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http://www.winnipegsun.com/Comment/Editorial/2006/03/03/1471916.html
Why we are in Kandahar
Jim Davis, whose 28-year-old son died this week while serving with the Canadian military in Kandahar, knows why we’re in Afghanistan, even if some politicians don't.
“I’m very proud of my son, Paul,” Davis said. “I believe Paul died serving his country and serving the free world.” He did. Davis, of Bridgewater, N.S., became the ninth Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan. A Canadian diplomat was also killed in the line of duty.
Davis wasn’t lost in combat. He died and six other soldiers and a local translator were injured when their armoured car collided with a taxi. But his sacrifice was no less significant.
Davis’s father said his son turned down a promotion that would have let him stay in Canada because he wanted to serve with his comrades out of his profound “sense of duty.”
With 2,200 Canadian soldiers now taking the lead role in hunting down Taliban fighters and al-Qaida terrorists in Kandahar, we also have a duty here at home to them. Especially since the Liberals appear to be going soft on the mission.
Incredible. Sad. As Prime Minister Stephen Harper noted: “You do not send men and women into harm’s way on a dangerous mission ... and then decide, once they’re over there, that you’re not sure you should have sent them.”
Exactly. Nor do you adjust foreign policy according to the polls, whether it’s this week’s Ekos survey showing 70% of Canadians support this dangerous new mission, or last week’s Strategic Counsel one that said 62% were opposed. Forget the polls. We’re in Afghanistan because it’s right.
The time for the parliamentary debate the Liberals now want was before they deployed our troops. Why do we need it now? So we can hear more Liberal sucking and blowing like we did from Jean Chretien just before the Gulf War in 1991? Remember this Chretien gem when he was opposition leader?
“Of course, if there is no war, our forces should stay there ... If faced with an act of war, we say on this side of the House that it is premature and that our troops should not be involved in a war at this moment, and our troops should be called back if there is a war, unless we decide to be in a war.” Blah, blah, blah.
Forget the Liberals. As for Harper, a month ago we urged him to make a televised address to the nation explaining why we’re in Kandahar. We still think it’s the right thing to do.
Why we are in Kandahar
Jim Davis, whose 28-year-old son died this week while serving with the Canadian military in Kandahar, knows why we’re in Afghanistan, even if some politicians don't.
“I’m very proud of my son, Paul,” Davis said. “I believe Paul died serving his country and serving the free world.” He did. Davis, of Bridgewater, N.S., became the ninth Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan. A Canadian diplomat was also killed in the line of duty.
Davis wasn’t lost in combat. He died and six other soldiers and a local translator were injured when their armoured car collided with a taxi. But his sacrifice was no less significant.
Davis’s father said his son turned down a promotion that would have let him stay in Canada because he wanted to serve with his comrades out of his profound “sense of duty.”
With 2,200 Canadian soldiers now taking the lead role in hunting down Taliban fighters and al-Qaida terrorists in Kandahar, we also have a duty here at home to them. Especially since the Liberals appear to be going soft on the mission.
Incredible. Sad. As Prime Minister Stephen Harper noted: “You do not send men and women into harm’s way on a dangerous mission ... and then decide, once they’re over there, that you’re not sure you should have sent them.”
Exactly. Nor do you adjust foreign policy according to the polls, whether it’s this week’s Ekos survey showing 70% of Canadians support this dangerous new mission, or last week’s Strategic Counsel one that said 62% were opposed. Forget the polls. We’re in Afghanistan because it’s right.
The time for the parliamentary debate the Liberals now want was before they deployed our troops. Why do we need it now? So we can hear more Liberal sucking and blowing like we did from Jean Chretien just before the Gulf War in 1991? Remember this Chretien gem when he was opposition leader?
“Of course, if there is no war, our forces should stay there ... If faced with an act of war, we say on this side of the House that it is premature and that our troops should not be involved in a war at this moment, and our troops should be called back if there is a war, unless we decide to be in a war.” Blah, blah, blah.
Forget the Liberals. As for Harper, a month ago we urged him to make a televised address to the nation explaining why we’re in Kandahar. We still think it’s the right thing to do.