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Ok, I went through "The Night Faries". It has an interesting perspective, but there are a couple of things Miss Chayes writes that are a stretch of the truth, to put it nicely.
First;
Now, no doubt you've heard about all the warlords elected into parliament. But, believe it or not, lots of good people were voted into power as well, people who are struggling to better their country. There was a CBC special a while back, shortly after I returned from Kandahar in February, where they had a very good example of one woman elected into parliament fighting to expose the warlords within the system, amongst other things, trying to improve her country. She was allowed to do this because of the US, other countries, Northern Alliance, and various NGOs who went into Afghanistan in 2001, deposed the Taliban, and helped set up an environment where elections COULD be held.. So just because the bad people gather a lot of attention in the parliament, doesn't mean that there aren't many good people trying to make things better for the country.
Now, the only firsthand experience I have on this is seeing a suicide bomber's ear that landed in a very unlikely place.... But I'm sure there are members of this forum who were actually at these events. Try telling them that they weren't suicide bombings... Even if that once specific case was an RCIED as Miss Chayes alleges, that does not discount all the other suicide bombings that occured.
And yes the "Night Faries" do exist, and are a problem.. But, the question I must pose is that if Afghanistan is so much worse off now than before with the Americans and other foreigners around, what will happen if we all just pull out and leave? I have my theory on what will happen, and based on my experience and knowledge about the country, it does not paint a pretty picture.
Finally, I want to address the protesting of the training.. It's your right as a Canadian citizen, and indeed as a human to protest. That's why we chose to take up arms to defend that right. You can protest the mission all you want. But please try to understand that, as mentioned earlier, the training that the troops will undergo on this exercise will save both Canadian and Afghan lives when the soldiers get over there and are put in the dangerous positions. If you want to stop the mission, protest to the government and policy makers, please don't put people's lives in danger by trying make the troops go overseas unprepared.
(1) http://www.jemb.org/pdf/JEMBS%20MGT%20Final%20Report%202005-12-12.pdf
(2) http://www.nodice.ca/elections/canada/voterturnout.php
(3) http://www.results.jemb.org/province.asp?ProvinceID=28
First;
The turnout for the 2005 parliamentary elections, according to the JEMB, was about 51.5 percent(1) of all voters, which compared to Canada's 64.9% voter turnout in the 2006 Federal Elections(2) may seem like a dismal turnout. Considering it's a country where women's rights have been squandered for years under the Taliban, a deeper look provides interesting results. In Kandahar alone, the male voter turnout was 76.3%, while the female voter turnout was 23.7%(3). Now, I don't have the stats to prove this, but I'm assuming that the voter turnout between males and females in Canada is very close... So, it stands to reason that although many women did not vote for whatever reason, be it from fear, threats, or simply choosing not to vote, the voter turnout from the male side of things was pretty good. Imagine what kind of voter turn out it would be had women not been oppressed for so many years under the Taliban? (As well, the JEMB Report in reference 1 is a good read if you want some factual information on the elections, as opposed to pure heresay)Parliamentary elections last fall, hailed as free and fair--or at least as free and fair as anyone could expect in a place like Afghanistan--have allowed many Western observers to regard the nation-building process here as a success. In Kandahar, those elections were considered a joke--even by the people who won. Less than a quarter of the population voted, and, as most locals predicted, the counting process functioned like a bazaar with plenty of extra zeros for sale.
Now, no doubt you've heard about all the warlords elected into parliament. But, believe it or not, lots of good people were voted into power as well, people who are struggling to better their country. There was a CBC special a while back, shortly after I returned from Kandahar in February, where they had a very good example of one woman elected into parliament fighting to expose the warlords within the system, amongst other things, trying to improve her country. She was allowed to do this because of the US, other countries, Northern Alliance, and various NGOs who went into Afghanistan in 2001, deposed the Taliban, and helped set up an environment where elections COULD be held.. So just because the bad people gather a lot of attention in the parliament, doesn't mean that there aren't many good people trying to make things better for the country.
Even the "suicide bombings" in Afghanistan that have garnered mentions in the Western press of late are often something else. In one case I investigated carefully--the target, an Afghan official, was a friend of mine--much evidence contradicted the notion that the attack was a suicide bombing, as it was immediately labeled: the condition of my friend's body, the type and location of the survivors' wounds, and eyewitness descriptions. Everything pointed to a remote-controlled mine planted ahead of time. But no Afghan or U.S. official bothered to collect this evidence or to examine it seriously when it was presented to them.
Now, the only firsthand experience I have on this is seeing a suicide bomber's ear that landed in a very unlikely place.... But I'm sure there are members of this forum who were actually at these events. Try telling them that they weren't suicide bombings... Even if that once specific case was an RCIED as Miss Chayes alleges, that does not discount all the other suicide bombings that occured.
And yes the "Night Faries" do exist, and are a problem.. But, the question I must pose is that if Afghanistan is so much worse off now than before with the Americans and other foreigners around, what will happen if we all just pull out and leave? I have my theory on what will happen, and based on my experience and knowledge about the country, it does not paint a pretty picture.
Finally, I want to address the protesting of the training.. It's your right as a Canadian citizen, and indeed as a human to protest. That's why we chose to take up arms to defend that right. You can protest the mission all you want. But please try to understand that, as mentioned earlier, the training that the troops will undergo on this exercise will save both Canadian and Afghan lives when the soldiers get over there and are put in the dangerous positions. If you want to stop the mission, protest to the government and policy makers, please don't put people's lives in danger by trying make the troops go overseas unprepared.
(1) http://www.jemb.org/pdf/JEMBS%20MGT%20Final%20Report%202005-12-12.pdf
(2) http://www.nodice.ca/elections/canada/voterturnout.php
(3) http://www.results.jemb.org/province.asp?ProvinceID=28