the first tour for Cpl. Michael Hosken, who patrolled urban roads and Canadian installations.

Hosken said the mission was so quiet he wished he saw some more action.

“It was a lot of IEDs, that’s what it turned out to be. A lot of IEDs and not a lot of firefights,” he said.

Overall, it was an experience low in danger but high in reward.

“There are a lot of good things going on,” he said.

His troopmates were able to occupy one town through his entire tour.

“We’re providing a stable life they haven’t had in a long time,” said Hosken.

Walsh said there’s a sense that the mission in Afghanistan is clicking like never before.

“There’s no question there’s still a lot of work to be done. But what we’ve set in motion, and when I say we I mean ... the Afghans themselves, NATO, military, civilians, all the NGOs, everyone coming together now with a real focus and things are really coming together like they haven’t been in previous years,” he said.
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Afghan officer did not suggest shooting prisoner, diplomat says
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Steven Chase

Ottawa — Globe and Mail Update Published on Wednesday, May. 12, 2010 12:37PM EDT Last updated on Wednesday, May. 12, 2010 5:54PM EDT

A Canadian diplomat is denying an allegation by a former military interpreter that he transferred a prisoner to Afghanistan’s notorious intelligence service even after it proposed executing the detainee.

Ed Jager, a Foreign Affairs officer, featured prominently in troubling allegations leveled by a former military translator last month.

Ahmadshah Malgarai, whose former Canadian Forces codename was “Pasha,” told MPs in April that he was present in the summer of 2007 when a colonel with Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security refused to take an ill captive and suggested shooting him instead.

Mr. Malgarai said Mr. Jager was there when this happened. But Mr. Jager told the Military Police Complaints Commission Wednesday he doesn’t recall such an incident.

“No ... I can say so categorically,” he told the commission hearings, which are probing allegations that Canadian soldiers knowingly handed over Afghan captives to torture at the hands of local interrogators.

Mr. Jager, who served as a political adviser in Afghanistan in 2007 and 2008, is now posted to Brazil and was flown back by Foreign Affairs to attend the commission hearings.

It’s the second significant allegation made by Mr. Malgarai that the Canadian government has rejected. Last month Canada’s top soldier, Chief of the Defence Staff General Walter Natynczyk, denied the ex-interpreter’s charge the military shot an unarmed teen in the back of the head during a raid.
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Ex-Liberal defence minister says 2005 Afghan prisoner deal was best available
Published On Thu May 13 2010
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Former Liberal defence minister Bill Graham says a flawed 2005 agreement on the transfer of Canadian detainees to the Afghans was better than no deal and dismissed suggestions torture was a big concern at the time.

“In the end the agreement was not perfect . . . but it was the best we could do at the time,” Graham told an all-party parliamentary committee. The panel is looking into whether the Conservative government transferred prisoners knowing there a chance of them being tortured or sexually abused.

Graham told the committee that for one thing, there was no monitoring provision in place to follow up on the welfare of Canadian prisoners turned over to Afghan authorities.

“It was not . . . evident to us that there was such a substantial risk” of torture, said Graham, defence minister from 2004 to 2006. Even so, he added, the government and its officials had decided it was the Afghans’ responsibility once the deal was signed to see that prisoners were not abused.

“I cannot honestly say that we foresaw all of that at the time. We didn’t or we might have acted differently.”

The 2005 agreement was replaced with a new agreement in 2007.
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Articles found May 14, 2010

CANADIAN ARMY, SUPPORTED BY AIR FORCE, TRAINS FOR AFGHANISTAN DEPLOYMENT
By Dave ******** Thu, May 13 2010
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VALCARTIER GARRISON, QC, May 13- Approximately 50 soldiers from 12e Régiment blindé du Canada, supported by the Air Force, will train in the Chaudière-Appalaches and Centre-du-Québec regions from May 17 to 21, 2010. They will practise joint planning and coordination in preparation for their deployment to Afghanistan in fall 2010.

Between Lévis (St-Étienne-de-Lauzon sector) and Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes, soldiers will carry out a number of scenarios such as mounted patrols, convoy escorts including close air support, as well as landing zone set ups.

Scenarios using choppers will be limited to municipalities located between Saint-Agapit and Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes. Citizens from these municipalities will therefore notice the occasional presence of helicopters, sometimes at low altitude, in the daytime.

In addition to about 10 wheeled light armoured vehicles, two Griffon helicopters will provide tactical air support to Land Force troops (joint aspect). Flight personnel will be composed of two crews of four soldiers from 430 Tactical Helicopter Squadron, based in Valcartier.

Although the soldiers will be in the area and will interact freely with the public, residents will not be overly inconvenienced and will be able to go about their daily business. Blank ammunition and pyrotechnic material will be used safely.
end

Top soldier in southern Afghanistan warns against Taliban 'impunity'
Major Gen Nick Carter, the top soldier in southern Afghanistan, has given a stark warning that the Taliban were acting with "impunity" in an area of "criminality and lawlessness" where British troops might next deploy.
By Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent 8:26PM BST 13 May 2010
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Maj Gen Carter, the British officer in overall command of coalition troops in southern Helmand, said warlords had taken over large swathes of Kandahar province and the government was "pitifully weak".

By mid-summer it is expected that a substantial American operation will begin in Kandahar following the surge of 30,000 fresh troops into southern Afghanistan.

But by the end of July next year the Canadian force that is based in Kandahar will be leaving and high level talks have taken place in having them replaced with the British force currently in Helmand. Major Gen Carter said there were "no plans over who might backfill them" but did not quash the suggestion that the British might move in.

Speaking via videolink at a Ministry of Defence briefing he said a serious issue to be addressed was the private security companies that were roaming through the countryside unrestricted in some instances working as armed militias for warlords.

They were also taking recruits away from the Afghan Army by being paid $500 a month, double the wage of an Afghan soldier.

"We have to go after the private security companies," the officer said. He added that as the spiritual heartland of the Taliban Kandahar was the key city to secure in the country.
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Australia boosts army equipment spend
Published: May 13, 2010
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CANBERRA, Australia, May 13 (UPI) -- Australia will boost spending on its 1,550 troops in Afghanistan by an extra $391 million up to the end of 2011, the defense ministry said.

The money, announced as part of the new defense budget, will be for increased fire power and improved rocket-detecting technology mostly for soldiers fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan's dangerous Oruzgan province.

The government's shopping list includes upgraded technology to clear roads of dangerous improvised explosive devices, better armor and increased firepower for Bushmaster vehicles, improved body armor for soldiers, new night vision equipment, additional explosives detection dogs and better capabilities for intelligence and reconnaissance work.

Defense Minister John Faulkner said the money is part of an $894 million increase to the overall $20.6 billion defense budget announced by the government. The rest of the $894 million will be spent on operations in Middle East, East Timor and the Solomon Islands.
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Nato troops prepare Kandahar push
By Caroline Wyatt Defence correspondent, BBC News
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Maj Gen Nick Carter said Kandahar was essentially 'a political problem'

Nato forces in Afghanistan hope to "steal the ground" beneath the Taliban in a summer campaign to drive them out of Kandahar, a UK commander has said.

Maj Gen Nick Carter, who commands Nato forces in the south, said plans for the offensive were already under way.

Almost a decade of political and economic inequality in Kandahar city had led to lawlessness, criminality and a culture of impunity, he said.

His comments were made via a video link from Kandahar to reporters in London.

Maj Gen Carter said the situation in Kandahar was more complex than in Helmand, but was essentially "a political problem".

He described Kandahar as "culturally probably the most significant place in terms of the Pashtun people of Afghanistan".

The "shaping" part of the operation - the attempt to build up Afghan governance and security structures, as well as the number of Afghan police and soldiers - had already begun in Kandahar city, he said.
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Afghanistan–IED: “The Hidden Killer”
Conference of Defence Associations' media round-up, March 14
http://www.cdaforumcad.ca/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1273857158/0#0

Mark
Ottawa
 
Articles found May 16, 2010

The media fraternity got it wrong - very wrong
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Christie Blatchford

Journalists are a fraternity, as one of my friends remarked the other day at a funeral for a beloved one of our own. In the hurly-burly together, we are generally loath  to publicly criticize one another.

That said, I confess to astonishment by reports which received big play in newspapers across the country last weekend, and which form part of the Afghan detainee narrative which in my view has been torqued from the get-go.

Not only were these particular reports wrong, they were so diametrically opposed to the facts that it is difficult to believe the writers read a word of the lengthy document upon which the stories were allegedly based.

