- Reaction score
- 4,276
- Points
- 1,260
Donkey mascot enjoying better life with Canadian engineers
Bill Graveland, Canadian Press, via Canada.com, 25 Nov 06
Article Link
A little white donkey has become the apple of the eye . . . for Canadian engineers in Panjwaii. Excuse the clumsy attempt at rhyming but Tina, officially known as Regulator-1 in military jargon, has troops here at this remote Canadian camp wrapped around her delicate little finger - make that hoof. Tina was purportedly purchased from a local farmer who had beaten her, to help carry supplies such as sandbags to the top of a mountain where an observation post is being built. But her workload has been non-existent, and now Tina has received some interesting news. "She is pregnant," confirmed medic Cpl. Shannon Fretter of Springhill, N.S. "The veterinarians in KAF (Kandahar Air Field) pretty much gave us the pregnancy stuff and one of the master corporals has been giving her some examinations and apparently she is pregnant." ....
Afghanistan resorts to militias to fight the insurgency
Associated Press, via International Herald Tribune, 25 Nov 06
Article Link
Afghanistan is training thousands of men affiliated with local militias in hopes of giving the country's security forces a boost in their fight against a growing insurgency. But some fear that Taliban militants and common criminals have infiltrated the program. The training of the local militia members could give Afghanistan up to 11,000 on-call policemen who officials could tap to boost ranks during times of need. But the quality of the recruits and their effectiveness in the police force is being questioned by some. "There are criminals and drug users among them," said Col. Mohammed Hussain Andiwall, a senior police official in Kandahar province who coordinates between the Ministry of Interior and foreign experts training the auxiliary police force ....
Nato runs critically short of combat troops to keep Taliban at bay
Kim Sengupta, The Independent (UK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
Tony Blair and other Nato leaders gathering in the Latvian capital, Riga, this week will almost certainly fail to secure the additional troops being sought to keep the Taliban at bay in Afghanistan, according to sources here. Although it took over responsibility for the whole country just a few weeks ago, Nato's mission remains at least 15 per cent undermanned, with a significant shortage of combat troops and a desperate lack of helicopters. A succession of Nato meetings has failed to secure reinforcements, and all the indications are that the alliance's Riga summit, presented as one of the most crucial in its post-Cold War history, will not be any more successful. Commanders have repeatedly sought at least 1,000 fighting troops to form a quick reaction force which could deal with upsurges of violence, but many in the 37-nation mission have insisted on constraints which effectively keep them away from the front line ....
France may join Afghan front line
Nicola Smith, Times Online (UK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
FRENCH and German troops who have been kept away from the fiercest fighting in Afghanistan could be used as emergency reinforcements for British, American and Canadian soldiers bearing the brunt of the war against the Taliban. A Nato summit this week in Riga, the capital of Latvia, is expected to agree greater flexibility for commanders to call on coalition allies for frontline support. British officers have described how military police and engineers have had to fend off Taliban attacks while well trained coalition troops remain far away in Kabul and the relatively peaceful north. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, Nato’s secretary-general, is urging all nations to lift the restrictions imposed on where their troops can be stationed. There has been a sharp disparity within Nato between European allies that have sought to minimise their casualties and concentrate on reconstruction, and Britain, Canada and the United States, which are committed to defeating the Taliban ....
Bush readies Afghan push at NATO
Agence France Presse, via Khaleej Times (UAE), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
President George W. Bush heads to the NATO summit in Latvia looking to press European allies for more support as the Afghan war reaches a pivotal point, and US-occupied Iraq slides into chaos. Bush, stung by the drubbing of his Republican Party in congressional elections, will also push for a new network of “global partners” for NATO, including Australia, Japan, South Korea, Sweden and Finland. “For us, the number one issue is Afghanistan,” said US undersecretary of state Nicholas Burns ahead of the November 28-29 summit in Riga. US officials say they are satisfied with the progress of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, despite intensifying battles with Taleban fighters. They are asking for more European support in reconstruction aspects of the mission, and want combat risks shared more equally among the alliance as up to now some nations have imposed conditions on where their troops can fight ....
Flaws in Afghan mission among key challenges facing leaders at Latvian summit
Pak Tribune (PAK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
The western military alliance is facing a credibility crisis - struggling to rustle up troops as its first major combat test, in Afghanistan, rests on a knife-edge. According to article published in Guardian limited, founded to confront a country and empire that no longer exist and an ideology that is largely moribund, even its name, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, is incongruous, given the eastward lurch of its centre of gravity. As leaders of the 26 member states gather in the Latvian capital, Riga, next week, the question that will haunt them, one they may be too frightened to ask, will linger uncomfortably: what is Nato for? ....
