Troops would welcome extended mission in Afghanistan, says Canadian veteran
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By Matthew Fisher, Postmedia News November 8, 2010
KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan — Reports that Canada is seriously considering taking on a NATO training mission in Afghanistan after current combat operations end next summer have given a jolt of adrenalin to many troops now serving in Kandahar.
"If the second training rotation begins early in 2012, which seems likely, that would be perfect for me," speculated a sergeant now on his fourth Afghan tour. The combat engineer added that another rotation, this time "inside the wire" as a trainer, would be the perfect way for him to end his long military career.
Word of the possibility of a new military role for Canada in Afghanistan, to which Defence Minister Peter MacKay hinted strongly during a security conference in Halifax on Sunday, spread quickly among soldiers as they woke up across Kandahar on Monday morning.
After 152 deaths in Afghanistan, many Canadians want the troops to come home. However, among those in combat arms who have borne the brunt of the casualties, there is almost universal interest in being part of a potential, smaller, follow-on mission designed to assist Afghanistan's burgeoning security forces, which are to become responsible for security across the country in 2014.
Reluctant to see Canada leave Afghanistan after the crucial role it has played in Kandahar since early 2006, and in urgent need of 900 more skilled military trainers, NATO has spent months crafting an offer that would be difficult for the Harper government to refuse.
After years of complex operations that have involved heavily armed vehicles, artillery, close air support and surveillance drones, the Canadians have been invited to return to Afghanistan as soon as that mission ends, but next time with little more than their duffel bags and skills honed on the battlefield.
The Canadians would be "an absolutely superb fit" as trainers because they have combat experience, Lt.-Gen. Bill Caldwell IV, the American who runs all training for Afghan soldiers and police, said in an interview with Postmedia News early this summer.
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