This was, in the convoluted lingo of the Canadian Forces, the military Board of Inquiry into In-theatre Handling of Detainees.

Basically, it was about a June 14, 2006, incident involving a Canadian-detained prisoner who was allegedly abused by Afghan police.

The inquiry was ordered last December when Chief of Defence Staff Walt Natynczyk, a profoundly decent guy, was horrified to realize he’d never been told about the incident and actually held a news conference to correct testimony he’d given to a Parliamentary committee the day before.

That tale got plenty of play. The Globe and Mail headline – “Natynczyk in the dark on Afghan prisoner’s history: In an explosive reversal, Canada’s top soldier admits a prisoner taken into Canadian custody was abused by Afghan authorities after a report comes to light that contradicts his own testimony and [Defence Minister Peter] MacKay’s repeated denials.”

The story referred back to Richard Colvin, the diplomat who had alleged the month before that virtually all prisoners Canadians handed over were likely tortured and that most were also probably innocent farmers.

As it happens, before that same committee, Mr. Colvin’s testimony has been politely but steadily chipped away by evidence from a cast that includes three former Canadian ambassadors to Afghanistan and other senior officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade who were on the Afghanistan file, a representative from the Correctional Service of Canada (who was in Kandahar and made 47 visits to prisons, most of them unannounced) and an array of generals who were on the ground during the 2006-07 period.

Now a whistleblower, as Mr. Colvin has been painted, often stands alone. But the list of those whose evidence has sharply contradicted his is long, and includes distinguished diplomats who have worked for Liberal governments and would seem unlikely puppets of the one headed by Stephen Harper.
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  Canadian Armour in Afghanistan
Posted by Think Defence in Land Combat, Operations & Strategy on May 14, 2010

Some interesting footage of the Leopard main battle tank and Kodiak armoured engineer vehicle in Afghanistan.
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The UK has deployed the Trojan combat engineering heavy armoured vehicle but not Challenger 2 citing terrain restrictions in the Green Zone as the main reason for not deploying them There was some talk of a request being turned down on cost grounds a few months ago.

If the UK area of operations does shift to replace the departing Canadians one wonders if the UK might emulate the success of he Canadians and others with the deployment of small numbers of main battle tanks.

They certainly have an intimidatory effect but perhaps our new ‘courageous restraint’ approach might not be compatible with 70 tonnes of mobile firepower.
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NATO Outlaws Save Lives
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May 14, 2010: Although NATO is over half a century old, and has developed many common standards, member nations in Afghanistan are finding out that their national rules on sharing intelligence prevent them from exchanging data on many enemy activities. This is particularly troublesome for information on IEDs (roadside bombs), where the enemy is constantly changing weapons design and tactics.

The problem is that the NATO alliance was set up to fight a conventional war, and there are existing protocols for sharing high level information. But this was never extended down to tactical level data. Right now, the problem is the lawyers (who draw up the agreements) and the politicians (who have to approve them). Lower level commanders, who are hurt most by the current security regulations that prevent sharing of tactical information with "foreigners", have little clout with the lawyers and politicians back home. The mid-level commanders often break (or bend) the rules informally, to share life-saving data on what the enemy is doing on a tactical level. Everyone ignores this lawlessness, but careers could be ruined if some journalists decide to make headlines over the issue. For the moment, the only one benefitting from this situation is the enemy.
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U.S. Is Still Using Private Spy Ring, Despite Doubts
NY Times, May 15
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/16/world/16contractors.html?ref=todayspaper

Top military officials have continued to rely on a secret network of private spies who have produced hundreds of reports from deep inside Afghanistan  and Pakistan, according to American officials and businessmen, despite concerns among some in the military about the legality of the operation.

Earlier this year, government officials admitted that the military had sent a group of former Central Intelligence Agency officers and retired Special Operations troops into the region to collect information — some of which was used to track and kill people suspected of being militants. Many portrayed it as a rogue operation that had been hastily shut down once an investigation began.

But interviews with more than a dozen current and former government officials and businessmen, and an examination of government documents, tell a different a story. Not only are the networks still operating, their detailed reports on subjects like the workings of the Taliban leadership in Pakistan and the movements of enemy fighters in southern Afghanistan are also submitted almost daily to top commanders and have become an important source of intelligence.

The American military is largely prohibited from operating inside Pakistan. And under Pentagon rules, the army is not allowed to hire contractors for spying.

Military officials said that when Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top commander in the region, signed off on the operation in January 2009, there were prohibitions against intelligence gathering, including hiring agents to provide information about enemy positions in Pakistan. The contractors were supposed to provide only broad information about the political and tribal dynamics in the region, and information that could be used for “force protection,” they said.

Some Pentagon officials said that over time the operation appeared to morph into traditional spying activities. And they pointed out that the supervisor who set up the contractor network, Michael D. Furlong, was now under investigation.

But a review of the program by The New York Times found that Mr. Furlong’s operatives were still providing information using the same intelligence gathering methods as before. The contractors were still being paid under a $22 million contract, the review shows, managed by Lockheed Martin and supervised by the Pentagon office in charge of special operations policy.

Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon press secretary, said that the program “remains under investigation by multiple offices within the Defense Department,” so it would be inappropriate to answer specific questions about who approved the operation or why it continues.

“I assure you we are committed to determining if any laws were broken or policies violated,” he said. Spokesmen for General Petraeus and Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the top American commander in Afghanistan, declined to comment. Mr. Furlong remains at his job, working as a senior civilian Air Force official.

A senior defense official said that the Pentagon decided just recently not to renew the contract, which expires at the end of May. While the Pentagon declined to discuss the program, it appears that commanders in the field are in no rush to shut it down because some of the information has been highly valuable, particularly in protecting troops against enemy attacks.

With the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the expanded role of contractors on the battlefield — from interrogating prisoners to hunting terrorism suspects — has raised questions about whether the United States has outsourced some of its most secretive and important operations to a private army many fear is largely unaccountable. The C.I.A. has relied extensively on contractors in recent years to carry out missions in war zones.

The exposure of the spying network also reveals tensions between the Pentagon and the C.I.A., which itself is running a covert war across the border in Pakistan. In December, a cable from the C.I.A.’s station chief in Kabul, Afghanistan, to the Pentagon argued that the military’s hiring of its own spies could have disastrous consequences, with various networks possibly colliding with one another...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Articles found May 17, 2010

Cdn military chaplains suffering burnout, compassion fatigue at high rates

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By: Alison Auld, The Canadian Press 16/05/2010

Chaplains in the Canadian military are suffering high levels of burnout and many are at risk of developing disorders like depression, according to documents that pin the blame on heavy workloads and compassion fatigue.

Officials in the chaplaincy office link the elevated stress to the prolonged surge in operational tempo, staff shortages and the strain of tending to families of soldiers killed or injured overseas.

Leadership in the Chaplain General's office is so concerned about the issue that it has submitted a strategic plan to the chief of military personnel outlining ways to deal with the problem.

Lt.-Col. Sylvain Maurais, director of chaplaincy services, said the initiative was prompted by the first-ever survey of morale among the Forces' 225 padres, which found all chaplains were experiencing burnout and compassion fatigue.

"We are feeling the same stresses as the rest of the Canadian Forces population," Maurais said of the survey, which was obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.

"The level of ministry that we are providing is quite complex. It's not at all what it used to be."

The survey, conducted under two years ago but only now being acted upon, found that 52 per cent of chaplains were at medium to high risk for anxiety or depressive disorders.

That puts them at more than double the normal levels for other Forces members and higher than the civilian population.

The questionnaire identified a handful of causes for the strain, such as work overload, poor work-life balance, lack of training, ineffective leadership and being pulled in different directions by the chaplaincy, the Forces and churches.

Much of that is compounded by the ongoing mission in Afghanistan and the difficult tasks that fall to military padres, who serve six to nine month rotations overseas with troops in Kandahar, and are ministers to families at home.
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Opinion: On Being Pakistani
Updated: 14 hours 2 minutes ago
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Pakistanis are becoming the world's pariahs. Since being implicated in a steady stream of violent attacks -- from the London Tube bombings in 2005 to this month's failed attempt to bomb Times Square -- it seems almost inevitable now that when the next act of terrorism happens, a Pakistani will be involved.

