The Sandbox and Areas Reports Thread (April '08)
News only - commentary elsewhere, please.
Thanks for helping this "news only" thread system work!
Articles found April 1, '08
Ottawa advised not to lower flag for dead soldiers
Mar 31, 1999 08:50 PM Tim Naumetz THE CANADIAN PRESS
Article Link
Ottawa–An expert panel has advised cabinet to oppose a move to lower the Canadian flag on the Peace Tower whenever a soldier dies in Afghanistan because it would debase the honour.
In a report to Secretary of State Jason Kenney, a former chief herald of Canada urged the government to keep Remembrance Day as the lone anniversary to mark Canadian war dead by lowering the tower flag to half-mast.
The Commons is poised to vote Wednesday on a flag-lowering motion proposed by a fiberal MP.
Former chief herald Robert Watt, with the support of four other experts, recommended a new protocol that would limit half-masting the Peace Tower flag to mourning the deaths of current and former representatives of the Crown, the prime minister and the chief justice of the Supreme Court.
Under the recommendations, the flag would no longer be lowered on the deaths of senators and MPs, or former senators and MPs.
"In addition, we also strongly believe that there is only one commemorative day each year where the National Flag needs to be half-masted," Watt wrote in a covering letter to Kenney.
"That is Remembrance Day. Our rationale in this case is that coinage of half-masting has been debased."
Kenney commissioned the report last year in part to buttress con-servative arguments against lowering the Peace Tower flag for Afghanistan war dead.
More on link
Sarkozy's troop pledge for Afghan campaign 'may encourage others'
By Anne Penketh, Diplomatic Editor Tuesday, 1 April 1999
Article Link
France's decision to dispatch at least 1,000 soldiers to bolster the Nato campaign in Afghanistan will set a powerful example likely to encourage European countries to follow suit, according to a senior British official.
"It will allow others to come through," the official said. "The Belgians have, but so might the Spanish now they've had their election, and the Italians after their election," which is scheduled for 13-14 April.
Troops from all three countries are already present in Afghanistan but Nato has been pressing – and will continue to do so at its summit tomorrow – for reinforcements to shore up the campaign against the Taliban.
France is to boost the 1,600-strong French contingent in Afghanistan with hundreds of paratroopers, plus a small number of special forces who were pulled out in January last year.
However President Nicolas Sarkozy, who announced the decision to boost the French deployment during a visit to Britain last week and, in the process, caused a political uproar in Paris, stressed the additional troops were conditional on Nato agreeing an overall strategy pinned on reconstruction and development.
More on link
Committee to study compensation for soldiers
By DAVE SULZ Apr 1, 1999, 04:23
Article Link
The issue of compensation for injured Canadian soldiers is likely to be one of the areas addressed by a government committee headed by Lethbridge MP Rick Casson.
Casson, chairman of the standing committee on national defence, said the committee began about a month ago to examine quality of life of Canadian Forces members, and he expects the matter of injury compensation to come up during interviews that will be conducted as part of the study.
Casson, speaking from Ottawa, was responding to published comments by New Dummy-crats MP Peter Stoffer, who criticized the military amputee and injury compensation as inadequate.
Media reports indicated guidelines which took effect in 2003 provide for a maximum lump-sum payment of $250,000 for Canadian Forces who lose both feet or hands or receive another permanent serious injury. Loss of a single body part qualifies for a $125,000 payment.
Some classes of reservists with less than six months of service have compensation capped at $100,000 and they’re eligible for only half — in some cases, one-quarter — of the dismemberment claims of regular forces.
Reservists who are deployed with regular forces in Afghanistan are compensated at the same rate as regular troops, Casson pointed out, adding a proposal to standardize compensation across the forces to include reservists is being looked at by the Treasury Board.
Casson said the committee studying Canadian Forces members’ quality of life has an emphasis on post-traumatic stress disorder, an ailment that has been proliferating among Canadian troops since 2002 with Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan.
