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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: OPED: Staying The Course
Title:Canada: OPED: Staying The Course
Published On:2007-03-01
Source:This Magazine (Canada)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 11:49:41
STAYING THE COURSE

Why Canada Shouldn't Pull Its Troops Out Of Afghanistan

Camp Julien was set down on a barren plain on the outskirts of Kabul,
against a stark, mountainous backdrop. Across the road sat the ghostly,
bombed-out remnants of Afghanistan's royal palace. Once a majestic building
surrounded by immaculate gardens, it was now a looming reminder of
destruction wrought by decades of war.

In sturdy canvas tents within the heavily fortified camp, about 1,700
Canadian soldiers slept side-by-side in cots. Everything they ate or drank
was shipped in. The only time they left was to go on patrol.

I found myself at Camp Julien on Canada Day 2004, having just arrived for a
sixmonth position with a media development organization. The occasion
provided a rare opportunity for Canadians living in the country to wander
around the base and mingle with soldiers who lived a strangely insular
existence.

Like the troops, we were allotted two cans of beer for the evening's
festivities, which included a heavy-metal cover band and a Quebecois
comedian. One beer was free, the other we paid for. We ate rubbery lobster,
then we went to a party in Kabul.

Hosted by a French NGO, the party was held in the well-kept garden of an
exquisite house. Alcohol was free, and the mostly European and North
American crowd of development workers danced to electronic music that
bounced off the mud walls of the compound. The phrase "fiddling while Rome
burns" did not come to mind at the time.

It was a period of optimism perhaps unrivalled in recent Afghan history.
The Taliban had been chased out, girls were returning to school, money was
flowing into reconstruction projects, and the country's first democratic
elections were about to be held.

In Canada, there was little opposition to the government's decision to
contribute soldiers to an international security force, especially in the
wake of 9/11. It seemed in line with previous peacekeeping-type missions,
and casualties were still low. It would have been difficult then to imagine
the intense combat and barrage of suicide bombers Canadian soldiers would
soon face. As the violence has escalated over the past year, so too have
calls to bring the troops home. In 2002, three out of four Canadians
supported our role in Afghanistan; today we are split down the middle. In
January, Innovative Research Group found support to be at 58 percent.

Canadian casualties have skyrocketed in the two years since troops left the
relative safety of Camp Julien for the volatile southern province of
Kandahar, where the Taliban has re-emerged in strength. Canada lost 36
soldiers and a diplomat last year, compared to one casualty in each of the
previous two years.

Afghans, too, are losing confidence in the reconstruction process. A
wide-ranging World Public Opinion (WPO) poll revealed that in 2006, only 62
percent of those surveyed said the country was going in the right
direction, down from 83 percent the previous year.

"The Taliban is far from winning the hearts and minds of the Afghan
people," said WPO's Stephen Weber in a December 14 release, "but there are
signs that the Karzai government and NATO are gradually losing them."

The debate on Parliament Hill and around the country grows more heated with
every maple-leafdraped coffin sent home. From the right comes a blindly
patriotic cry to stay the course in Afghanistan, while many on the left
accuse Ottawa of abandoning our tradition of peacekeeping in order to join
America's so-called war on terror.

Left-wing organizations--including, now, the federal NDP--have endorsed the
"troops out" position. But they have so far failed to articulate a clear
vision of what would happen to Afghanistan without the Canadian presence.
Meanwhile, the Conservatives ignore warnings from analysts and opposition
parties that Canada needs to focus more of its efforts on reconstruction
and less on combat. For example, in the December 20 Toronto Star, Prime
Minister Stephen Harper said he would not change the nature of Canada's
mission in the face of demands from opposition parties, even if means the
defeat of his government.

Distress over the fact of Canadian soldiers dying in a complicated war on
the other side of the world is understandable. But there is a certain irony
in where that unease has led.

The NDP and others now argue for an immediate withdrawal of Canadian
troops. But pulling troops out of Kandahar would simply open the door to
another Taliban takeover. There is also a real danger that the return of
the Taliban would lead to civil war, since anti-Taliban warlords would
almost certainly call up their militias again. It's an odd position for the
left, which has always prided itself on a commitment to social justice, to
advocate a policy that could result in the suffering of millions of Afghans.

In a December interview, Afghanistan's development minister, Mohammed Ehsan
Zia, pleaded with Canadians not to rush to judgment. "Our journey is long
and the road is bumpy, so we request them to be patient," said Zia, who had
travelled to Canada to explain where $1 billion in Canadian aid is going.
"We do not feel proud of the presence of Canadian soldiers on our soil for
security. As a nation, we want to take charge of our own affairs, but we
need help at this time."