As a Canadian of Pakistani descent, I've watched this pattern emerge with a rising sense of trepidation. Thirty-five years ago, when my parents decided to move to Canada, things were much different. Pakistanis were different. They were much in demand -- an intelligent, hard-working people who integrated and contributed positively to society, wherever they went.

What a terrible journey we've made since then.

Today, Pakistanis are objects of fear and suspicion. Wherever we go we must contend with the "terrorist" label and endure the scrutiny that accompanies it. Like many of my compatriots, I've been "interviewed" by the Joint Terrorism Task Force at the U.S. border, questioned at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi airport and scrutinized with extra efficiency by a German border control officer. Every time it happens, a piece of advice a Sufi in Saudi Arabia once gave me cycles through my mind: "When an obstacle is placed in front of you," he said, "be like water -- flow around it."

Pakistanis are being asked to flow a lot these days, and it will not get better any time soon. Many people in the world must be asking why it is that so many acts of terrorism in the West seem to lead back to Pakistan. Is there something in the Pakistani psyche that makes them susceptible to violence?

What those people might be surprised to hear is that Pakistanis are asking the same questions.
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EU has let us down on Afghanistan, says Defence Secretary Liam Fox

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New British Defence secretary Liam Fox has attacked Britain's EU "partners" for not pulling their weight in Afghanistan.

Scotsman Mr Fox, in his first interview as Defence Secretary, has said that he would make it a priority to reform Britain's riole in NATO and make sure other countries play their part.

Whilst he named no names, it was clear that Fox was talking mainly about Germany, France and Italy, saying that it was unfair for Britain to carry such a huge burden within the NATO alliance.

Mr Fox, a "NeoCon" with close links to the US Republican Party, also revealed that he will, amongst other things, put the MoD on a proper war footing to see through the job in Afghanistan; make it a criminal offence to discriminate against Britain's service personnel; and provide support for service personnel and their families.

Fox may be a bit of fresh air after a succession of former Marxists, Trotskyists and CND activists as Defence Secretary under the left-wing Labour Government.
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Afghan-Canadian performing tightwire act of governing Kandahar
Tooryalai Wesa left his Canadian home behind hoping to put troubled province on right path
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Three times we have marched up the steps of the Governor’s Palace in Kandahar City. Three times we have found different men behind the big desk, each promising that this time things will be different.

Maybe so. If one is to measure change by the resources at hand, never has Kandahar had a better chance than now.

Yet never have we seen fatigue like that on the face of Tooryalai Wesa, the Afghan-Canadian returnee who is serving as the latest political canary in the volatile coal mine that is southern Afghanistan.

He came back late in 2008, you may recall, tossing away a scholar’s life in Vancouver and replanting himself as Governor of his native Kandahar Province at the behest of President Hamid Karzai.

And now, 17 months and one assassination attempt later, Wesa has a bundle of bags under his woebegone eyes to show for it.
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Combat weapons in soldier's luggage

  Article Link
Canwest News Service May 17, 2010

A Canadian soldier en route back home from Afghanistan was caught with brass knuckles and throwing stars in his luggage, airport officials said. He and a comrade missed their connecting flight at the Winnipeg International Airport last week after they were held up by security.

Mathieu Larocque, spokesman for the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority, said a security officer detected brass knuckles and throwing stars in one of the Regina-based soldiers' checked bags.

Laroque said Winnipeg police were called to the airport where the weapons were seized them.

"These items are not only prohibited on planes, but also under the Criminal Code of Canada," said Larocque.
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  The NATO training mission in Afghanistan shows promise
By COL. JAY D. HADEN
Article Link

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN | As an Army Reserve officer who has spent the last 11 months working with and training the Afghan National Army (ANA), I’d like to share some of my impressions.

Afghanistan is slightly smaller than Texas in area and slightly larger in population. That’s where the similarities end. The country is desperately poor. However, its people are generous with what they have. Every time I entered an ANA officer’s workplace, I was served tea and, almost always, something to eat. And this hospitality is at the personal expense of the officers, even the most senior of whom are paid less than $1,000 a month.

The poor pay of army officers and other government officials contributes to the corruption that’s been widely reported. And I don’t mean to minimize this — corruption rears its head everywhere, across all spectra of society — but the country is about more than that.

Afghans are generally upbeat and optimistic about the future. Most I have encountered feel that if the government can establish a modicum of order and security in their day-to-day lives, Afghanistan will become the country they hope for.

This would mean that the people are safe from attacks by insurgents and collateral damage inflicted by the coalition. And it would also mean they’re not routinely subject to petty indignities, such as the payment of bribes to secure necessary public services.

Society here can’t really progress far until the government addresses the corruption problem seriously. Efforts thus far have not been much more than lip service.
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Articles found May 18, 2010

Cohn: Afghan exit strategy a non-starter
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A truce has been declared in Parliament’s war of words, sparing our politicians an election battle over who tortured whom in Afghanistan four years ago. Now spare a thought for the Canadian soldiers still fighting on the front lines and the Canadian aid workers in the trenches, virtually forgotten.

Canada’s body politic is transfixed by torture. What truly excites the opposition and the press is the classic Watergate formulation: what did the minister know and when did he know it?

It matters less that the Afghan security services blindfolded Taliban prisoners than that Ottawa’s bureaucracy turned a blind eye to it. Fair enough, for we are a nation of laws, even if some feign surprise that not every other nation is. Doubtless we could have, should have, done more to bind the hands of Afghans before letting them slap around the prisoners we handed over.

More puzzling is why our focus on events in 2006-07 has crowded out intelligent discussion of any other aspect of Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan in 2010-2011. Obsessed with the fate of a few dozen Taliban prisoners, we’ve become oblivious to the future of 30 million Afghan souls and the roughly 3,000 Canadians on the ground helping them.

Thankfully, we have gained a brief respite from Torturegate while MPs pore over the tortuous memo traffic buried in the bowels of our bureaucracy. That presents an opportunity for the rest of us to take our eyes off the rear-view mirror and look ahead to the deadline that is rapidly approaching for Canada to withdraw its combat troops from Kandahar starting in mid-2011.
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Kevin McKay’s family gets it: Worthington
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The sacrifice in Afghanistan is put in perspective
By Peter Worthington Last Updated: May 17, 2010

Sincere though they may be, those who think our soldiers should not be wasted in Afghanistan could learn from the parents and friends of soldiers who are killed there.

Incredible, to some, is the pride and support shown by families of soldiers killed — and their moral courage in the face of the greatest tragedy in their lives.

The family of Pte. Kevin McKay, 24, of the Princess Pats is a case in point — the 144th Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan, just a couple of days short of his tour ending and his return home.

It would seem Pte. McKay did one extra foot patrol, and fell victim to an IED — the curiously named improvised explosive device that has claimed half the soldiers killed.

McKay’s family lives at Horseshoe Valley north of Barrie. His father, Fred, is a Toronto fire captain, from whom his son evidently got his values, patriotism, his sense of purpose.

Amid the family’s grief, Fred McKay could put his son’s death in perspective.

“I think every soldier there and the ones going in the next battle group would say ‘leave them there until the job is done,’” he told the Sun’s Don Peat.

“You cannot give a date to withdraw troops, it has to be based on objectives. If they haven’t completed the task ... support them 150% so they have the resources to get the job done. Then bring them home.”

That’s a pretty mature attitude, and one our political leaders (in all parties) could well consider as they bicker to make points from what’s going on in Afghanistan.

Here’s Fred McKay, who suffered an unimaginable loss — as have 143 other Canadian families — recognizing that broadcasting a time-table for withdrawing troops further endangers those troops, and encourages an already fanatic enemy.

As a firefighter, he’s in one of those jobs that can be dangerous, demands dedication and serves a public that is not always appreciative of such efforts. Like police and soldiers, firefighters risk their lives in the cause of others.

When soldiers die in Afghanistan it’s normal for comrades and commanders to praise and grieve. Regiments are also family.

Still, it’s powerful and persuasive when families at home stand tall for their sons who are killed, and urge the government to show the courage and support Canada gets from its soldiers.
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Walking backward into battle: How Canada’s civilian and military deep integrationists took us to war
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May 5, 2010 in Briarpatch Articles, May/June 2010: Foreign policy | 1 comment
By Chris Shaw Briarpatch Magazine May/June 2010

August 2009, CFB Wainwright

It was well after midnight when we got off the yellow school buses and stepped into a field of thick Alberta mud. The sides of the large field kitchen tents nearby were billowing in the cold wind. Our kit had just been chucked to the ground from the buses, each item landing with a wet thump.

