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Manley to recommend Canada stay on in Afghanistan
Last Updated: Tuesday, January 22, 2008 | 7:28 AM ET
John Manley is set to release his highly anticipated report Tuesday morning on Canada's mission in Afghanistan, in which he is expected to recommend Canada continue its presence in the country beyond the current deadline of February 2009.
The blue-ribbon panel led by the former Liberal cabinet minister is also expected to urge NATO to send more troops and helicopters to Kandahar and put more emphasis on training the Afghan army and police.
It has been widely reported that Manley and the advisory group will not give a specific timeline of how long Canada's mission in the embattled country should last.
The findings won't be binding, but will carry weight in the discussions about Canada's future role in Afghanistan given that Prime Minister Stephen Harper has also promised to allow MPs to vote on the issue in Parliament.
The panel has received more than 200 submissions from interested people and organizations, including those from the Liberal party and the Green party, the CBC's Rosemary Barton reported. The NDP and the Bloc Québécois, which have been critical of the panel, didn't submit suggestions, she said.
Speaking in Halifax Monday, Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay said he expects a "very informed and informative report — one which will be very beneficial to not just the government, but to Parliament and to all Canadians in framing the debate as to how we go forward in Afghanistan."
The Liberals have indicated they would like to see Canada's combat role in the south wind down by the 2009 deadline, with more emphasis placed on the development element of the mission.
Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion said Monday he isn't against the idea of Canadian soldiers training the Afghan army or helping with development projects. But he said he wants Canada off the front lines where its soldiers have been fighting and dying.
"What we want, it's a mission to help Afghanis to build their country, a mission in the tradition of Canada," Dion said. "The combat mission must end in February 2009, and after that we'll help Afghanistan by other ways."
NDP Leader Jack Layton reiterated his party's call on Monday for a complete Canadian withdrawal.
"I think that it's well known by Canadians that we feel this is the wrong mission, the wrong mission for Canada, that NATO's approach is failing," Layton said. "More and more Canadians have come around to our view.
The advisory panel and Manley, a one-time federal Liberal leadership contender, were appointed by the prime minister last October to consider four options:
Keep training Afghan troops and police to be self-sustaining when Canadian troops withdraw.
Focus on reconstruction in Kandahar with another NATO country taking over security.
Shift Canadian security and reconstruction to another region of Afghanistan.
Withdraw the main body of Canada's troops in February 2009.
The group — which includes former broadcaster Pamela Wallin, Derek Burney, former ambassador to Washington and one-time chief of staff to former prime minister Brian Mulroney, Paul Tellier, former clerk of the privy council and Jake Epp, a former Mulroney cabinet minister — also spent 10 days touring Afghanistan in November.
Harper appointed the panel amid a political debate over what Canada should do when the mandate of its current Afghan commitment runs out in February 2009. The Conservatives are leaning toward a continuation of Canadian troops working in the region, while other parties are demanding that the troops come home.
Seventy-seven Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have been killed since the beginning of Canada's mission in Afghanistan in 2002.
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/01/22/afghan-manley.html
Last Updated: Tuesday, January 22, 2008 | 7:28 AM ET
John Manley is set to release his highly anticipated report Tuesday morning on Canada's mission in Afghanistan, in which he is expected to recommend Canada continue its presence in the country beyond the current deadline of February 2009.
The blue-ribbon panel led by the former Liberal cabinet minister is also expected to urge NATO to send more troops and helicopters to Kandahar and put more emphasis on training the Afghan army and police.
It has been widely reported that Manley and the advisory group will not give a specific timeline of how long Canada's mission in the embattled country should last.
The findings won't be binding, but will carry weight in the discussions about Canada's future role in Afghanistan given that Prime Minister Stephen Harper has also promised to allow MPs to vote on the issue in Parliament.
The panel has received more than 200 submissions from interested people and organizations, including those from the Liberal party and the Green party, the CBC's Rosemary Barton reported. The NDP and the Bloc Québécois, which have been critical of the panel, didn't submit suggestions, she said.
Speaking in Halifax Monday, Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay said he expects a "very informed and informative report — one which will be very beneficial to not just the government, but to Parliament and to all Canadians in framing the debate as to how we go forward in Afghanistan."
The Liberals have indicated they would like to see Canada's combat role in the south wind down by the 2009 deadline, with more emphasis placed on the development element of the mission.
Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion said Monday he isn't against the idea of Canadian soldiers training the Afghan army or helping with development projects. But he said he wants Canada off the front lines where its soldiers have been fighting and dying.
"What we want, it's a mission to help Afghanis to build their country, a mission in the tradition of Canada," Dion said. "The combat mission must end in February 2009, and after that we'll help Afghanistan by other ways."
NDP Leader Jack Layton reiterated his party's call on Monday for a complete Canadian withdrawal.
"I think that it's well known by Canadians that we feel this is the wrong mission, the wrong mission for Canada, that NATO's approach is failing," Layton said. "More and more Canadians have come around to our view.
The advisory panel and Manley, a one-time federal Liberal leadership contender, were appointed by the prime minister last October to consider four options:
Keep training Afghan troops and police to be self-sustaining when Canadian troops withdraw.
Focus on reconstruction in Kandahar with another NATO country taking over security.
Shift Canadian security and reconstruction to another region of Afghanistan.
Withdraw the main body of Canada's troops in February 2009.
The group — which includes former broadcaster Pamela Wallin, Derek Burney, former ambassador to Washington and one-time chief of staff to former prime minister Brian Mulroney, Paul Tellier, former clerk of the privy council and Jake Epp, a former Mulroney cabinet minister — also spent 10 days touring Afghanistan in November.
Harper appointed the panel amid a political debate over what Canada should do when the mandate of its current Afghan commitment runs out in February 2009. The Conservatives are leaning toward a continuation of Canadian troops working in the region, while other parties are demanding that the troops come home.
Seventy-seven Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have been killed since the beginning of Canada's mission in Afghanistan in 2002.
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/01/22/afghan-manley.html