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Coalition forces: Canada

by Richard Tanter last modified 12-Aug-2007 22:27

Canadian military forces in Afghanistan, and Canadian policy debates

Government sources

Canadian Forces Afghanistan Operations, as of 29 March 2007, Department of National Defence, Canada.

"Operation Athena: The Canadian contribution to the NATO [North Atlantic Treaty Organisation] led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), 2,500 personnel

"Operation Archer: Canadian Support to the National Training Centre, Combined Joint Task Force 76 (CJTF-76) and Combined Security Transition Command – Afghanistan (CSTC-A, formerly the Office of Security Cooperation - Afghanistan), 30 personnel

"Operation Argus: Canadian Strategic Advisory Team providing support to the Afghan Government, 15 personnel"

Report to Parliament: Canada's Mission in Afghanistan: Measuring Progress,  Government of Canada, February 2007.

Protecting Canada, Rebuilding Afghanistan, Government of Canada.

Backgrounder: Canadian Forces Operations in Afghanistan, Department of National Defence/Canadian Forces, 5 January 2007.

Afghanistan and Canada's International Policy, Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Canada.

The Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team, Rebuilding Afghanistan, Government of Canada.

Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team, National Defense, Government of Canada.

Parliamentary sources

Canadian Forces in Afghanistan, Report of the Standing Committee on National Defence, House of Commons, Canada, 39th Parliament, 1st Session, June 2007.

Useful report on policy, mission, force structure and detainee policy. Note Dissenting Opinions of the Bloc Quebecois and the New Democratic Party.

Canadian Troops in Afghanistan: Taking a Hard Look at a Hard Mission, An Interim Report of the Standing Senate Committee on National Security and Defence, February 2007.

Canadian forces in Afghanistan

Joint Task Force Afghanistan (JTF-Afg)

"a. 1200 person infantry battle group; including

1. A combat engineer squadron,

2. An artillery battery,

3. An armoured reconnaissance troop,

4. A Leopard tank squadron,

5. A Tactical Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle (TUAV) Unit, and

6. Operational Mentor Liaison Teams (OMLTs) partnering with
Afghan National Army (ANA) Infantry kandak (battalion) and ANA Corps HQ

b. 70 Health Service Support (HSS) personnel at the Multinational Medical Unit (MMU) at Kandahar Airfield;

c. 30 military members with the Multi-National Brigade (MNB) Headquarters;

d. 300 military members with the National Command Element (NCE) at Kandahar Airfield;

e. 300 military members with the National Support Element (NSE) in Kandahar;

f. In Kabul, about 50 military personnel at ISAF Headquarters, 15 personnel with a smaller NSE Detachment and 11 at the Canadian Embassy;

g. 250 military members with the Theatre Support Element (TSE) in Southwest Asia; and

h. The Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT)."

Bases

Camp Mirage

Location: Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 25° 1' 37N, 55° 22' 15E.

Camp Mirage, Wikipedia

"Camp Mirage is a Canadian Forces forward logistics base located near Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. It was established in the fall of 2001, to support Canadian personnel deployed to the Gulf region. The exact location of Camp Mirage and the nature of its mission(s) is classified by the Canadian Forces."

The worst-kept secret in the Persian Gulf, Paul Koring and Borzou Daragahi, Globe and Mail, 21 May  2005.

"Camp Mirage is on Minhad Air Force Base in the desert south of the glittering port city of Dubai, one of seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates."

Camp Julien

Location: Afghanistan, Kabul. Closed November 2005.

Camp Julien, Military Facilities, Afghanistan, GlobalSecurity.org.

"NATO received command of Camp Julien on 29 November 2005. Located in the ruins of what was once an Afghan royal garden, Camp Julien was built by Canadian engineers in the spring of 2003. Among ISAF troops, Camp Julien is generally considered the most troop-friendly facility in Afghanistan."

Camp Nathan Smith

PRT-Kandahar base.

Camp Nathan Smith, Wikipedia.