Two hundred metres away, half a dozen rows of modular tents would be our sleeping quarters. No one knew for sure who belonged to which tent, so hundreds of tired army reservists, me included, grabbed rucksacks and rifles and slumped into the nearest empty cot for a few hours sleep before the early morning reveille. By morning, we knew, we would no longer be in the middle of a mud field on Canadian Forces Base Wainwright, but rather on the sweltering and dusty Kandahar Airfield in southern Afghanistan, half a world away.

Maple Defender, a week-long training exercise, was designed to give us a taste of the war in Afghanistan, as far “down in the weeds” as it was possible to get without actually being there. Some of those who got off the buses were thinking about signing up for a future tour. Others, like me, were mostly curious about Canada’s first real shooting war since Korea and here to experience the changes that had come over the military since 2006. We were all soon to be confronted by two key observations: first, Canada was truly fighting a brutal counter-insurgency war against a determined enemy. Second, perhaps surprisingly to some, the military really liked its new war. Both observations led me to ask how the Forces came to be so involved in the fighting in Afghanistan, the so-called “graveyard of empires.” Was it an accident of history or a misjudgment by ignorant politicians? Or maybe – just maybe – the Forces themselves had been a major player in the decision to go to war against the Taliban.

By week’s end, I no longer had any doubts: Canada’s front-line role in the war in Afghanistan was at least in part designed by the Forces themselves as their 21st century coming-of-age party. It had been planned and executed to this end and had, on its own terms, been a spectacular success. Meanwhile, most Canadians have no clue that their country has been backed into a shooting war through the deliberate actions of a senior group of bureaucrats and military brass pursuing a particular political agenda.

When I first visited CFB Wainwright in the early 1990s, it was a sleepy place near its namesake, a farming village in east-central Alberta, about 60 kilometres from the Saskatchewan border. The base then, as now, sprawled over hundreds of kilometres of gullies and small hills, cut through by the Battle River. Back then, Canada and its NATO allies were still training for the kind of war that would be waged against the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact – a self-evident anachronism. Even those new to the Forces knew that Canada wasn’t going to be fighting the Russians in any foreseeable future. So who to fight? A military, after all, is designed to fight wars. Without real enemies, the very notion of having an army at all begins to lose its lustre. With politicians of all stripes starting to wonder aloud about the future role of the Canadian Forces, an existential angst had begun to ripple though the ranks. The Forces really needed a credible enemy, and soon.

In the years between the collapse of the Soviet Union and 2001, the Canadian military used Wainwright to train soldiers for deployment to the civil wars in the former Yugoslavia. After 9/11, when Afghanistan became the Forces’ focus, the base was rebranded as the Canadian Manoeuvre Training Centre. Wainwright’s location, cold winters and hot summers proved a perfect training ground for the new mission of fighting the Taliban insurgency.

The new training doctrine adopted by the Forces was called the “three-block war,” lifted directly from U.S. military practice. In three-block warfare, the first block consists of low- to medium-level combat operations against generic insurgents, rather ominously known as “rest of the world enemy,” or ROWEN. Block two involves so-called stabilization operations – in other words, the mopping up phases of combat. The final block consists of reconstruction efforts in which the military works alongside civilian and non-governmental agencies to fix the things that all the fighting has so effectively broken.
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Pakistan blast 'kills 12' in Dera Ismail Khan
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At least 12 people have been killed in a bomb blast near a police vehicle in the north-western Pakistani town of Dera Ismail Khan.

Officials say the bomb was planted on a bicycle and targeted the town's deputy police superintendent, who was killed along with his guard and driver.

Nobody has yet said they carried out the attack.

Dera Ismail Khan borders tribal South Waziristan, where the army launched an anti-Taliban assault last year.

Many people fled to the town after the army launched its offensive against militant strongholds in the volatile region.

While there has been a relative lull in violence in Dera Ismail Khan since the offensive, correspondents say many insurgents simply shifted to the nearby regions of Orakzai and Khyber.

map

"The target was Deputy Superintendent Iqbal Khan," a local police official told the BBC.

DSP Khan had been leaving his house in the Kutchi Painda Khan area of the city and getting into his car when the bomb was detonated by remote control, police said.

Hospital officials said the dead included women and children.
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Afghanistan war: Kandahar offensive is now in the slow lane (?!?)
McClatchy Newspapers, May 17
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-South-Central/2010/0517/Afghanistan-war-Kandahar-offensive-is-now-in-the-slow-lane

US officials say key military operations in the Kandahar offensive - scheduled for this summer - will be delayed until the fall. The Taliban have taken the Afghanistan war to the streets of the southern Afghan city with a campaign to assassinate key public officials.

Kandahar, Afghanistan —

Although it's just beginning, the U.S.-led effort to pacify Kandahar – the Taliban's spiritual capital in southern Afghanistan – already appears to be faltering.

Key military operations have been delayed until the fall, efforts to improve local government are having little impact, and a Taliban assassination campaign has brought a sense of dread to Kandahar's dusty streets.

NATO officials once spoke of demonstrating major progress by mid-August, but U.S. commanders now say the turning point may not be reached until November, and perhaps later.

At the urging of Afghan leaders, U.S. officials have stopped describing the plan as a military operation. Instead, they've dubbed it "Cooperation for Kandahar," a moniker meant to focus attention on efforts to build up local governance while reducing fears of street battles.

"We're not using the term 'operation' or 'major operations' because that often brings to mind in peoples' psyche the idea of a D-Day and an H-Hour and an attack," U.S. Army Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the commander of U.S.-led international forces in Afghanistan, said Thursday in Washington...

...According to an updated timeline seen by McClatchy, the U.S. troop buildup won't reach its peak until September, around the time that Afghanistan is to hold parliamentary elections and U.S. congressional election campaigns will be in full swing.

One major question is whether there will be enough forces for Kandahar, where McChrystal's plan calls for the deployment of 20,000 U.S. and Afghan troops.

U.S. defense officials and defense analysts said that McChrystal used 10,000 troops in Helmand to gain control of a rural river valley with about 50,000 residents. But in Kandahar, however, Afghanistan's second largest city, with an estimated population of 800,000, he's calling for just 20,000 troops.

"None of this makes any sense," said a U.S. defense official. "If it took you 10,000 (U.S. troops) to do Marjah, there aren't enough troops (for Kandahar)." The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Articles found May 19, 2010

Labrador airbase limited by Afghanistan deployment
 

By Bradley Bouzane, Canwest News Service May 18, 2010
Article Link

Operations at the Canadian Forces Base in Goose Bay, N.L., will be limited this summer, as much of the base staff is in Afghanistan helping with the Canadian mission.

More than half the staff on the base's combat support squadron was deployed to Afghanistan, which eliminates Goose Bay's ability to conduct some emergency operations, including search and rescue.

Lt.-Col. Michel Brisebois said the reduction in staff is a necessity given the scale of Canada's Afghan mission, but the staffing burden is cycled between Goose Bay and two other combat support squadrons in Cold Lake, Alta., and Bagotville, Que.

"Our commitment to Afghanistan, especially from an air force perspective, is very high," said Brisebois, a search-and-rescue adviser at the air force division headquarters in Winnipeg. "The staff is being pulled to go support Afghanistan, and by doing so, it reduces the personnel at home and it affects their status.

"It comes in waves, and at this particular time, Goose Bay is the (base) that's in its lull where most of their guys are gone and obviously, it has an impact on what they can do at home."

Brisebois said the Goose Bay base, which normally has 37 personnel, will carry a staff of between 10 and 15 people this summer. He could not specify when the crew from Goose Bay will return from Afghanistan.
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Canada may turn to U.S. military to guard its aid efforts in Afghanistan
Protection needed as development projects slated to outlast Canadian combat mission
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Canada’s aid effort in Afghanistan could fall under American military protection after our soldiers leave next year, the country’s top development official says.

Acknowledging the fragility of security in Kandahar Province, International Co-operation Minister Bev Oda said the surge of Americans into what has long been Canada’s patch in Afghanistan includes the possibility of a U.S. safeguard for development projects — and Canadian civilians — slated to outlast the Canadian combat mission.

“(The Americans) have offered to support the ongoing efforts that we will be continuing in Kandahar. And we will be talking to them as we go on,” Oda said Tuesday.

