Canadian casualties likely on mission
Posting in volatile Kandahar region will put Edmonton troops in daily danger
Terry Pedwell
The Canadian Press
(Printed: Edmonton Journal)
July 15, 2005
OTTAWA - Canadians need to prepare psychologically for the strong possibility some of their soldiers will be killed in a new military operation in southern Afghanistan, says the head of the armed forces.
"Is there a probability that we're going to take casualties? Yes, of course," Gen. Rick Hillier said Thursday.
"Can I give you a number of what we're going to take? Absolutely not."
Canada is sending a team of about 250 soldiers, along with Foreign Affairs officials, development workers and Mounties, to Afghanistan's volatile Kandahar province.
A small part of what's dubbed a provincial reconstruction team, or PRT, will begin deploying early next week, with the bulk of troops starting to move out, mainly from Edmonton, beginning the following week.
Afghan officials have warned that Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network is planning Iraq-style attacks against soldiers in the region. Last month, an American PRT in Kandahar was struck by a suicide bomber -- in the same area where Canada's team will be deployed. Four soldiers were injured.
Casualties are a reality of military life, Hillier said, although he doubts Canadians are ready for that possibility.
"No, I don't believe they are," said Hillier, appointed chief of defence staff earlier this year.
"But there needs to be an awareness across Canada that we're in a dangerous business."
Critics also question whether the public has the stomach for bloodshed coming from Canada's new role in Afghanistan.
"Kandahar will be the acid test of whether or not we can bear the price of our latest goal," Nic Boisvert wrote in an article published this week by the Council for Canadian Security in the 21st Century.
"It is going to take moral courage and political leadership. Are we up to it?"
Despite the increased danger in Kandahar -- compared with the relatively safe haven of Kabul where Canada lost three soldiers in the line of duty -- the military doesn't plan to change the way it operates for the PRT.
"Same, exact strategy," said Hillier. "A three-block war" approach, where troops focus on small pockets within communities to avoid getting involved in large conflicts.
"We're going to prosecute some operations there and we're going to go after the Taliban in some cases," he said.
"The Brits do it superbly, the Aussies do it superbly, we do it superbly.
"We're going to take absolutely every step possible to set up conditions for success and a reduced risk," Hillier said.
"I believe we can put in place in Kandahar ... the best-equipped structure inside of Afghanistan. But we still can't reduce the risk to zero. It's still a high-risk area."