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Voices: Afghanistan casualties
TheStar.com - opinion - Voices: Afghanistan casualties
April 10, 2007
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We asked you whether you think our commitment in Afghanistan worth the price. Here's what you had to say.
We have a choice as a civilized nation; do we let terrorists take over a country or do we try to stop them? Whatever consequences ultimately come from this decision must be accepted as the cost of our choice.
Sean Doolittle, Mississauga
Stephen Harper owes it to the country to explain plainly what we intend to accomplish in Afghanistan and under what conditions our troops will be brought home.
William Bedford, Toronto
We cannot get an explanation of our goals so that we may evaluate our progress. We cannot get the truth of what is happening on the ground.
Allan Eizinas, Simcoe, Ont.
My answer is a question: Would you sooner that we fight them on our soil?
Don Lowther, Halifax
No, It is not worth the price. What are we doing sending our young men to die for something that is not our business?
Badet Ellen, Windsor
Why are our troops in Afghanistan to begin with? This was never our war and our troops should never have been sent there.
Mary Matheson, Toronto
If I say I'm going to do something, then I usually do it. So yes, I believe Canada should remain committed to this cause (without judging the merits of our presence there).
Virginia Furlong, Pickering
Absolutely it is worth the price. While I agonize over every report about another member of our forces being killed or maimed, I think too of the children who may now have an opportunity for a normal life, Afghan girls who may now receive an education, Afghan women who may now engage in a career if they wish.
David Carr, Whitby
No. We rushed to help the U.S. in the context of stopping bin Laden and Al Qaeda and we inherited an unwinnable tribal war when the U.S. imperiously moved into Iraq.
John Ansara, Toronto
The question should be: "Do we Canadians think that the Afghanis deserve the same freedoms that we enjoy?" That's what you're really asking. If we believe that our freedoms are worth fighting for, then how can we deny them to others?
Andrew Mannie, Barrie
Since "our commitment in Afghanistan" is all about protecting central Asian petroleum for transnational corporations, it may well be worth the "price" (of the oil), but it is definitely not worth the cost (in lost Afghani and Canadian lives).
Al Eslami, Toronto
We as a free-thinking nation cannot turtle in the face of adversity, run away and hope for the best through "group hugs."
Brent Williams, New Brunswick
It's estimated 20 million soldiers made the ultimate sacrifice to stop the scourge of Nazi Germany. Was that a too high a price to pay?
Helena Desouza, Toronto
The families of those serving who have been killed would probably be the ones to ask the question of. For the rest of us, the question is academic.
Renata Schneider, Toronto
We were warned, we distorted facts to gain public and government approval, we even made some facts up. Now soldiers from every nation are paying the price for hasty decisions made by arrogant, politically self-serving officials. It is certainly not worth the price, but it is a price we are now morally obliged to pay for our ignorance and our arrogance.
Erica Holloway, Thornhill
Prior to recent PC cash infusions to our armed forces, we had effectively abandoned our defence to the U.S. How then could we refuse a request by the U.S. to at least support the Afghanistan war action?
Bill Soles, Oro-Medonte, Ont.
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