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A Line in the Sand

Page 38

by Ray Wiss


  First, the country must be independently militarily secure. To achieve this, the Coalition must maintain a robust force on the ground until the Afghan army is able to hold the Taliban at bay on its own. What I saw in 2009 confirmed what I had come to believe in 2007–08: the ANA would reach an acceptable level of competence in 2012. I feel our military pullout, therefore, to be a year earlier than it should be.

  Second, the educational system must be nurtured and protected. This war will be won in the Afghan classroom, by giving the rural poor economic alternatives more attractive than a Taliban paycheque and by giving ordinary Afghans a world view that rejects extremism. The Taliban realize this, and will continue to do their utmost to destroy schools and intimidate, maim or kill teachers and students. They must be prevented from doing this.

  Third, an Afghan leadership must arise that is worthy both of the Afghan people and of the sacrifice of the Coalition nations. Results in this area have been disappointing, to say the least. A flawed election was followed by a run-off election that was cancelled when the challenger felt he would not have a fair chance at victory. Everyone is questioning whether President Hamid Karzai is willing, or even capable, of curbing the corruption that plagues his government.

  The political process did have a significant positive aspect, but it was one the media largely overlooked. The main challenger for the presidency was Abdullah Abdullah, the former minister of foreign affairs. Upon withdrawing from the run-off election, he committed himself to oppose President Karzai politically. This is a sea change for Afghanistan. For the past thirty years, any leader who has been pushed out of power has retreated to his ethnic power base and led an armed struggle against those who had forced him out of Kabul. Despite the weak mandate President Karzai obtained, not a single person who ran against him for the presidency has taken up arms. This lack of violence does not mean the political opposition is being docile. The country’s parliament rejected 70 per cent of Karzai’s first slate of ministerial candidates, forcing him to submit a second, more broadly acceptable list. It has blocked his attempts to gain more control over the independent Electoral Complaints Commission, which exposed much of the fraud in the August elections. At this writing, it is also fighting to retain control of the procedures for the Parliamentary elections scheduled for September 2010. All in all, the political opposition in Afghanistan is behaving much like a vigorous opposition in any other democratic country.

  Could this be the beginning of a more peaceful Afghanistan? If Abdullah Abdullah and the other opposition leaders can agree to work within the political process even after they feel that they have been cheated of the presidency by fraud, perhaps many of the Afghans who oppose the government with violence can be convinced to enter into dialogue and negotiations, and give up armed resistance. Taliban supporters are not a monolithic mass. Many of them hunger for moral and coherent leadership, just like the rest of their countrymen.

  Canadians will therefore watch events unfold in Afghanistan over the coming years with concern and trepidation. But regardless of the outcome, and regardless of how individual Canadians might feel about this war, all Canadians would do well to remember the names of Zhari, and Panjwayi, and Arghandab, and Shah Wali Khot. The men and women in uniform that you have met in these pages, and so many more in stories that have yet to be told, did Canada proud in those places. Canadians must be proud of them in return.

  CAPTAIN RAY WISS, M.D.

  Medical Officer, Second Battalion, Irish Regiment of Canada*

  Emergency Physician, Sudbury Regional Hospital

  * A reserve infantry regiment based in Sudbury, Ontario.

  Glossary of Abbreviations, Acronyms and Initialisms

  ANA Afghan National Army

  ANP Afghan National Police

  BIP Blow in Place

  CBC Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

  CCP Casualty Collection Point

  CDS Chief of the Defence Staff

  CF Canadian Forces

  CFB Canadian Forces Base

  CIA Central Intelligence Agency (U.S.)

  CIDA Canadian International Development Agency

  CIMIC Civil Military Cooperation

  CNS Camp Nathan Smith

  CPO Chief Petty Officer

  CT Computerized Tomography

  CPR Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

  DOW Died of Wounds

  EDE Emergency Department Echo

  EOD Explosive Ordnance Disposal

  ESL English as a Second Language

  ETA Estimated Time of Arrival

  FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation (U.S.)

