GK .Dundas
Army.ca Veteran
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All too true this would require Mr Harper to have a pair .Come to think of it that pretty well describes both sides of the house .Not since the retirement of Deborah Grey at any rate.
and you can read the debate here and here. Glutton for punishment? 52 pg PDF of just the motion debate downloadable here.Mr. Claude Bachand (Saint-Jean, BQ) moved: That this House condemn the government’s decision to unilaterally extend the Canadian mission in Afghanistan to 2014, whereby it is breaking two promises it made to Canadians, one made on May 10, 2006, in this House and repeated in the 2007 Throne Speech, that any military deployment would be subject to a vote in Parliament, and another made on January 6, 2010, that the mission in Afghanistan would become a strictly civilian commitment after 2011, without any military presence beyond what would be needed to protect the embassy.
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It may be counterintuitive, but we actually need less armor, and we need to be more flexible and unpredictable. Instead of dictating that no unit can leave its base unless in an MRAP or MATV, we must allow them to use Humvees, all-terrain vehicles, snowmobiles, and ruggedized pickup trucks when appropriate. Knowing their movements are being watched at all times, units need to use deception, such as varying the time of day and night they move, their routes of travel, and the types of vehicles in which they conduct missions, to keep the insurgents constantly guessing. Insurgents cannot possibly booby-trap and watch every road, trail, and wadi in Afghanistan but they can and do hammer us on the few roads that will support armored vehicles.
This is a very unconventional war being waged in the most difficult terrain possible, and we are responding very conventionally. Instead of allowing such ingenuity and its associated risk, the coalition’s default response has been to add more armor and widgets to ever larger vehicles that are the very antithesis of basic counterinsurgency operations.
We may not be able to “defeat” the IED, but we can make it irrelevant. To do so will require us to rely upon the ingenuity and resourcefulness of the junior leaders who are most in tune with the local dynamics and terrain, not on technology or defensive-minded mandates designed to prevent casualties at all costs. Marginalizing the IED will also require higher commanders to accept greater risk and allow their subordinates to sometimes make mistakes — even deadly ones. But that’s the only way to start connecting with the Afghan people, who are the ones who will defeat the Taliban in the end. It’s time to start playing to win instead of trying to avoid losing.
Maj. Michael Waltz served as the director for Afghanistan in the Office of the U.S. Secretary of Defense and as an advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney on South Asia and counterterrorism. He currently commands a U.S. Army Special Forces unit in the reserve component that recently returned from Afghanistan.
LINKNigel Fisher of the United Nations urges Canadians to not give up.
"In a sense, stay with us because you don't turn around [a country] overnight."
Good point - look at how long this one has been going on between two fellow members of NATO. But most elected governments think (at best) in terms of years, not decades (or generations).George Wallace said:An interesting comment here, in reference to Haiti, but should one that should be remembered by all Canadians when looking at our efforts in Afghanistan.
[url=http://news.sympatico.cbc.ca/home/canadian_aid_to_haiti_gets_mixed_results/b38ca163]LINKNigel Fisher of the United Nations urges Canadians to not give up.
"In a sense, stay with us because you don't turn around [a country] overnight."
More from Postmedia News here - the NDP's response, via e-mail, attached.The Liberals helped the Conservatives defeat a motion Tuesday that would have condemned the government for its decision to extend the Afghan mission until 2014 without consulting Parliament.
The Bloc Quebecois motion had the support of the NDP, but it failed to pass, going down 209-81.
Ahead of the vote, Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe said the motion was meant to show that Prime Minister Stephen Harper had "lied" to MPs. The Bloc and the NDP have accused the Conservatives of breaking a commitment to put future military deployments in Afghanistan to a vote in the House of Commons ....
Here’s how the NY Times gives context in a news story on President Obama’s recent quick visit to the troops at Bagram...
Fair enough I’d say. Now compare with what appears in the Globe and Mail’s, er, report; I’ve emphasized certain words...
Get the picture the Globe’s authors, Incorrigible Paul Koring and Susan Sachs, want you to have? Hopeless, hopeless, hopeless. The piece is simply a deliberate and disgraceful, agenda-driven, effort to undermine Canadian support for the NATO mission.
As I keep saying the Globe is no longer a newspaper, see here, here and here. And it stinks.