More News on CAN in AFG here
'Barber of Kandahar' finds himself in firefight
CTV.ca, 25 Nov 06
Article Link
Claude Goulet -- barber by trade, in Afghanistan by choice -- found himself in a close shave of his own. Goulet hails from Kapuskasing in northern Ontario. Six months ago, he agreed to do a stint in Afghanistan cutting hair for Canadian soldiers. Part of the job includes "house calls" to the forward operating bases in Kandahar province. During such a trip earlier this week, Goulet got trapped in the middle of a Taliban attack in the troubled Panjwaii district. "It was exciting, I'll guarantee you that, something I never thought I'd experience in my lifetime," he told CTV News. His digital camera captured the sounds of a Taliban mortar flying overhead, Canadian soldiers firing back and then American air support coming in to pound the insurgents. "Ahh, that was a big one!" he could be heard saying ....
Fresh claims of Afghan shortages
BBC Online, 24 Nov 06
Article Link
The government is facing fresh claims that British troops in Afghanistan are facing shortages of vital equipment. Sgt Stephen Brown of the Royal Marines has complained his men do not have enough ammunition and equipment, and have to use inappropriate vehicles. He told reporters in Helmand Province: "Countless times we have put in requests for what we need extra, and it has not arrived." But the MoD and senior officers insist there is enough equipment for the job ....
Afghan marines lack ammo, claims Arbroath sergeant
Andrew Jarret, Evening Telegraph & Post (UK), 24 Nov 06
Article Link
British troops fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan are short of essential equipment, according to a marine with Arbroath’s 45 Commando Group .... Royal Marine Sergeant Stephen Brown said his men were lacking ammunition and needed better-armoured vehicles. Repeated requests for extra kit have not been met, he is reported to have told journalists in Lashkar Gar. Sgt Brown commands the unit which included Gary Wright (21), who was killed by a suicide bomber while on patrol in Helmand last month. According to Sgt Brown, his troops are short of Wimiks — stripped down and heavily armed Land Rovers. He apparently did not suggest such a vehicle would have saved Marine Wright’s life, but insisted it could have prevented injuries to Dundee Sergeant Gary Ellis (35), also caught up in the incident ....
Troops poorly equipped to fight Taliban-sergeant
Pak Tribune (PAK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
BRITISH TROOPS fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan are short of essential equipment, according to an officer with Arbroath's 45 Commando Group. Royal Marine Sergeant Stephen Brown said his men were lacking ammunition and needed better armoured vehicles. Repeated requests for extra kit have not been met, he is reported to have told journalists in Lashkar Gar. Sgt Brown commands the unit which included Gary Wright (21), who was killed by a suicide bomber while on patrol in Helmand last month. According to Sgt Brown, his troops are short of "Wimiks"-stripped down and heavily armed Land Rovers ....
Bill Graveland, Canadian Press, via Canada.com, 25 Nov 06
Article Link
A little white donkey has become the apple of the eye . . . for Canadian engineers in Panjwaii. Excuse the clumsy attempt at rhyming but Tina, officially known as Regulator-1 in military jargon, has troops here at this remote Canadian camp wrapped around her delicate little finger - make that hoof. Tina was purportedly purchased from a local farmer who had beaten her, to help carry supplies such as sandbags to the top of a mountain where an observation post is being built. But her workload has been non-existent, and now Tina has received some interesting news. "She is pregnant," confirmed medic Cpl. Shannon Fretter of Springhill, N.S. "The veterinarians in KAF (Kandahar Air Field) pretty much gave us the pregnancy stuff and one of the master corporals has been giving her some examinations and apparently she is pregnant." ....
Afghanistan resorts to militias to fight the insurgency
Associated Press, via International Herald Tribune, 25 Nov 06
Article Link
Afghanistan is training thousands of men affiliated with local militias in hopes of giving the country's security forces a boost in their fight against a growing insurgency. But some fear that Taliban militants and common criminals have infiltrated the program. The training of the local militia members could give Afghanistan up to 11,000 on-call policemen who officials could tap to boost ranks during times of need. But the quality of the recruits and their effectiveness in the police force is being questioned by some. "There are criminals and drug users among them," said Col. Mohammed Hussain Andiwall, a senior police official in Kandahar province who coordinates between the Ministry of Interior and foreign experts training the auxiliary police force ....
Nato runs critically short of combat troops to keep Taliban at bay
Kim Sengupta, The Independent (UK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
Tony Blair and other Nato leaders gathering in the Latvian capital, Riga, this week will almost certainly fail to secure the additional troops being sought to keep the Taliban at bay in Afghanistan, according to sources here. Although it took over responsibility for the whole country just a few weeks ago, Nato's mission remains at least 15 per cent undermanned, with a significant shortage of combat troops and a desperate lack of helicopters. A succession of Nato meetings has failed to secure reinforcements, and all the indications are that the alliance's Riga summit, presented as one of the most crucial in its post-Cold War history, will not be any more successful. Commanders have repeatedly sought at least 1,000 fighting troops to form a quick reaction force which could deal with upsurges of violence, but many in the 37-nation mission have insisted on constraints which effectively keep them away from the front line ....