Oda’s comment came at a briefing following a day-long helicopter tour, in which the minister heaped praise upon signs of progress in irrigation and education, two of Canada’s signature projects in the restive southern province.
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Taliban launch brazen strike on NATO base
U.S. military: 10 insurgents die in predawn attack outside of Afghan capital
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Insurgents carrying rockets and grenades launched a brazen pre-dawn attack on a giant U.S.-run base north of Afghanistan's capital on Wednesday, leaving at least 10 guerrillas dead and 7 foreign troops wounded.

The attack on Bagram air base, about an hour's drive north of Kabul, continued into daylight with sporadic fire of rockets and small arms outside. One rocket landed inside the base, causing minor damage, but no insurgents managed to get inside Bagram, according to NATO.

Helicopter gunships hovered above Bagram, the main base for the U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan with the largest airfield in the country. It was used by the former Soviet Union during its invasion of the country in the 1980s. 
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Articles found May 20, 2010

Hamid Karzai’s half-brother accused over theft of Defence Ministry land
Article Link
May 20, 2010

Long the subject of allegations of criminality, a half-brother of President Karzai has for the first time faced public accusation from within the Afghan Government.

A dossier prepared by Major-General Sher Mohammad Zazi, the Corps Commander of the Afghan Army in Kandahar, was leaked yesterday. It accuses Ahmad Wali Karzai of using his influence to help associates in the illegal appropriation of government land around the southern city of Kandahar, where he leads the Kandahar Provincial Council and wields huge influence.

Mr Wali Karzai responded by demanding an investigation to clear his name and announced that he and the rest of the council would go on strike.

He told The Times by telephone yesterday: “I myself, with all the members of the provincial council, have today stopped working in Kandahar. I want a high-ranking delegation from Kabul to come and investigate the case.
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Canadian general escaped suicide bombing
Blast killed colonel in same convoy
By Matthew Fisher, Canwest News Service May 20, 2010
  Article Link

A Canadian Forces general narrowly escaped death in the same suicide car bombing that killed Canadian Col. Geoff Parker and 17 others in Kabul on Tuesday.

Brig.-Gen. Andre Corbould -- who is to become deputy commander for NATO operations in southeastern Afghanistan this fall -- two other Canadian officers and a corporal were in the five-vehicle convoy with Parker when a suicide bomber exploded a minivan loaded with nearly a tonne of explosives. None of the other Canadians were injured in the blast.

Aside from Parker, five American soldiers and 12 Afghan civilians were killed in the explosion.

Parker was to have taken up a position co-ordinating humanitarian aid and development across southern Afghanistan at the same time that Corbould was to become deputy commander of RC South, which has its headquarters at Kandahar Airfield.

Along with an American colonel killed in the same blast, Parker was the highest ranking NATO officer to have died in Afghanistan since U.S. forces invaded the country in the fall of 2001.

Parker was on a fairly typical mission in Kabul for officers soon to be deployed to Afghanistan when the convoy was hit near Canada's old base in Kabul. It was closed when the former Liberal government of Paul Martin government turned its military focus to Kandahar four years ago.

Parker was in the Afghan capital with some of those he was to work with when he took up his duties as deputy director for stability for NATO's Regional Command South. The posting at Kandahar Airfield was to have been for one year.
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Photoblog: mortar attack
Article Link
May 19, 2010

When reporter Tom Coghlan and I arrived at the remote forward operating base (FOB) “Lane” in the mountains of Zabul province, home to a platoon of US paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division, we found the guys in the mortar pit, preparing to carry out a mission to fire on surrounding peaks.

There were two reasons for the mortar fire: first, to target known Taleban spotter positions, and second, because they needed to practise.  I was eager to start photographing something of substance as it had taken nearly five days to get here and there had been a lot of waiting around, so I photographed them as they went about their firing, shifting position and constantly re-arranging my earplugs because they kept falling out just as the mortar was about to fire.
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Photoblog: IED attack
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Richard Pohle

Day Two of Operation Eagle Claw, and I groggily awoke from a doze inside a heavily armoured American MRAP (mine resistant ambush protected vehicle).

Reporter Tom Coghlan and I were with paratroopers of the American 82nd Airborne division as they accompanied Afghan Army soldiers to search villages that had known Taleban sympathies. We knew that these villages could have rings of defensive IEDs around them, and despite the fact we were travelling in one of the safest vehicles possible in the circumstances I was still nervous.

We were manoeuvering onto an "overwatch" position on a small hill overlooking the village of Khan Kalay. I looked out of the MRAP's small window at the village, vaguely aware of the Afghan army moving into their start positions and a humvee rumbling down a track to the side of us. The vehicle disappeared behind the lee of the hill.

Then I heard a sickening thud and saw a fountain of dust, smoke and pieces of metal fly into the air where the Humvee had just driven. "IED!" our vehicle's gunner shouted.

In the shocked seconds afterwards confusion reigned in our vehicle. I tried to find the bag I had put my cameras into the night before to protect them from the dust, but failed to locate it under a jumble of army ration boxes and backpacks. Tom leapt out of the vehicle and raced down to the scene while I pulled and wrestled with the packs. "Watch out for more IEDs!" I shouted after him.
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Photoblog: "They've just shot the tea boy!"
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May 17, 2010 Richard Pohle

This is Sergeant Daniel Yentsch, a military police officer attached to the 82nd Airborne at FOB Lane in Zabul province, Afghanistan. Reporter Tom Coghlan and I joined him on a visit to a nearby Afghan Police compound, to do an inventory of what equipment the police had and what they needed.

Tom went because he wanted to see how the local police worked and interview them. I went because I wanted to shoot some portraits of the different characters, and to get out of the small US base where we have been embedded for the past few days.

Our arrival triggered a flurry of activity amongst the Afghan Police. I guessed they saw this as quite an important visit. Officers were running about, pulling on bits of uniform and smoothing out the crumpled mess with their hands.
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A Quiet, Tense Night for a First Patrol
Rod Nordland, NY Times, 20 May 10
Article link
Kandahar, Afghanistan — The crescent moon had just risen as the Canadian soldiers crushed their last cigarettes out in the dust and began helping one another put on their heavy packs. There was a soft breeze in the warm night air, pleasantly and unseasonably mild. That wouldn’t last.

They were about to go on their first dismounted night patrol; their unit had just rotated in, and most of these men, from India Company, Second Royal Canadian Regiment, were on their first tour of Afghanistan. Their predecessors had over the previous year lost five service members.

“This is a presence patrol,” the patrol leader, Sgt. Dan Wiese, told them, “So when it gets too dark to see, use white light. That’s the point, to let them know we’re here.”

In a staggered double file, the 20 men marched out the gate of Camp Nathan Smith, on the edge of this city at the heart of the Taliban insurgency in southern Afghanistan. They turned right onto the main north-south road, whose NATO name was Miller Lite, and took both sides of the pavement. It was 8:05 p.m.

For the first few hundred yards, Miller Lite ran through a busy commercial district, and people were still in the shops and roadside stalls; three-wheeled motorized rickshaws and motorcycles and bicycles all pulled over. Afghan police escorts stopped auto and truck traffic, and it piled up far behind, headlights blazing from the vehicles in front, spilling onto the dirt verges five or six abreast, engines revving, occasional horns blowing; it seemed like a noisy, menacing mob, held at bay by some invisible force.

Leaving Miller Lite, to the roar of vehicles finally released to move, the platoon followed a zigzag route along streets too small for NATO names, mostly dirt and gravel, crisscrossed by narrow alleyways.

This is District Nine of Kandahar City, where many Taliban fighters reputedly live because there are footpaths that lead into the adjoining mountains — ratlines, the military calls them ....

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ARTICLES FOUND MAY 21

Canada's route out of Afghanistan will be bumpy
Best-laid plans could be derailed by a change in government in Ottawa

Toronto Star, May 21
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/afghanmission/article/812407--canada-s-route-out-of-afghanistan-will-be-bumpy?bn=1

The Canadian military’s plans to get every last soldier and tank out of Kandahar by the end of next year are detailed and well-advanced, even as it plans for contingencies ranging from exit routes to snap elections at home.

Internal documents obtained by the Star show the highly-secretive Mission Termination Task Force is grappling with the cost of an exit strategy that could be thrown into chaos if a new government in Ottawa decides to recommit to Afghanistan.

Between July and December 2011, when the withdrawal is to be completed, the Taliban insurgency is still expected to be active – despite a series of major offensives planned this year – and a substitute force to take Canada’s place has yet to be found...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Articles found May 21, 2010

Canada's route out of Afghanistan will be bumpy
Best-laid plans could be derailed by a change in government in Ottawa
Article Link

The Canadian military’s plans to get every last soldier and tank out of Kandahar by the end of next year are detailed and well-advanced, even as it plans for contingencies ranging from exit routes to snap elections at home.

