The fall of Panjwaii casts a long shadow over Canada's Afghan war veterans - Action News
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The fall of Panjwaii casts a long shadow over Canada's Afghan war veterans

The Taliban did something last weekend they've been unable to do for nearly two decades. They captured a key district on the edge of Kandahar City a region many Canadian soldiers gave their lives to defend. The event was greeted with a mixture of dismay, sadness and resignation by the ordinary troops who fought there.

After years of bloodshed, the Canadians who served are asking themselves whether any of it was worthwhile

A Canadian CH-147 Chinook helicopter takes off outside a combat outpost in Panjwaii, Afghanistan in June 2011. (Murray Brewster/The Canadian Press)

The declaration that Panjwaii a wild, angry district of Kandahar province in Afghanistan had fallen to the Taliban was greeted this week with a mixture of shock, numbness and resignation by many of theCanadian soldierswho foughtin that part of the country for the better part offive years.

A lot of Canadian blood was spilled on that lonely, scorched patch of land.Some of it belonged to former corporal Bruce Moncur.

There was also a lot of sweat and heartbreak folded into the gnarled, sun-bleached grape and marijuana fields in this region west of Kandahar City.

Just ask retired leading seaman Bruno Guevremont.

Panjwaii District centre as seen from the Canadian military's forward operating base at Ma'sum Ghar, west of Kandahar City, in the spring of 2009. (Murray Brewster/The Canadian Press)

In many ways, both menleft a little bit of themselves behindin Panjwaii a sprawling, once-prosperous checkerboard of sand, farmlandand ancient, dead volcanic hills that risesteeplyout of the desert floor.

When soldiers referred to the killing fields of Kandahar, more often than not they were talking about Panjwaii where Canadian troops did most of their fighting and dying amid endless fields, mud-walled compounds and empty villages.

Against an often-unseen enemy, they fought for the place over and over again throughout the five-year combat mission, which formally ended a decade ago this week.

The Taliban the enemy thatCanadian soldiersmanaged to keep at bay but never quite defeat swept through Panjwaii last weekend, handing Afghan Army troops a significant defeat and delivering a major psychological blow in the wake of the American withdrawal.

'It's never going to end'

Following up on their victory inPanjwaii,Taliban insurgents reportedlypenetrated Kandahar City late in the week. The Talibandesperately wanted control ofKandahar City, the second largest in Afghanistan,and spilled a lot of their own blood trying to get there mostly with the Canadians standing in the way.

The city and its surrounding region was their spiritual home, birthplace andfirst seat of power, a place from which they projectedtheir own brutal version of Islamin the 1990s.

Retired leading seaman Bruno Guevremont, a former bomb disposal technician who served with the Canadian Armed Forces in Afghanistan. ( Bruno Guevremont/Facebook)

Guevremontsaid he was shaken by thethought that thevillagers he'dprotected,and sometimes shared tea and flatbread with,were about to return to that kind of misery.

"What's the feeling I got when I heard that Panjwaii, (the Afghan National Army) had withdrawn and the Taliban was moving back in? It was anxiety. It was exhaustion," said Guevremont, who dismantled insurgent bombs and disarmeda live suicide bomber single-handedin the spring of 2009.

"It's like, this is never-ending. It's never going to end.I'm thinking about the local population. I mean, I made friends over there."

Bruno Guevremont says he is the only member of the Canadian Armed Forces to dismantle a suicide vest on a live bomber. (Bruno Guevremont/Facebook)

He said the news brought back vivid memories ofthe three times his team was called in to defuse bombs at schools.

"Once, we got there too late where an IED had actually detonated on a school, so a lot of children had died," said Guevremont. "There were two where IEDs were prepared to go off when the kids came out of school and we got there in time and dismantled those IEDs."

While he worries abouttheordinary Afghans caught in the path of the advancing Taliban, he said he also remembers theinsecure feeling of being an outsider among Afghansof not knowing who could be trusted.

Guevremont recalled being asked by locals to respond to a report of a rocket strapped to the underside of a bridge only to discover thathe'd been led into a minefield. He had to dig and tiptoe his way out.

Ten years later, he is left with a sense of dismay and futility.

"So, you're thinking, 'What did we do for 20 years? What did we do there for the whole time that we were there?'" hesaid.

He's not the only one asking those questions.

'It was an inevitability'

The hardened resolve andpatient, wait-and-seeattitude shared bythe 40,000 Canadians troops who served in Afghanistan showed cracks here and there on social media this week.

What was it all for?It's a question that, over the past decade, has been answered with the claim that Canada's interventionempoweredAfghans to choose their own destiny.

But for some former soldiers, fatalism has taken over.

"It was an inevitability," said Moncur, who suffered a major head wound in 2006at the onset of Operation Medusa, the biggest battle foughtby Canadians during the war.

"I honestly thought it was going to happen. I never thought the Taliban stranglehold on Kandahar was going to be broken for that long."

Bruce Moncur (right) in southern Afghanistan in 2006. (CBC News)

Moncur and many soldiers like him take a pragmatic view of their service in Afghanistan:they had a job to do keeping the Taliban at bay and they did it.

"It's been 20 years now, a generation, and we lost a lot of blood and guts. But they lost too," he said, referring to the full sweep of western involvement in Afghanistan following the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

There is a phrase the Taliban liked to use in their propaganda against western forces: "You have the watches, but we have the time."

Moncur said he has grown to appreciate the truth of thatclaim.

"The inevitability was, unless we were willing to retain that presence for a millennia, they were ultimately going to come out on top," he said.

'We didn't finish the job'

Moncur said he believesthe war was not worth the sacrifice in lives and treasure. As a veterans' advocate who is married to NDP MP Niki Ashton, there is an important political dimension to his feelings about Panjwaii.

If Canada, he said, was serious about everything it claimed (and sometimes continues to claim) about its presence inAfghanistan,it would have not walked away from combat operationsin 2011 and would not haveleft the country entirely in 2014.

"I have a hard time grappling with some of the politics that come after this, the decisions to leave," he said."I mean, we didn't finish the job."

For soldiers like Moncur, mixed in with that remorse anddismay over the fall of Panjwaii is asense that Canada's war inAfghanistan is ancient history now.

"I've moved on," he said."I think a lot of the vets have moved on from this.

"I think if you had to ask them what they're more concerned about, the Taliban taking over Kandahar province or perhaps the state of the military within our country, I'm pretty sure most guys would be talking about what is going on with the Canadian military now."

But Canada left some loose ends behind in Afghanistan flesh-and-blood ones.

Growing calls for Ottawa to rescue the local Afghan translators who worked for theCanadians and wereleft behind after 2014haveput the Liberal government on the spot in recent days.

Those calls started with ordinary soldiers but are now coming from some ofthe country's topformer commanders who say they're not prepared to see people whorisked their lives for Canada sacrificed to the Taliban.