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CanadaPoint of View

OPINION: Let's not talk about war in front of the voters

Author Michael Byers says it is time our political leaders talked openly and realistically about the dangers of staying on in Afghanistan.

"Don't talk about the war. The war was a long way away. Maybe there wasn't any war. There was no war here." Ernest Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms


Seven UN staff members were hunted down and killed this month after more than 1,000 Afghans, outraged over an insult to the Qur'an in a U.S. church, stormed their compound in Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan.

This week, we learned that one of the locationsfor Canadian troops engaged in the new training mission in Afghanistan will be, of all places, in Mazar-i Sharif.

Peter MacKay, the Conservative defence minister, authorized the deployment before the federal election began.

Michael Byers teaches political science at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of Intent for a Nation and, most recently, Who Owns the Arctic? He ran as a New Democrat in the 2008 federal election. He is also the co-author, with Stewart Webb, ofa report this week, Training can be Dangerous: A Realistic Assessment of the Proposed Canadian Mission to Train Afghan National Security Forces, published by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

Butthe government is delaying any announcement because of what might ensue when people realize that Mazar-i-Sharif will be the focus of Canada's deployment, not Kabul as previously promised.

Michael Ignatieff should have read the Citizen that day. For during Tuesday's leaders debate, the Liberal leader said that it was "right for Canada to stay in a training mission, out of harm's way."

In doing so, he was agreeing with Stephen Harper, who last November said there were "minimal risks" associated with training and on that basis decided that no parliamentary debate was needed to extend the Afghan mission to 2014.

Training is never safe

Military training, however, is never safe, especially in a war zone. Remember, the first four Canadian deaths in Afghanistan occurred in 2002 when a training exercise drew "friendly fire" from an American fighter pilot.

And now, across Afghanistan, the Taliban are infiltrating the ranks of army and police recruits in order to attack and kill NATO soldiers.

As a colleague and I noted earlier this weekin our study, Training is dangerous, for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, there is quite a history here.

For example, in November 2009, five British soldiers were killed by an Afghan policeman. Then, last July, three British soldiers were killed by an Afghan soldier, while two American contractors were killed by an Afghan soldier at a training centre outside Mazar-i-Sharif.

I could go on. In August, two Spanish policemen were killed by an Afghan policeman, as were six American trainers in November by another police recruit, with the trend continuing almost to this day: on April 4, two American trainers were killed by an Afghan border policeman.

All told, in the last year and a half, 25 NATO soldiers have diedthis way.

Making matters worse, Afghan insurgents have been targeting recruitment and training centres.

On December 19, five Afghan soldiers were killed outside the main army recruitment centre near Kabul. Later that day, five more Afghan soldiers and three policemen were killed when another recruitment centre was attacked.

And just yesterday, three Afghan policemen were killed when suicide bombers struck a training centre run by the U.S. in eastern Afghanistan.

Adding to the risk is the fact that Canadian soldiers will never remain completely "inside the wire," no matter what a prime minister says.

Mazar-i-Sharif

For training to succeed, some reliable organization has to provide security for the bases, and soldiers from other NATO countries are increasingly few on the ground.

Staffan de Mistura, the UN Special Representative for Afghanistan, touches the casket of one of seven colleagues killed in an attack on the UN operations centre in Mazar-i-Sharif in April 2011. (Eric Kanalstein/UNAMA/Associated Press)

Using Canadians to secure the base perimeters will increase the risks to those soldiers and raise the question how wide the buffer zone should be.

Moreover, effective training requires at least some hands-on mentoring outside the wire, on roads increasingly mined with IEDs.

Right now, at least 325 of the 2,750 Canadian military personnel currently in Afghanistan are already training Afghan soldiers and policemen in the field, sometimes embedded within Afghan units.

Yet going outside the wire in Mazar-i-Sharif is fraught with risk. The region is dominated by the Afghan warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum, who is infamous for having executed some of his opponents by tying them to the tracks of tanks and driving over them.

The city has also been the site of brutal massacres. In August 1998, the Taliban captured Mazar-i-Sharif from the Northern Alliance, a coalition of warlords.

They searched the city house by house, summarily executing male members of the Hazara, Tajik and Uzbek tribes. According to Human Rights Watch, at least 2,000 people were killed.

In November 2001, Mazir-i-Sharif was the first city captured by the Northern Alliance after U.S. forces intervened to oust the Taliban. It was reported that as many as 2,000 captured Taliban were stuffed into unventilated shipping containers and left to suffocate.

In this election campaign, let's not allow our public discourse to be suffocated. It's time for politicians to talk openly and realistically about Afghanistan. About our values, our interests and above all the ongoing dangers that our soldiers face.