Internal documents obtained by the Star show the highly-secretive Mission Termination Task Force is grappling with the cost of an exit strategy that could be thrown into chaos if a new government in Ottawa decides to recommit to Afghanistan.

Between July and December 2011, when the withdrawal is to be completed, the Taliban insurgency is still expected to be active – despite a series of major offensives planned this year – and a substitute force to take Canada’s place has yet to be found.

Then there’s the physical path out of war-torn Afghanistan. It’s a dusty, dangerous unpaved route laden not only with roadside bombs and bandits, but despotic regimes, rough terrain and enemies.

The military is also aware of the possibility that governments could use the country’s need for a 2011 withdrawal as a bargaining chip for their own commercial gain.
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Suicide attack hits Afghan police in Paktika
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A group of suicide bombers launched an attack on a police base in the eastern Afghan province of Paktika, officials say.

At least one policemen and four militants were killed during the raid and the gun battle that ensued in Paktika's Urgun district.

It is the latest in a series of attacks on security targets across the country.

On Wednesday suspected Taliban attacked one of Afghanistan's largest and most heavily fortified US bases.

Ten insurgents were killed and seven US troops injured in a battle at Bagram airbase that raged for several hours.

That attack came one day after a suicide bomb attack in Kabul killed 18 people, including five US soldiers and a Canadian colonel.
Volatile tribal areas

Four suspected Taliban fighters were involved in the raid on the police base in Urgun. One drove a lorry carrying explosives into the entrance, killing a policeman in the blast, local officials say.

The three others militants were killed only after a prolonged gun battle with police.
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Afghanistan: stuck
Posted By Thomas E. Ricks Thursday, May 20, 2010
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Afghanistan: stuck
Posted By Thomas E. Ricks Thursday, May 20, 2010 - 9:55 AM Share
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Travels with Shiloh, a good blog new to me, covers a recent conference on counterinsurgency at Fort Leavenworth and comes away with the interesting conclusion that the U.S. military is not gonna get out of Afghanistan anytime soon:

    While, current U.S. policy states that we'll begin withdrawing our forces in 2011 there was a universal recognition that any real effort to apply COIN in Afghanistan would take a very long time. While the subject wasn't addressed (except for one question at the final Q&A roundtable) my impression was that all of the speakers (British, Canadian and U.S.) were operating under the assumption that forces would be in place well beyond 2011. I heard no discussion about how to conduct any sort of hand off to the Afghans within 18 months, alterations to COIN theory or doctrine or trains of thought about alternate ways militaries could support/conduct COIN without significant numbers of forces on the ground. I would interpret that to mean that the military has been given the word (explicitly or implicitly) that that 2011 deadline is NOT set in stone. I would, in fact, go further and predict that barring some unforeseen change in the operating environment we will almost definitely have a significant presence in Afghanistan for some time.

I agree with this, and feel worse about it than I do about Iraq. I never thought invading Iraq was a good idea, but I thought (and still think) that invading Afghanistan was a correct response to 9/11.

He also offers this worrisome report:

    We most definitely do NOT own the night. Just because we have night vision goggles doesn't mean that much. We're not generally active at night and initiative goes to those who move at night.
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Web Exclusive: The Pakistan mess
Article Link
Saul Landau | May 20th 2010

Washington’s national security elite seethe and fume with resentment and frustration. Pakistan receives billions of U.S. aid dollars and remains a training ground for terrorists targeting the United States.

On May 1, Faisal Shahzad tried unsuccessfully to detonate his explosive-ridden car in Times Square. He subsequently revealed his Taliban training roots.

Washington complained that Pakistani governors in the militant’s operations areas have not cooperated in eliminating terrorists. On May 6, General Stanley McChrystal, U.S. commander in Afghanistan, urged Pakistan’s General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani in Islamabad to rapidly begin an offensive in North Waziristan, Al Qaeda and Taliban strongholds.

After all, U.S. diplomats whined, after Congress has authorized more than $11 billion to Pakistan, that ungrateful President Asif Zardar dared grumble about Pakistan not receiving its proper share of the money. Is this extortion? An insider Muslim joke on Christians?

According to Pakistani writer Pervez Hoodbhoy, President Zarder gets approval for anti-American posturing. Even the attempted Times Square terrorist attack received substantial support from the Pakistani public because it represented a prevailing notion: “the U.S. is responsible for all ills, both in Pakistan and the world of Islam”.

Routine U.S. drone bombings of “suspected militants” have not won wide approval. Instead, the droning assassinations of supposed Taliban or Al Qaeda leaders have killed lots of civilians. This has led some Pakistanis and Muslims elsewhere to hear more credibly the jihad-preaching Imams calling for revenge.
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US investigates Afghanistan civilian deaths
US soldier in Afghanistan
Article Link

The US military has opened a criminal investigation into allegations that American soldiers were involved in the unlawful deaths of Afghan civilians.

A statement released by the US Army in Afghanistan says that a small number of US soldiers were responsible.

It said that "as many as three Afghan civilians" were killed.

A spokesman for the US military in Kabul told the BBC's Mark Dummett that there had been "no other similar cases as serious as this one".

The spokesman said that he could not give more information because he did not want to jeopardise the investigation.

The statement released by the military said that there were also allegations of illegal drug use, assault and conspiracy. So far no charges have been made.

However the statement says that one soldier has been placed in pre-trial confinement.

Source of tension

"The army's Criminal Investigation Command initiated their investigation after receiving credible information from the soldiers' unit earlier this month," the statement said.
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NATO Agrees to Split of Regional Command South, Afghanistan
International Security Assistance Force HQ Public Affairs, May 21
http://www.dvidshub.net/?script=news/news_show.php&id=50065#

AFGHANISTAN - On May 21, 2010, the North Atlantic Council in consultation with non-NATO International Security Assistance Force Troop Contributing Nations, gave final authorization for the reorganisation of ISAF's Regional Command South and the establishment of an additional Regional Command South-West – RC(SW) – in Afghanistan. This new organisation will be effective later this summer.

The new RC(SW) will have responsibility for the Helmand and Nimruz provinces and will be placed initially under the command of the United States. Regional Command South, which is under the command of British Maj. Gen. Nick Carter, will retain the provinces of Kandahar, Uruzgan, Zabul and Daikundi [emphasis added].

The decision was taken upon the recommendation by Gen. McChrystal, commander of ISAF, to optimize the command and control of a Regional Command that has grown exponentially since its transfer to NATO's command in 2006. With more than 50,000 ISAF troops and eight Afghan national army brigades operating in six different provinces, the strain on the span of control would have been too high for Regional Command South in its present configuration. The new structure will ease the burden of Regional Command South and enable more adapted and efficient counter-insurgency operations at the local level.

Supreme Allied Commander Europe has now been authorized to implement the restructuring. Work in-theatre has already started for the new Regional Command to become fully operational in the summer of 2010.

Afghanistan: “Taliban Flexing Muscles”
Conference of Defence Associations'media round-up, May 21
http://www.cdaforumcad.ca/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1274455544/0#0

Mark
Ottawa
 
ARTICLES FOUND MAY 23

U.S. troops, Afghan police sweep through Taliban stronghold
Military and civilian teams search homes and offer reconstruction aid in a Kandahar district. The operation is a preview of a wider summer campaign.

LA Times, May 23
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-afghan-kandahar-sweep-20100523,0,1825801.story?page=1&utm_medium=feed&track=rss&utm_campaign=Feed%3A%20latimes%2Fasia%20%28L.A.%20Times%20-%20Asia%29&utm_source=feedburner

Reporting from Kandahar, Afghanistan

U.S. soldiers and Afghan police early Saturday swarmed a dense Taliban stronghold of mud-brick homes on the western shoulder of Kandahar, conducting searches and promising aid in a preview of a planned summer campaign to control the insurgent movement's spiritual home.

Operation Kokaran was named for the neighborhood where the Taliban have assassinated government officials and built infiltration routes. The U.S. goal is to clear out insurgents, build up local governance and bring in reconstruction projects.

Only a few shots were fired during the most comprehensive military-civilian operation in Kandahar since President Obama in December ordered 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan. It is the first time civilian aid and reconstruction teams have taken part in conceiving and planning a military clearing operation here, U.S. officials said.