Two years after leaving Afghanistan, back in Vancouver, I attended a CBC
forum on Canada's role in Kandahar. The panel included Omar Samad,
Afghanistan's ambassador to Canada. In an interview the previous day I had
asked Samad if he was surprised at the strength of the Taliban resurgence.

"We all probably did not have the right assumptions in the first three or
four years following the fall of the Taliban about what the remnants of the
Taliban were up to," he said by phone from Ottawa. "They were actually
regrouping, retraining and rearming, and looking for new sources of funding
and recruits."

Samad found irony in the fact that the growing Taliban insurgency is being
matched by louder calls in Canada to bring the troops home. In the late
1990s, he and other Afghans had tried in vain to prod the West into action
by highlighting the atrocities being committed by the Taliban regime.

"Nobody was listening or hearing their cries," he said. "Now the same
people who claim to be supporting the disadvantaged in the world are
advocating the return of the oppressor--at least indirectly advocating the
return of the oppressor--by saying we should leave Afghanistan."

At the CBC forum, Samad was confronted by Mable Elmore, co-chair of
Vancouver's Stop War Coalition, which wants the immediate withdrawal of all
Canadian troops. She ran down a list of concerns, including the presence of
warlords in Samad's government.

"Where were you when the children of Afghanistan could not go to school?"
Samad demanded in response. "Where were you when women were being executed
in sports stadiums by the Taliban?"

When the forum was over, Elmore said she'd heard nothing to change her
mind. "The role the Canadian military is playing is contributing to
deteriorating conditions," she said.

But if Canadian troops pulled out of Kandahar, wouldn't the Taliban take
over, I asked repeatedly.

"That's a good question," she finally offered, explaining that her
coalition needs to discuss such issues further.

Elmore wasn't the first activist to dodge that question. Last spring, for
example, I talked with Cindy Sheehan, the well-known American anti-war
spokesperson whose son was killed in Iraq. The Council of Canadians brought
her to Canada to lend support to the growing movement to bring troops home
from Afghanistan. I asked her if withdrawing international forces could
actually lead to increased violence, pointing out that the country is one
of the most fractious and well armed in the world. "Are we having an
interview or are we having a debate?" she responded.

Sheehan's reaction on its own would have held little significance, but this
unwillingness to grapple with the consequences of withdrawing troops seems
common, if not endemic, among those opposing the war.

The Conservative government seems no better equipped to face up to the
complexity of Afghanistan, as Senlis Council founder Norine MacDonald
learned in Ottawa last fall. Senlis, an international policy think-tank, is
probably the most authoritative source of information on what's happening
on the ground in Kandahar.

MacDonald, a Canadian lawyer, has spent much of the past two years in
Kandahar interviewing Afghans to learn what they think about conditions in
the province. Senlis has documented increasing frustration with the
international community's failure to bring security and rebuild the south.
In September, the group sounded the alarm about Afghans on the verge of
starvation in camps just kilometres from the Canadian military base in
Kandahar.

On October 26, MacDonald presented her group's findings to the Standing
Committee on National Defence. While opposition MPs appeared interested and
requested further briefings, the Conservative MPs seemed intent on
undermining the credibility of her research.

"The questions we got from the Conservative members of the committee were
more around either denying that there was extreme poverty in Kandahar, or
what you would call a kill-the-messenger type of attack on our
organization," said MacDonald. "Even if they don't agree with our policies
or our recommendations, we think they should be interested in any
information from any source about what's really going on in Kandahar."

A couple weeks later, Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor launched a national
tour to sell the mission to Canadians. After a speech at a Vancouver Board
of Trade luncheon, he reacted defensively when The Globe and Mail's Jane
Armstrong asked him about deteriorating security conditions in Kandahar,
where she had just returned from assignment. He insisted that security was
not getting worse.

The previous day, a joint report of UN, Afghan government and coalition
officials had estimated that 3,700 Afghans had been killed in 2006,
including about 1,000 civilians. That's about four times the number killed
in 2005.

The Taliban's influence is now keenly felt in southern Afghanistan,
according to MacDonald. "The Taliban have psychological control in Kandahar
now. So what that looks like is, all the men are growing beards. No one
goes out without a beard. No one goes out at night. There are roadblocks
and fighting inside Kandahar city. People are making their decisions about
how to live their lives on their understanding of Taliban rules."