‘No one believes in Afghanistan any more:’ EU leader in WikiLeaks cable
Brussels, Belgium— The Associated Press
Published Sunday, Dec. 05, 2010
Leaked diplomatic memos said that European Union President Herman Van Rompuy told America's ambassador that the EU no longer believes in success in Afghanistan, and that European troops are still there “out of deference to the United States.”
U.S. Ambassador to Belgium Howard Gutman, in the memo released by WikiLeaks, quotes Mr. Van Rompuy as saying in December 2009 that the EU will wait until the end of 2010 to see progress.
Mr. Van Rompuy, the former Belgian prime minister who at the time was EU president-designate, reportedly said that “if it doesn't work, that will be it, because it is the last chance.”
“Europe is doing it and will go along out of deference to the United States but not out of deference to Afghanistan,” the memo said citing Mr. Van Rompuy. “No one believes in Afghanistan any more.”
America's European allies contribute about 30,000 troops to the U.S.-led NATO force in Afghanistan.
Last month, alliance leaders endorsed a plan to start turning over responsibility for security to Afghan forces next year. The summit in Lisbon, Portugal, said NATO's combat role would end in 2014.
MarkOttawa said:Actually the Dutch did it first . Though they are thinking of coming back in a training role too, and President Obama has made an ask:
http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2010/11/us_asks_the_netherlands_for_se.php
Mark
Ottawa
Today’s essential Afghan reading (with apologies to BruceR. at Flit),
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Today%27s+essential%22+site%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.snappingturtle.net%2F&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-USfficial&client=firefox-a
from a very interesting post by C.J. Chivers at a NY Times blog, "At War":
'Informed Dissent: One Blogger’s Critique of the Afghan War
Registan.net
Joshua Foust’s blog on Central Asian affairs is anthologized in a new book, “Afghanistan Journal.”
FORWARD OPERATING BASE WILSON, Afghanistan — In 2006, as levels of violence in Afghanistan were rising sharply, a new voice entered the online debate about the United States’ military campaign. The Afghan war was then in its back-burner status, relegated behind the Pentagon’s fight in Iraq.
The voice belonged to Joshua Foust, an unknown American student of Central Asia who began posting his opinions and analyses on www.registan.net, a blog focusing on Central Asian affairs...'
As for all over the map:
'Petraeus Gives Gates an Upbeat Assessment'
http://nationaljournal.com/nationalsecurity/petraeus-gives-gates-an-upbeat-afghan-war-assessment-20101207
'Sober Take in Afghanistan
On-the-Ground Assessments Delivered to Gates Are a Contrast to Upbeat Views'
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704250704576005563544608074.html
Progressives (e.g., our NDP) have been mostly against the war for quite some time. Sadly a lot of conservatives, now that the going has got tough, want out too. Some very pertinent points in an excellent, and wider, article this July by Sebastian Junger...
I still haven’t seen Restrepo yet, but Sebastian Junger’s War was brilliant, I thought, as a portrait of young men at war. His article here on the response he received is also very much worth reading…
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-07-21/sebastian-junger-on-war-and-restrepo-in-afghanistan/
…I don’t understand why anyone would assume that the Tajiks and Hazara and Kabuli Pashtuns who still hate the Taliban will not fight for their homes if we left. They’re not going to be so easy to roll the second time, and the fact the ANA make poor doorkickers in our concept of ops does not mean they’d do just fine against similarly armed Pashtun insurgents, especially if we left a SOF/FID/CAS/Fires thumb on the pro-government side of the scales.
We shouldn’t confuse a lack of Afghan army enthusiasm with being cannon fodder in the south with a lack of determination to fight for the north when the time comes…
…When I deployed, I remember looking at this pretty analytically. I had a contempt for the Taliban I no longer have quite so much, and the reports from the field were rosier than even my bullcrap filter could compensate for, so it’s fair to say I was of a more optimistic cast than now. But when I could look at it coldly and logically, I basically saw what Junger saw… that, worst-case, fighting in the south bought time in the north, and ISAF’s presence could give those people after 20 years of war an indeterminate number of years of relative peace while we were there. Worst case, we could give them a shot at normalcy. To me that was enough of a humanitarian argument to justify my serving in ISAF. Still is…
…If the violence starts ramping up again in the summer of 2011, as it has every year higher than the year before, than we really need to start digging the fallback positions and figuring out what ANSF with ISAF enablers can realistically hold onto in the years to come. Because the only alternative will be an indefinite, fruitless Western commitment.