Hours later, insurgents launched a rocket, mortar and ground attack on the main base used by foreign troops, at Kandahar's air field a few miles east of Kokaran. Explosions wounded several troops and civilian workers, said Capt. Scott Costen, a North Atlantic Treaty Organization spokesman at the base. Costen said he could not provide details on the attack, the number of wounded or any insurgent casualties.

But the attack seemed similar to an insurgent assault Wednesday on the sprawling U.S. base at Bagram, north of Kabul.

In Kandahar, more than 200 U.S. military police and infantry troops backed 200 to 250 Afghan police officers in door-to-door searches that began before dawn in the tight warren of residential compounds in the city's District 8, which is home to about 75,000 people and includes Kokaran. U.S. commanders say the Taliban exercises more autonomy in the district than anywhere else in the city.

Previous sweeps failed to dislodge insurgents because there weren't enough troops and little aid to elicit local support. This time, U.S. and Afghan commanders promised enough military muscle and development aid to make a difference...

Aussie troops build presence in Kandahar ahead of NATO push
The Australian, May 17
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/full-recovery-for-injured-aussie-troops/story-e6frg8yo-1225867853449

AUSTRALIAN special forces have begun ramping up their presence in Kandahar ahead of a major NATO-led push to oust Taliban insurgents from the key southern province.

The increasing troop numbers was confirmed today in a briefing by Defence head Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, who said the offensive would involve Australian special forces, Chinook transport helicopters and possibly Afghan National Army kandaks (battalions) mentored by Australian forces...

...members of Australia's Special Operations Task Group (SOTG) are already conducting operations in Kandahar province, with Air Chief Marshal Houston reporting that the SOTG would be involved in what were termed “shaping operations” ahead of the main event.

“If there is a particular area where there's a lot of Taliban, you might go in and disrupt that Taliban sanctuary,” he said.

“Shaping is quite a demanding form of operation and precedes more conventional forces going in and doing clearing operations.”..

Update:

Taliban networks targeted in Special Forces operations
Australian Department of Defence, May 17
http://www.defence.gov.au/media/DepartmentalTpl.cfm?CurrentId=10303

Taliban insurgent networks have suffered a series of blows with three commanders killed in Oruzgan in the past week.

Mullah Jalil, an insurgent commander known to be responsible for Improvised Explosive Device (IED) attacks against Coalition soldiers operating from Multi-National Base Tarin Kowt, has been shot and killed in an Afghan National Security Force led operation supported by the Special Operatons Task Group (SOTG).

Several components used to manufacture IEDs were recovered during the incident.

The Taliban leader believed to be responsible for the IED that killed two Dutch soldiers on the 17th of April, Abdul Malik has also been killed in a Special Forces operation.

The recent operations in the Deh Rafshan area will disrupt Taliban activities.

Additionally, the last known Taliban leader in the Gizab district was also killed in a combined operation over the weekend, which will allow the Afghan Government to continue to restore services to the locals.

The Commanding Officer of the Australian Special Operations Task Group, said the operations are examples of the successful training and partnering with Afghan security forces by Australian forces in Afghanistan.

“Every time we remove an insurgent leader, we make the area safer for Afghan civilians and help the Afghan government forces to regain control of their communities from the Taliban.”

In the past month, the SOTG and its partnered Afghan National Security Force element have also detained two key insurgent leaders who operated in the Mirabad and Gizab regions of Oruzgan Province...

For more information on Australia's operations in Afghanistan go to: http://www.defence.gov.au/op/afghanistan/index.htm

Mark
Ottawa
 
Articles found May 24, 2010

Canadian patrol illustrates difficulty figuring out friend from foe in Panjwaii
By: Tara Brautigam, The Canadian Press 23/05/2010
Article Link

BAZZAR-E-PANJWAII, Afghanistan - Gunfire rings out less than a kilometre away from the Panjwaii district centre, shattering the silence that hangs over this small village southwest of Kandahar city.

Hours later under the shadow of night, men mill about roadside culverts, a popular hiding spot for improvised explosive devices.

That makes Cpl. Christopher Turk suspicious.

The next morning, the 29-year-old Hamilton man leads a small section of soldiers and Afghan National Police to talk to the Kuchis, a nomadic agrarian people who have remained neutral in the conflict with the Taliban. They also live in the vicinity of where the gunshots were fired and farm near the roadside during the relative cool of night.

The patrol illustrates the challenges members of the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment face in identifying friend from foe in Panjwaii, known as the birthplace of the Taliban.

The march is slow, each footstep gentle. On this parched stretch of land eyes fixate on a bottle cap, a piece of cloth, a clump of dirt — anything that appears unusual.

Families piled onto bicycles and motorcycles are stopped along the way. Master Cpl. Chad Vincent delivers the same message each time.

"Be careful when you're around the roads at nighttime and make sure to stay away from the culverts especially," the 29-year-old native of Corner Brook, N.L., tells them.

"If you do work at nighttime you should report to the (district centre) and let them know what you're doing exactly because of the activity that's been happening."

At one point, a man cradling his toddler-aged son pleads with a NATO interpreter and journalist to provide medication — any kind of medication will do, he emphasizes. Master Cpl. Sergio De Franco, a medic, gets the boy to stick out his tongue and then examines his pupils.

De Franco tells the father his boy likely has diarrhea and encourages him to see a doctor. But the father says he doesn't trust local doctors as much as those from the West. He hops back onto his motorcycle with his son and moves on.
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Afghan peace conference delayed for 2nd time
Article Link
(AP) – 20 hours ago

KABUL, Afghanistan — An Afghan official says a conference to discuss peace prospects with the Taliban has been postponed for a second time.

The gathering of tribal elders and other community leaders had been expected to begin this coming Saturday. But the spokesman for the conference, Gul Agha Ahmedi, says the meeting will be begin June 2 and last three days. No reason for the delay was given.

The conference, known as a loya jiga (LOH-yah JER-ga), was postponed from early May to allow President Hamid Karzai to discuss his peace plans during a visit to Washington earlier this month.

No representatives of the Taliban are due to attend. Instead the conference will focus on economic incentives for insurgents willing to give up the fight.
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Taliban blows up two suspected spies
Article Link
Haji Mujtaba, Agence France-Presse; With Files From Reuters  Published: Saturday, May 22, 2010

Taliban operatives strapped explosives to two men accused of being U.S. spies, then blew them up at a public execution in northwest Pakistan.

The killings took place Thursday evening in North Waziristan, a lawless al-Qaeda and Taliban sanctuary on the Afghan border where the United States has stepped up attacks with missile-firing drone aircraft, fuelling the insurgents' fears of spies.

Five masked Taliban paraded the hand-cuffed prisoners before dozens of people in the Datta Khel area and accused them of passing information to the United States on targets for the pilotless drone aircraft operated by the Central Intelligence Agency.
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Another ISAF soldier killed in Afghanistan today. No nationality has been released.

Prayers and thoughts to family, friends and fellow soldiers of all the Fallen. Spring is definitely here.

ISAF Joint Command

ISAF Joint Command - Afghanistan

2010-05-CA-091
For Immediate Release

KABUL, Afghanistan (May 24) - An ISAF servicemember died following an improvised explosive device attack in southern Afghanistan today.

It is ISAF policy to defer identification procedures for casualties to the relevant national authorities.
 
ARTICLES FOUND MAY 25

An earful after a military operation in Kandahar
Afghan tribal elders in Kokaran, invited to discuss governance and development, turn the focus instead on security, especially complaining about not receiving advance notice of military raids.


LA Times, May 25
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-afghanistan-kandahar-20100525,0,683009,full.story

Reporting from Kandahar, Afghanistan

It was supposed to be a meeting about governance and development — two of the three pillars of the U.S. counterinsurgency effort in Kandahar province this summer.

Instead, the shura, or assembly of local leaders, at a police station Monday turned into a gripe session about the third pillar: security. The elders complained bitterly about a U.S. military raid in their neighborhood, Kokaran, the night before, and about a big security sweep Saturday.
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/may/23/world/la-fg-afghan-kandahar-sweep-20100523

Security defines daily existence here — for the military, for development workers and for Afghans. Without it, neither governance nor aid to improve schools, sanitation and clinics is possible. And that is the crux of the challenge for the United States as it tries to wrest control of Kandahar from the Taliban.

"It's not good, these big operations. They worry the people," Haji Fadi Mohammed told the gathering Monday as other elders murmured in agreement.