There is nothing to suggest that this new generation of Taliban is any less
brutal than its predecessor. Last July, for example, Human Rights Watch
warned of "attacks on schools by the Taliban and other groups that are
intended to terrorize the civilian population." Tactics also included
suicide bombings, targeting civilians, attacks on aid workers and
distributing threatening messages known as "night letters."

There are good reasons why 82 percent of the Afghans surveyed by WPO
continued to hold the view that overthrowing the Taliban was a good thing,
and 77 percent described NATO forces as effective. In the face of the
Taliban's history of cruelty, MacDonald argued that withdrawing troops
would be a betrayal.

"If the international community, NATO, leaves Afghanistan--if the Taliban
and al-Qaeda have southern Afghanistan--we know what will happen because
we've already seen it," she said. "That basically makes us complicit in
what will be a crime against humanity."

Yet the call for withdrawal continues to grow as activists attack Canada's
role in the NATO mission. Mobilization Against War & Occupation (MAWO) is
one of Vancouver's most active groups, having collected more than 12,000
signatures on a petition to withdraw troops. But MAWO appears to oppose
Canadian military intervention on principle. In November the group adopted
a resolution condemning Canadian, UN or NATO action to protect the citizens
of Darfur, Sudan. MAWO claims that humanrights concerns are just an
imperialist smokescreen.

The NDP's position has evolved from supporting the mission, to questioning
its strategy, to calling for immediate withdrawal. The party came to its
final conclusion at its September policy conference in Quebec City, where a
Vancouver Island riding association proposed and then withdrew a motion
accusing Canadian troops fighting in Afghanistan of "acting like terrorists."

The current NDP position is a sharp departure from that voiced by Foreign
Affairs Critic Alexa McDonough last June during a World Peace Forum event
at the University of British Columbia. She mentioned serious concerns about
Canada's role, including handing prisoners to U.S. Special Forces. But she
insisted that international troops were needed for security.

Many of the audience members--probably most--were dissatisfied with such a
nuanced argument. Some, like James Clark of Toronto's Stop the War
Coalition, stood up to condemn the presence of Canadian and other
international forces.

McDonough appeared mildly exasperated with some of the arguments put forth
by what were her party's natural constituents. "We need to be concerned
about disarming the warlords. Who's going to do that? This is dangerous
work, folks," said the Halifax MP. "I think we've got a problem with a
knee-jerk reaction to the military that we need to confront."

If the NDP faced the same reaction from voters across the country, then its
decision to take a harder line can be understood as a ploy for electoral
support.

There is no denying the magnitude of the issues raised by those opposed to
the mission. NATO itself admitted in early January that too many civilians
were killed in 2006. That statement came after pleas by Karzai to stop
killing Afghans. In December, Karzai broke down in tears at a press
conference as he lamented the deaths of children at the hands of NATO
forces as well as "terrorists coming from Pakistan."

Pakistan's relationship with the Taliban poses a major challenge to those
attempting to fight insurgents who slip over the border with impunity. The
worst-kept secret in the region is that Taliban leaders are based in
Pakistan, safe from NATO forces.

Pakistan's efforts against them have been "nonexistent or ineffectual,"
according to a November 2 International Crisis Group report. Until this
situation changes, international efforts will be about "containment at best."

Perhaps an even bigger barrier to security and reconstruction is the opium
trade. It fuels the Taliban, as well as lining the pockets of everyone from
policemen to government officials.

Poppy cultivation also feeds the families of farmers, especially in areas
where little else will grow. A program implemented by the U.S., British and
Afghan governments to eradicate the drug trade by plowing under farmers'
poppy fields has been an abject failure, alienating local populations as
production rates skyrocketed.

"What you see is classic U.S. war-on-drugs policy being applied in
Afghanistan," said MacDonald. "We've said that stuff doesn't work elsewhere
and surely doesn't work in Afghanistan when you've got ... the Taliban and
al-Qaeda waiting for you to make a mistake."

The Senlis Council has been lobbying for a pilot program to license poppy
production for pain medication. There is a large, unmet demand for drugs
like codeine and morphine, especially in developing countries, according to
the Council's research.

Poppy licensing is not the panacea to solve southern Afghanistan's drug
problem, but it "will send a very positive signal that we are trying to
figure out how to help them with this opium problem," MacDonald argued.