  FLQ Front de Libération du Québec

  FOB Forward Operating Base

  FOO Forward Observation Officer

  GP General Practitioner

  HLTA Home Leave Travel Allowance

  ICU Intensive Care Unit

  IED Improvised Explosive Device

  ISI Inter Services Intelligence (Pakistan)

  IT Information Technology

  IV Intravenous

  KAF Kandahar Air Field

  KIA Killed in Action

  LAV Light Armoured Vehicle

  MASCAL Mass Casualty

  MMU Multinational Medical Unit

  MRE Medical Rules of Eligibility

  MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging

  MS Master Seaman

  MULLE Mobile Unit Light Logistics Element

  MWO Master Warrant Officer

  NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization

  NCO Non-Commissioned Officer

  NGO Non-Governmental Organization

  NIS National Investigation Service (CF)

  OMLT Operational Mentoring and Liaison Team

  OP Observation Post

  PA Physician Assistant

  PBW Patrol Base Wilson

  PPCLI Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry

  PPE Personal Protective

  PRT Provincial Reconstruction Equipment Team

  PTSDPost-Traumatic Stress Disorder

  QRF Quick Reaction Force

  RCMP Royal Canadian

  Mounted Police

  RIP Relief in Place

  RMC Royal Military College

  RPG Rocket-Propelled Grenade

  SAS Special Air Service (U.K.)

  SEAL Sea Air Land (U.S. Navy)

  SWAT Special Weapons and Tactics

  TCCC Tactical Combat Casualty Care

  TOC Tactical Operation Centre

  UMS Unit Medical Station

  UN United Nations

  USD U.S. Dollars

  VIP Very Important Person

  VOIED Victim-Operated Improvised Explosive Device

  VPS Vulnerable Point Search

  VSA Vital Signs Absent

  WIA Wounded in Action

  WO Warrant Officer

  The Fallen

  THE PHOTOGRAPHS BELOW and on the following pages are of Canadian soldiers who were killed in action and who are mentioned in this book.

  SERGEANT ROBERT SHORT

  KIA October 2, 2003

  , Infantry

  CORPORAL ROBBIE

  BEERENFENGER

  KIA October 2, 2003, Infantry

  CORPORAL JAMIE MURPHY

  KIA January 27, 2004,

  Infantry

  Above are the official photos released by the CF when these three men were killed. These photos are lifted from impromptu photos taken by friends. They are low-resolution images, which become extremely blurry if I try to magnify them.

  It was only when we came to Kandahar, and our dying became more frequent and predictable, that the CF began taking the formal, high-resolution pictures of our soldiers that appear on the following pages.

  That is the picture I absolutely did not want to have taken of me.

  CAPTAIN NICHOLA GODDARD

  KIA May 17, 2006, Artillery

  TROOPER MARK WILSON

  KIA October 7, 2006, Armour

  CAPTAIN JONATHAN SNYDER

  KIA June 7,
2008, Infantry

  WARRANT OFFICER GAËTAN ROBERGE

  KIA December 27, 2008, Infantry

  SAPPER SEAN GREENFIELD

  KIA January 31, 2009, Engineer

  TROOPER KARINE BLAIS

  KIA April 13, 2009, Armour

  PRIVATE ALEXANDRE PELOQUIN

  KIA June 8, 2009, Infantry

  CORPORAL MARTIN DUBÉ

  KIA June 14, 2009, Infantry

  CORPORAL NICK BULGER

  KIA July 3, 2009, Infantry

  MASTER CORPORAL CHARLES-PHILIPPE MICHAUD

  DOW July 4, 2009, Infantry

  MASTER CORPORAL PATRICE AUDET

  KIA July 6, 2009, Air Force

  CORPORAL MARTIN JOANNETTE

  KIA July 6, 2009, Infantry

  PRIVATE SÉBASTIEN COURCY

  KIA July 16, 2009, Infantry

  CORPORAL CHRISTIAN BOBBITT

  KIA August 1, 2009, Engineer

  SAPPER MATHIEU ALLARD

  KIA August 1, 2009, Engineer

  MAJOR YANNICK PÉPIN

  KIA September 6, 2009, Engineer

  CORPORAL JEAN-FRANÇOIS DROUIN

  KIA September 6, 2009, Engineer

  PRIVATE PATRICK LORMAND

  KIA September 13, 2009, Infantry

  PRIVATE JONATHAN COUTURIER

  KIA September 17, 2009, Infantry

  FOR THE FALLEN

  They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old.

  Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.

  At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them.

  LAURENCE BINYON

  At the going down of the sun

  (Photo courtesy Master Corporal Ken Fenner)

  We will remember them

  (Artwork by Silvia Pecota)

  CAPTAIN RAY WISS, M.D., is an emergency medicine specialist from Sudbury, Ontario, and a member of the Canadian Forces Reserves. In 2008, he was awarded the YMCA Peace Medal and the Ontario Medical Association Career Service Award. In 2010, he received the Rotary Club’s Paul Harris Award at an event headlined by Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Also in 2010, he was selected to be the keynote speaker at the North York General Hospital Emergency Medicine Update, Canada’s premier emergency medicine conference. FOB Doc, the book he wrote about his first tour, was one of Amazon.ca’s “Editors’ Picks: Top 100 Books” of 2009.

 

 

 


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