American and Canadian civil affairs and development teams [emphasis added] had arranged the meeting to follow up on Saturday's joint U.S.-Afghan Operation Kokaran...

...The only visible hand of the government is the Afghan national police. Mohammed, speaking for the elders, accused them of taking bribes. Even American soldiers who train the police say they don't trust all of them.

One of four suspected insurgents captured after a Taliban assault on the main foreign base at Kandahar Saturday night was a police recruit. Three Canadian soldiers [emphasis added] and 10 civilian workers were wounded in the attack [more here]. According to the Canadian military, bomb-making materials were found in the officer's quarters at a police training academy a few miles from the base...

The discussion turned briefly to development. The elders complained that their neighborhood had received visits from U.S. and Canadian aid teams, but no projects.

Master Warrant Officer Kevin Walker, a Canadian civil affairs specialist [that's a CIMIC operator, more here, here and here], explained that Kokaran had to be secured first. He had heard such complaints before; he's on his third tour in Afghanistan.

Walker, who has visited Mohammed at his home, told him that Saturday's operation, designed to cut Taliban infiltration routes and set up police checkpoints, would make it easier to visit and discuss development projects.

"The fact that he made the effort to get here shows he's serious and wants to engage with us," Walker said of Mohammed afterward...

Soon it was time to go. The American and Canadian soldiers strapped on their body armor and weapons and climbed back into their armored vehicles. Eight of the elders, dressed in flowing white salwar kameez and silver and black turbans, piled back into a battered Toyota Corolla station wagon. The other two left in a pickup truck...

Mark
Ottawa
 
Articles found May 26, 2010

Taliban Haunt Nights in a Kandahar Village
Fear-Struck Afghans Turn Away Troops Who Come Seeking Their Confidence
Article Link

Three days before the first American patrol rolled into this village in Kandahar province, the Taliban paid a visit to farmer Ismail Khan. They kidnapped his son, who worked on a government road project, beat up Mr. Khan, and torched the family's prized possession, a white Toyota Corolla.

Yet, when American soldiers asked Mr. Khan and his neighbors about the vehicle's charred hulk in the courtyard, the villagers initially feigned ignorance.

After realizing the soldiers already knew about the incident, Mr. Khan explained. "Today, you come here. Tonight or tomorrow, once the Taliban find out I've been talking to ...
end

Cda finally processing entry requests for Afghan interpreters, but few make cut
Article Link
By: Bill Graveland, The Canadian Press 25/05/2010

More than a year after Ottawa promised to fast-track immigration applications for Afghan translators, a narrow list of applicants who meet the criteria to come to Canada has been compiled.

Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney originally announced the program for Afghans who face "extraordinary personal risk" because of their support to Canada's mission in Kandahar. At the time, Kenney said he expected "a few hundred'' successful applicants to qualify by the time the mission and the program ends in 2011.

But out of 114 applications only 25, or roughly 21 per cent, have been approved to come to Canada by the committee made up of officials from the departments of National Defence, Foreign Affairs, International Development and Immigration and Citizenship. The committee works in conjunction with the International Organization for Migration, an intergovernmental agency.

"We're beginning to process some of the approved applications. There was a delay because we need to work as well through the International Organization for Migration and they removed all their staff for security reasons in Kandahar," Kenney said in a recent interview.

"The security situation has made it go slower than I would have liked but we're finally starting to process some of those positive applications and some of those people should be settling in Canada shortly."

Neither Kenney nor officials in his department could say exactly when the successful immigrants, who are allowed to bring along two family members each, would arrive in Canada.

Opposition critics say that bureaucratic foot-dragging is risking the lives of Afghan interpreters.

"It's been a long time and they face danger and their families face danger. Don't have them bogged down with bureaucratic red tape," said NDP immigration critic Olivia Chow, who was surprised that even 25 had been approved.
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Undercover CSIS agents carry guns in foreign flashpoints
Article Link
Spies get only few weeks training; 'amateurs with guns are dangerous to everyone,' says critic
Colin Freeze
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail Published on Tuesday, May. 25, 2010

Ottawa’s spies are carrying guns in Afghanistan, a new practice for the clandestine civilian agents who are not authorized to bear arms inside Canada.

In response to Globe and Mail questions, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service confirmed for the first time that intelligence operatives can carry firearms in overseas hot spots.

That revelation shocks many long-time spy-service watchers, who say Parliament never contemplated this power. CSIS’s request for firearms was never publicized or debated publicly.

The authorization is to use force as a last resort, and only when facing dire circumstances. No CSIS agent is yet known to have fired a bullet.

This development comes as CSIS, increasingly constrained within Canada, looks to expand its horizons abroad. In Afghanistan, it already claims to have disrupted terrorists and safeguarded soldiers.

“We have saved Canadian lives,” CSIS director Dick Fadden told a parliamentary committee this month, testifying about Afghanistan. He did not reveal details.
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Suicide bomber targets Canadian base in Afghanistan
  Article Link
By Matthew Fisher, Canwest News Service May 26, 2010

A car bomb blew up outside Canada's Provincial Reconstruction Team base in Kandahar City on Wednesday morning.

The attack occurred in front of Camp Nathan Smith where Afghan workers on the base sometimes gather or pick up lifts.

The abortive attack in front of Camp Nathan Smith was a vehicle borne improvised explosive device. One local national was injured in the attack according to Canadian and Afghan sources.

"Camp Nathan Smith's Quick Reaction Force responded, assisted by the Afghan National Police," Lt. (N) Michele Tremblay, the military spokesman at the KPRT, said in a statement. "To ensure the safety of local Kandaharis, the immediate vicinity was evacuated."

It was unclear whether the bomb detonated prematurely or what, exactly its intended target was.

The incident was the first of its kind to target Kandahar's PRT. The base is home to hundreds of Canadian and American troops as well as scores of Canadian and American diplomats, police trainers and aid workers who assist with development projects, train local security forces and help bring governance to the province.
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U.S. puts hopes in bedraggled Afghan police
If the U.S. is to succeed in seizing control of Kandahar — the country's second-largest city — from the Taliban this summer, improving the performance of the police will be at the heart of the effort.

LA Times, May 26
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-afghan-cops-20100527,0,6481245.story

Reporting from Kandahar, Afghanistan — Afghan national police checkpoint No. 4, substation 3, is a blighted shell of a building ringed by garbage and shaded by scruffy trees whose leaves are coated with fine gray dust. Here, nine police officers have the task of protecting the Shinghazi Baba neighborhood of southern Kandahar.

Sometimes they can't even protect themselves. Two months ago, an officer was fatally shot by an insurgent who escaped on a motorcycle.

"The force-protection posture is not really all that great," Sgt. 1st Class Arnaldo Colon, a U.S. Army military policeman, said as he arrived Wednesday morning for an inspection. He gestured toward dilapidated concrete barriers, a few sad strands of concertina wire and a yelping guard dog tied to a tree.

If the U.S. is to succeed in seizing control of Kandahar, Afghanistan's second-largest city, from the Taliban this summer, improving the performance of the Afghan police will be at the heart of that effort. The often bedraggled force patrols roads and operates neighborhood checkpoints, putting officers in daily contact with a civilian populace the U.S. is trying to win over.

Colon's unit, the 293rd Military Police Company, trains and mentors Afghan police in Kandahar. The U.S. military is attempting to put an Afghan face on policing, pushing Afghans to take the lead on patrols, searches and neighborhood sweeps. The police and army will be responsible for security when U.S. forces begin to withdraw, perhaps as early as next summer.

When his company arrived in July as the only U.S. unit stationed in downtown Kandahar, Colon said, the police "didn't have a clue." They were incapable of patrolling on their own.

"Now, they're better prepared and know the minimum standards for patrol and security," Colon said as he led a foot patrol of seven U.S. MPs and six Afghan officers through busy streets filled with vendors hawking vegetables and shopkeepers selling sodas and snacks...

Canadian Army Sgt. Sarah Surtees, whose civil affairs patrol bumped into Colon's patrol at the checkpoint Wednesday [emphasis added], said the Afghan police have been instrumental in her mission. With their help, she said, she assesses community needs and encourages residents to seek help from the government-appointed district manager.

No projects are underway in the Shinghazi Baba neighborhood, Surtees said. But 300 residents of nearby neighborhoods have been hired to clean out clogged irrigation canals and culverts. Water carried by the system is needed by the small farm plots that dominate the area...

Mark
Ottawa
 
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