“We want to make sure they’re properly taken care of,” said Casson.
But the committee’s view isn’t limited to post-traumatic stress disorder and Casson said the compensation issue “is quite timely for our study.”
He anticipates the matter of injury compensation will come up during the committee’s work.
“As we’re looking at the quality of life issue through the committee, these are the types of things we’ll be asking about,” he said.
More on link
Excalibur Goes to Afghanistan
April 1, 1999
Article Link
American and Canadian troops have begun using the U.S. Excalibur GPS guided 155mm Infantry shell in Afghanistan. A year ago, American troops began using Excalibur in Afghanistan. This is just in time, because Islamic warriors tend to use civilians as human shields, and that means you have to be precise when you go after the bad guys with Infantry. A typical situation has enemy gunmen holding out in one building of a walled compound or village. In nearby buildings, there are women and children. While killing the enemy is good, killing the civilians can be worse. Smart bombs should be able to fix this, except that sometimes the smallest smart bomb, the 500 pounder, has too much bang (280 pounds of explosives). A 155mm Infantry shell should do the trick (only 20 pounds of explosives each), but at long range (20 kilometers or more), some of these shells will hit the civilians. This is where Excalibur comes in handy. Unguided shells land anywhere within a 200 meter (or larger) circle. The GPS guided Excalibur shell falls within a ten meter circle (the middle of that circle being the "aim point".) After a year of use in Afghanistan, the troops find Excalibur invaluable for hitting just what you want to hit.
More on link
Working to rid Afghanistan of land mines a 'kind of jihad'
OLIVER MOORE April 1, 1999
Article Link
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- Noor Ahmad has one of the most dangerous jobs in the world. For 18 years, he's prodded the earth centimetre by centimetre to rid his country of land mines, a scourge that has become more numerous in the time he's been working. He's seen an anti-personnel mine blow up in front of him and still bears the scars where his body wasn't shielded by protective gear.
He presses on in spite of the dangers, working in the hot sun on the weekend to help clear the perimeter of a bombed-out weapons factory east of Kandahar, because he considers it "a kind of jihad."
"If you protect the life of one person, then you will be rewarded as if you have protected all the world," Mr. Ahmed said, citing a verse from the Koran.
But that dedication hasn't been enough to protect de-miners from attacks. Teams have been targeted in several parts of the country and at least 10 people have been killed since August.
More on link
One Danish soldier killed, two wounded in Afghanistan
www.chinaview.cn 1999-04-01 00:27:11
Article Link
STOCKHOLM, March 31 (Xinhua) -- A Danish soldier was killed and another two were wounded in southern Afghanistan on Monday, according to Danish news reports.
Earlier on Monday the Danish and British troops battled the Taliban insurgents near the city Gereshk of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. As result a Danish soldier died and the other two were wounded, the Danish News Agency Ritzau quoted the Danish Army Central Command as saying in a statement.
This is the fourth Danish soldier who died in Helmand province in March. So far ten Danish soldiers have died in Afghanistan. Denmark, a NATO member, has about 550 combat troops in Afghanistan.
More on link
Taliban commander detained in southern Afghanistan
By ASSOCIATED PRESS Apr 1, 1999 10:21 KANDAHAR, Afghanistan
Article Link
Police arrested a senior Taliban commander during a clash with militants in southern Afghanistan that left three insurgents dead, an official said Tuesday.
The militants, led by Taliban commander Mullah Naqibullah and dressed in police uniforms, ambushed a police convoy on Monday north of Lashkar Gah, the capital of southern Helmand province, said Mohammad Hussein Andiwal, the provincial police chief.
The ensuing gun battle left three militants dead, and wounded two policemen and Naqibullah, who was taken into custody, Andiwal said.
This is the third time that authorities have arrested Naqibullah.
Two months ago, Naqibullah managed to escape from the prison run by the Afghan intelligence service in Lashkar Gah, Andiwal said. Previously he had escaped from a prison in the capital, Kabul.
