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THE STANS
Canada heads for Afghan exit after 9 years at war
by Staff Writers
Ma Sum Ghar, Afghanistan (AFP) July 5, 2011

British drone kills four Afghan civilians: Defence Ministry
London (AFP) July 6, 2011 - A British Royal Air Force drone killed four Afghan civilians and injured two more during an attack on a Taliban commander, the Ministry of Defence confirmed Wednesday.

The defence department verified a report in Britain's Guardian newspaper which revealed that four civilians died when a Reaper drone being controlled from a US Airforce base in Nevada attacked a truck carrying a known commander.

"On 25 March, a UK Reaper was tasked to engage and destroy two pick up trucks," the defence ministry said Wednesday.

"Sadly, four Afghan civilians were also killed and a further two Afghan civilians were injured," added the ministry "with deep regret".

Two insurgents were also killed in the attack.

It is the first time a British Reaper drone has been responsible for civilian deaths since the RAF began using the pilotless aircraft over the war-torn nation in 2007.

For the Canadian troops leaving Afghanistan for the last time, the smiles and laughter as they filed across the tarmac to their transport plane said it all -- they were finally going home.

The 117 troops who left Kandahar airfield, the giant military base in the heart of the southern war zone, early Wednesday were among nearly 3,000 Canadian combat troops whose mission ends this week after nine years and 157 deaths.

Still in uniform, carrying camouflage kit bags and flashing thumbs-up signs to photographers, most were purely and simply looking forward to going back to their families.

But others were conscious that the adjustment from frontline to civilian life might not be totally straightforward, despite a five-day "decompression" period in Cyprus on the way home to help them acclimatise.

Speaking on the runway moments before boarding the C17 transport aircraft, Captain Giles McClintock was desperate to get back to Canada to catch up on lost time with his infant son.

"I got to meet him for a week before I was deployed and during three weeks' break," he said. "I haven't even known him as a baby -- I'm coming back to him as a little boy."

McClintock, who spent eight months in Afghanistan working with an engineering unit building roads and schools, said it felt "great" to be going home.

But some more senior officers cautioned that some soldiers might have a harder time adjusting to the aftermath of war.

Lieutenant-Colonel Martin Arcand spent 15 months in a senior operational role for Canadian forces and starts work as a military adviser to Canada's ambassador to the United Nations in New York later this month.

"Here, you're always on, you're called throughout the night. Back home it's going to be more like nine to six. You don't bring much work home. It will need some adjustment for sure," he said.

In Cyprus, the troops will attend talks on the psychological impact of war, while counselling will be available for those who want it. It will also be their first chance in months to drink alcohol.

Arcand said the Cyprus stop-off aimed to help them prepare for going home.

"You've been away for a year, you're going back home, your family have been doing stuff together for a year so you need to be able to adapt to a normal life," he said.

McClintock, though, was ambivalent about the prospect of the extended layover.

"Obviously it will be nice to be with the guys in a relaxed setting," he said. "However, all of us just want to go home."

A few soldiers whose husbands, wives or partners were also in the military in Afghanistan do not feel in such a rush to head back to their families.

Warrant Officer Yves Martin served as a physician specialising in trauma at frontline bases around Kandahar province, one of Afghanistan's most dangerous.

He said that members of his team provided strong support for each other, particularly after dealing with some of the most harrowing cases of dead and injured soldiers.

"After every case, we would get together and do a debrief," he said. "You can't save all the lives. You need to make sure everybody knows they did their best. So far I've been lucky, knock on wood, that I haven't had anything too traumatising."

Martin also had his wife to turn to, although military rules prevent intimacy between serving couples.

"We saw each other but we couldn't be too close. We played a lot of cards," he said.




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Attacks kill four NATO soldiers in Afghan east
Kabul (AFP) July 5, 2011 - Four NATO soldiers were killed Tuesday in two attacks in eastern Afghanistan, where mostly US troops are battling a fierce Taliban insurgency close to the border with Pakistan, the military said.

Three soldiers were killed in an improvised bomb explosion and the fourth in an attack, the international force said, without giving further details or announcing their nationalities.

The deaths came one day after a British soldier was found dead close to his post in the restive southern province of Helmand hours after going missing, overshadowing a surprise visit by British premier David Cameron to the area.

The four deaths on Tuesday brought the overall death toll to 288 foreign troops killed this year in Afghanistan, according to a tally based on that collated by the independent website iCasualties.org.





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THE STANS
US shifts supply routes to Central Asia: report
Washington (AFP) July 2, 2011
The US military is expanding its Central Asian supply routes to the war in Afghanistan, fearing that the routes going through Pakistan could be endangered by deteriorating US-Pakistani relations, The Washington Post reported late Saturday. Citing unnamed Pentagon officials, the newspaper said that in 2009, the United States moved 90 percent of its military surface cargo through the Pakistan ... read more


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