France may join Afghan front line
Nicola Smith, Times Online (UK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
FRENCH and German troops who have been kept away from the fiercest fighting in Afghanistan could be used as emergency reinforcements for British, American and Canadian soldiers bearing the brunt of the war against the Taliban. A Nato summit this week in Riga, the capital of Latvia, is expected to agree greater flexibility for commanders to call on coalition allies for frontline support. British officers have described how military police and engineers have had to fend off Taliban attacks while well trained coalition troops remain far away in Kabul and the relatively peaceful north. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, Nato’s secretary-general, is urging all nations to lift the restrictions imposed on where their troops can be stationed. There has been a sharp disparity within Nato between European allies that have sought to minimise their casualties and concentrate on reconstruction, and Britain, Canada and the United States, which are committed to defeating the Taliban ....
Bush readies Afghan push at NATO
Agence France Presse, via Khaleej Times (UAE), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
President George W. Bush heads to the NATO summit in Latvia looking to press European allies for more support as the Afghan war reaches a pivotal point, and US-occupied Iraq slides into chaos. Bush, stung by the drubbing of his Republican Party in congressional elections, will also push for a new network of “global partners” for NATO, including Australia, Japan, South Korea, Sweden and Finland. “For us, the number one issue is Afghanistan,” said US undersecretary of state Nicholas Burns ahead of the November 28-29 summit in Riga. US officials say they are satisfied with the progress of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, despite intensifying battles with Taleban fighters. They are asking for more European support in reconstruction aspects of the mission, and want combat risks shared more equally among the alliance as up to now some nations have imposed conditions on where their troops can fight ....
Flaws in Afghan mission among key challenges facing leaders at Latvian summit
Pak Tribune (PAK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
The western military alliance is facing a credibility crisis - struggling to rustle up troops as its first major combat test, in Afghanistan, rests on a knife-edge. According to article published in Guardian limited, founded to confront a country and empire that no longer exist and an ideology that is largely moribund, even its name, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, is incongruous, given the eastward lurch of its centre of gravity. As leaders of the 26 member states gather in the Latvian capital, Riga, next week, the question that will haunt them, one they may be too frightened to ask, will linger uncomfortably: what is Nato for? ....
More News on CAN in AFG here
'Barber of Kandahar' finds himself in firefight
CTV.ca, 25 Nov 06
Article Link
Claude Goulet -- barber by trade, in Afghanistan by choice -- found himself in a close shave of his own. Goulet hails from Kapuskasing in northern Ontario. Six months ago, he agreed to do a stint in Afghanistan cutting hair for Canadian soldiers. Part of the job includes "house calls" to the forward operating bases in Kandahar province. During such a trip earlier this week, Goulet got trapped in the middle of a Taliban attack in the troubled Panjwaii district. "It was exciting, I'll guarantee you that, something I never thought I'd experience in my lifetime," he told CTV News. His digital camera captured the sounds of a Taliban mortar flying overhead, Canadian soldiers firing back and then American air support coming in to pound the insurgents. "Ahh, that was a big one!" he could be heard saying ....
Fresh claims of Afghan shortages
BBC Online, 24 Nov 06
Article Link
The government is facing fresh claims that British troops in Afghanistan are facing shortages of vital equipment. Sgt Stephen Brown of the Royal Marines has complained his men do not have enough ammunition and equipment, and have to use inappropriate vehicles. He told reporters in Helmand Province: "Countless times we have put in requests for what we need extra, and it has not arrived." But the MoD and senior officers insist there is enough equipment for the job ....
Afghan marines lack ammo, claims Arbroath sergeant
Andrew Jarret, Evening Telegraph & Post (UK), 24 Nov 06
Article Link
British troops fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan are short of essential equipment, according to a marine with Arbroath’s 45 Commando Group .... Royal Marine Sergeant Stephen Brown said his men were lacking ammunition and needed better-armoured vehicles. Repeated requests for extra kit have not been met, he is reported to have told journalists in Lashkar Gar. Sgt Brown commands the unit which included Gary Wright (21), who was killed by a suicide bomber while on patrol in Helmand last month. According to Sgt Brown, his troops are short of Wimiks — stripped down and heavily armed Land Rovers. He apparently did not suggest such a vehicle would have saved Marine Wright’s life, but insisted it could have prevented injuries to Dundee Sergeant Gary Ellis (35), also caught up in the incident ....
Troops poorly equipped to fight Taliban-sergeant
Pak Tribune (PAK), 26 Nov 06
Article Link
BRITISH TROOPS fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan are short of essential equipment, according to an officer with Arbroath's 45 Commando Group. Royal Marine Sergeant Stephen Brown said his men were lacking ammunition and needed better armoured vehicles. Repeated requests for extra kit have not been met, he is reported to have told journalists in Lashkar Gar. Sgt Brown commands the unit which included Gary Wright (21), who was killed by a suicide bomber while on patrol in Helmand last month. According to Sgt Brown, his troops are short of "Wimiks"-stripped down and heavily armed Land Rovers ....