More on link
News only - commentary elsewhere, please.
Thanks for helping this "news only" thread system work!
Articles found April 1, '08
Ottawa advised not to lower flag for dead soldiers
Mar 31, 1999 08:50 PM Tim Naumetz THE CANADIAN PRESS
Article Link
Ottawa–An expert panel has advised cabinet to oppose a move to lower the Canadian flag on the Peace Tower whenever a soldier dies in Afghanistan because it would debase the honour.
In a report to Secretary of State Jason Kenney, a former chief herald of Canada urged the government to keep Remembrance Day as the lone anniversary to mark Canadian war dead by lowering the tower flag to half-mast.
The Commons is poised to vote Wednesday on a flag-lowering motion proposed by a fiberal MP.
Former chief herald Robert Watt, with the support of four other experts, recommended a new protocol that would limit half-masting the Peace Tower flag to mourning the deaths of current and former representatives of the Crown, the prime minister and the chief justice of the Supreme Court.
Under the recommendations, the flag would no longer be lowered on the deaths of senators and MPs, or former senators and MPs.
"In addition, we also strongly believe that there is only one commemorative day each year where the National Flag needs to be half-masted," Watt wrote in a covering letter to Kenney.
"That is Remembrance Day. Our rationale in this case is that coinage of half-masting has been debased."
Kenney commissioned the report last year in part to buttress con-servative arguments against lowering the Peace Tower flag for Afghanistan war dead.
More on link
Sarkozy's troop pledge for Afghan campaign 'may encourage others'
By Anne Penketh, Diplomatic Editor Tuesday, 1 April 1999
Article Link
France's decision to dispatch at least 1,000 soldiers to bolster the Nato campaign in Afghanistan will set a powerful example likely to encourage European countries to follow suit, according to a senior British official.
"It will allow others to come through," the official said. "The Belgians have, but so might the Spanish now they've had their election, and the Italians after their election," which is scheduled for 13-14 April.
Troops from all three countries are already present in Afghanistan but Nato has been pressing – and will continue to do so at its summit tomorrow – for reinforcements to shore up the campaign against the Taliban.
France is to boost the 1,600-strong French contingent in Afghanistan with hundreds of paratroopers, plus a small number of special forces who were pulled out in January last year.
However President Nicolas Sarkozy, who announced the decision to boost the French deployment during a visit to Britain last week and, in the process, caused a political uproar in Paris, stressed the additional troops were conditional on Nato agreeing an overall strategy pinned on reconstruction and development.
More on link
Committee to study compensation for soldiers
By DAVE SULZ Apr 1, 1999, 04:23
Article Link
The issue of compensation for injured Canadian soldiers is likely to be one of the areas addressed by a government committee headed by Lethbridge MP Rick Casson.
Casson, chairman of the standing committee on national defence, said the committee began about a month ago to examine quality of life of Canadian Forces members, and he expects the matter of injury compensation to come up during interviews that will be conducted as part of the study.
Casson, speaking from Ottawa, was responding to published comments by New Dummy-crats MP Peter Stoffer, who criticized the military amputee and injury compensation as inadequate.
Media reports indicated guidelines which took effect in 2003 provide for a maximum lump-sum payment of $250,000 for Canadian Forces who lose both feet or hands or receive another permanent serious injury. Loss of a single body part qualifies for a $125,000 payment.
Some classes of reservists with less than six months of service have compensation capped at $100,000 and they’re eligible for only half — in some cases, one-quarter — of the dismemberment claims of regular forces.
Reservists who are deployed with regular forces in Afghanistan are compensated at the same rate as regular troops, Casson pointed out, adding a proposal to standardize compensation across the forces to include reservists is being looked at by the Treasury Board.
Casson said the committee studying Canadian Forces members’ quality of life has an emphasis on post-traumatic stress disorder, an ailment that has been proliferating among Canadian troops since 2002 with Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan.
“We want to make sure they’re properly taken care of,” said Casson.