Camp Warehouse

Location: Afghanistan, Kabul, 69°18'14" E, 34°32'32" N.

Camp Warehouse, CBC News Online, 18 February 2004.

Camp Warehouse, Wikipedia.

"Camp Warehouse is the operations centre for the multinational International Security Assistance Force located 10 kilometers east of Kabul."

Kandahar Air Field

Kandahar Air Field, Australian Bases Abroad.

Intelligence

Canadian SIGINT and Afghanistan, Australia in Afghanistan

Analysis and commentary

Canada - Afghanistan War order of battle, Wikipedia

Excellent updated listing of units and organisation.

CANinKandahar, Milnews - Military News for Canadians.

Monitoring Peace Operations in Afghanistan, Peace Operations Monitor.

"A project of the Peace Operations Working Group (POWG), a working group of the Canadian Peacebuilding Coordinating Committee (CPCC). The Peace Operations Monitor is a web-based resource providing up-to-date factual information on complex peace operations.”

Canada’s mission in Afghanistan, globeandmail.com.

Detailed regularly updated site from major newspaper, including "The political debate", "The mission", "allegations of prisoner abuse", and "The soldier's life".

Canada's role in the invasion of Afghanistan, Wikipedia.

Canada: Uruzgan Weblog

Excellent compilation in English and Dutch; updating suspended as of mid-2007, but remains a useful resource.

As the caskets leave Kandahar, Chris Brown, Kandahar Dispatches, cbc.ca, 13 April 2007.

Canada in Afghanistan: Is it Working?, Gordon Smith, Canadian Defence & Foreign Affairs Institute, March 2007.

Canadians debate Afghan pullout, Owen Clegg, BBC News, 13 February 2007.

“A Canadian Senate committee says the government should consider withdrawing from Afghanistan unless its Nato allies provide additional troops there.”

Afghanistan: Wrong Mission for Canada, Michael Byers, The Tyee, 6 October 2006.

"Have we reached our national tipping point with regard to the counter-insurgency mission in Afghanistan? Having done my best to assess the arguments for and against, the conclusion, to me, is obvious."

Losing Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan. Canada´s Leadership to Break the Cycle of Violence in Southern Afghanistan, Senlis Council, October 2006

“The current crisis cannot be resolved through military means alone. Canada should focus on a new approach in Kandahar based on immediate food and medical aid, the establishment of emergency local Jirgas to establish political structure in Afghan communities, and the introduction of a science-based search for alternatives to the dominant illegal opium industry that currently holds Afghanistan in its grip. With a new strategic approach to the Canadian mission in Afghanistan, Canada will be able to bring about a winning strategy, one that can truly be effective in both its military objectives and in its development and reconstruction agenda.”

Canada in Kandahar: No Peace to Keep - A Case Study of the Military Coalitions in Southern Afghanistan, Senlis Council, June 2006

“Canada and the international community continue to unquestioningly accept America's fundamentally flawed policy approach in southern Afghanistan, thereby jeopardising the success of military operations in the region and the stabilisation, reconstruction and development mission objectives.”

Afghanistan: From good intentions to sustainable solutions, Ernie Regehr, Project Ploughshares, August 2006

"A thorough re-evaluation of Canada’s role and objectives in Afghanistan is long overdue. Canada certainly took on a special responsibility to Afghanistan when our Government joined the ill-advised war to overthrow Afghanistan’s Taliban government, but that doesn’t mean persisting in a military effort that is not working. To be in solidarity with the people of Afghanistan means being unrelenting in the search for ways to effectively support their security and viability as a stable country that respects human rights. While Canada has made major non-military commitments to Afghanistan, the primary commitment has been through the Armed Forces and questions about the impact and effectiveness of that effort now warrant a thoroughgoing public examination."

Canadian cooperation with Australia in Afghanistan

Canada and Australia: building on the ties that bind us, Gordon J. O'Connor, Minister of National Defence, Canada, Lowy Institute, 8 September 2006.

See also:

26 July 2007