After his Vancouver Board of Trade speech, Defence Minister O'Connor was
asked what he thought of the idea. "You just can't go in and destroy
farmers' crops without giving them something," he admitted.

But he also noted that Britain is officially responsible for working with
the Afghan government on the drug problem.

MacDonald argued that Canada must take an active role in resolving the
opium problem. "Canada has said they're not going to be involved in counter
narcotics," she said. "But nevertheless, they have stood idly by while the
U.S. has led this massive crop eradication campaign in Kandahar. And the
Canadian troops are paying the price for that, because it fuels the
insurgency, and the Afghan people are paying the price for that because
there was no alternate livelihood program in place."

Although the drug industry is booming as never before, it has long been a
fixture of the Afghan economy, helping to fund warlords who fought each
other in a brutal factional war in the mid-1990s. Many of those men now
hold official positions.

The Karzai administration has been harshly criticized for failing to take
on the warlords, notably by the courageous female MP Malalai Joya. But for
all its flaws, the current Afghan government's human rights record is light
years ahead of any in the past three decades. And despite their growing
dissatisfaction with the level of corruption and the pace of
reconstruction, nine out of 10 Afghans surveyed by WPO rated Karzai positively.

Rural Development Minister Zia explained that it has taken five years since
the Taliban was pushed out just to lay the foundations for security, good
governance and development.

Ambassador Samad said the next five years will be crucial for the
government to show Afghans progress. If the international community
abandons Afghanistan, the results will be grim, he warned. "We would have a
new cycle of violence and conflict in Afghanistan, the outcome of which
would be disastrous for that country and that region, and I think for the
world."

Samad is undoubtedly aware of how fragile his government is, and how
dependent on countries like Canada it is for survival. But mere survival is
not enough to create lasting change. The key to stability is providing
Afghans with decent living conditions.

"There definitely is resentment by the people, dissatisfaction with the
fact the government is weak, that institutions are not able to deliver the
services that people need and expect," Samad admitted.

He noted that "overall Canada is very generous," but called for more
funding from international donors for reconstruction.

The erosion of faith in reconstruction is actually a pretty damning
indictment of the international community, given the fairly simple
expectations most Afghans have for a better life.

Last summer, during his successful campaign for the Liberal leadership,
Stephane Dion told a group of Simon Fraser University students that
Afghanistan needs a Marshall Plan, similar to the one that rebuilt Europe
after the Second World War.

It occurred to me that activists calling for the withdrawal of troops might
put their resources to better use by lobbying the Canadian government to
take the lead in an international effort to devise such a plan.

But we need to understand there are no quick fixes in Afghanistan, only
long-term solutions. Even a massive, sustained reconstruction effort is
unlikely to yield the relatively swift results of the Marshall Plan. As
devastated as Europe was, it had a history of industrialization and an
educated citizenry ready to make the leap into a globalized world.
Afghanistan has been ripped apart by decades of war, which turned ethnic,
tribal, religious and political groups against each other. And in rural
areas, people continue to live in much the same conditions as they have for
hundreds of years. It will take perhaps generations for Afghanistan to
recover and advance. But that desperately needed transformation can only
come about through strengthening domestic institutions and civil society, a
process that depends on international support, which at present requires a
military component.

In the face of such daunting challenges, Canadians' reservations about the
mission are to be expected. But before raising the call to withdraw troops,
we might consider those whose lives have unquestionably improved because of
the security provided by international forces. As tenuous as it is, this
stability has allowed the Afghan government and international organizations
to deliver the basics-education, employment, health care--to a substantial
portion of the population.

If Afghanistan's history has poisoned the present, it has also fostered a
resiliency.

For a time, during my stay in Kabul, I had a Dari teacher named Abdullah.
He'd lost one of his legs at the knee during the 1990s when rockets rained
down on Kabul as different factions waged bloody battles for control of
sections of the city. He mentioned that he'd grown up in a house in the
neighbourhood where we were living. One night his family fled in the heat
of a battle. When they returned, their home was partially demolished and it
had been looted. His family lost everything.

Abdullah said all this with a smile on his face and then started laughing.
After a moment of speechlessness, I began laughing too, because it seemed
ludicrous that he'd find his own tragedy so funny. Wasn't his family
saddened by their loss?

"But we are still here," he exclaimed, holding out his hands as if to say,
"Look, here I am!"

Jared Ferrie is a Vancouver-based journalist who travels when he's able.
His work has appeared in publications including the Toronto Star, the South
China Morning Post and TheTyee.ca.
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