But the committee’s view isn’t limited to post-traumatic stress disorder and Casson said the compensation issue “is quite timely for our study.”
He anticipates the matter of injury compensation will come up during the committee’s work.
“As we’re looking at the quality of life issue through the committee, these are the types of things we’ll be asking about,” he said.
More on link
Excalibur Goes to Afghanistan
April 1, 1999
Article Link
American and Canadian troops have begun using the U.S. Excalibur GPS guided 155mm Infantry shell in Afghanistan. A year ago, American troops began using Excalibur in Afghanistan. This is just in time, because Islamic warriors tend to use civilians as human shields, and that means you have to be precise when you go after the bad guys with Infantry. A typical situation has enemy gunmen holding out in one building of a walled compound or village. In nearby buildings, there are women and children. While killing the enemy is good, killing the civilians can be worse. Smart bombs should be able to fix this, except that sometimes the smallest smart bomb, the 500 pounder, has too much bang (280 pounds of explosives). A 155mm Infantry shell should do the trick (only 20 pounds of explosives each), but at long range (20 kilometers or more), some of these shells will hit the civilians. This is where Excalibur comes in handy. Unguided shells land anywhere within a 200 meter (or larger) circle. The GPS guided Excalibur shell falls within a ten meter circle (the middle of that circle being the "aim point".) After a year of use in Afghanistan, the troops find Excalibur invaluable for hitting just what you want to hit.
More on link
Working to rid Afghanistan of land mines a 'kind of jihad'
OLIVER MOORE April 1, 1999
Article Link
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- Noor Ahmad has one of the most dangerous jobs in the world. For 18 years, he's prodded the earth centimetre by centimetre to rid his country of land mines, a scourge that has become more numerous in the time he's been working. He's seen an anti-personnel mine blow up in front of him and still bears the scars where his body wasn't shielded by protective gear.
He presses on in spite of the dangers, working in the hot sun on the weekend to help clear the perimeter of a bombed-out weapons factory east of Kandahar, because he considers it "a kind of jihad."
"If you protect the life of one person, then you will be rewarded as if you have protected all the world," Mr. Ahmed said, citing a verse from the Koran.
But that dedication hasn't been enough to protect de-miners from attacks. Teams have been targeted in several parts of the country and at least 10 people have been killed since August.
More on link
One Danish soldier killed, two wounded in Afghanistan
www.chinaview.cn 1999-04-01 00:27:11
Article Link
STOCKHOLM, March 31 (Xinhua) -- A Danish soldier was killed and another two were wounded in southern Afghanistan on Monday, according to Danish news reports.
Earlier on Monday the Danish and British troops battled the Taliban insurgents near the city Gereshk of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. As result a Danish soldier died and the other two were wounded, the Danish News Agency Ritzau quoted the Danish Army Central Command as saying in a statement.
This is the fourth Danish soldier who died in Helmand province in March. So far ten Danish soldiers have died in Afghanistan. Denmark, a NATO member, has about 550 combat troops in Afghanistan.
More on link
Taliban commander detained in southern Afghanistan
By ASSOCIATED PRESS Apr 1, 1999 10:21 KANDAHAR, Afghanistan
Article Link
Police arrested a senior Taliban commander during a clash with militants in southern Afghanistan that left three insurgents dead, an official said Tuesday.
The militants, led by Taliban commander Mullah Naqibullah and dressed in police uniforms, ambushed a police convoy on Monday north of Lashkar Gah, the capital of southern Helmand province, said Mohammad Hussein Andiwal, the provincial police chief.
The ensuing gun battle left three militants dead, and wounded two policemen and Naqibullah, who was taken into custody, Andiwal said.
This is the third time that authorities have arrested Naqibullah.
Two months ago, Naqibullah managed to escape from the prison run by the Afghan intelligence service in Lashkar Gah, Andiwal said. Previously he had escaped from a prison in the capital, Kabul.
More on link