Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

New monument commemorates Hamilton soldiers killed during Afghanistan war – Hamilton Spectator

For almost ten years, Bev McCraw has kept a small tin of desert sand safely tucked away inside her Hamilton home.

McCraw, the mother of Sgt. Shawn Eades, CD, collected it during a trip to Afghanistan in 2008, just after her son was killed by a roadside bomb.

McCraw says she had no idea what, if anything, she would do with it only that she felt compelled to bring a piece of the place where her son died back to Canada. So, before journeying home, McCraw scooped a few handfuls of sand into an empty peanut tin covered in Arabic text, save for the "Planters" logo wrapped it in packing tape, and stashed it in her suitcase.

On Saturday, that sand became part of a new monument honouring Eades and three other Hamilton soldiers who died during the Afghanistan war Pte. Mark Anthony Graham, Maj. Raymond Mark Ruckpaul, and Cpl. Justin Matthew Stark.

Graham was killed in a friendly fire incident near Kandahar in 2006, Ruckpaul died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Kabul in 2007 and Stark died by suicide in Hamilton in 2011, 10 months after returning from Afghanistan. Canadian troops were in that country from 2002-2014.

The monument, unveiled at a ceremony Saturday at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, is a demilitarized Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV) III the same type of vehicle Eades was in when he was killed.

"It means a lot to me, for the simple reason that Shawn was killed in a LAV," said McCraw. "I miss him every day. He was so much of our lives, and now he's gone. He left behind a wife and three little girls, so it's been hard on all of us."

During a dedication ceremony Saturday morning, the sand from McCraw's trip to Afghanistan was poured into a container that will be permanently sealed at the monument's foot.

The ceremony drew community members, military personnel, and local officials, including MP Bob Bratina, MP David Christopherson, MPPs Paul Miller and Monique Taylor, Mayor Fred Eisenberger, and Councillors Donna Skelly and Brenda Johnson.

One of the most notable groups who attended the ceremony were the North Wall Riders Association, a group of motorcycle riders dedicated to supporting veterans and the military. The group which turned out in full force wearing leather vests and red T-shirts spearheaded the fundraising effort to create a permanent monument to the Afghanistan war in Hamilton.

Keven Ellis, the president of the Steel City North Wall Riders Association, says the project was two-and-a-half years in the making. To Ellis, it was a true labour of love.

"My entire family served in the military, right back to the 1700s in England. I was unable to serve because of some learning disorders that I have. So I've felt, since I was 15, that the only way that I could serve my country is to serve those that served it," he said.

"I've spent the rest of my life remembering those that have served our country and defended our freedom."

Emma Reilly is a reporter with the Hamilton Spectator.

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New monument commemorates Hamilton soldiers killed during Afghanistan war - Hamilton Spectator

Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry, Pakistan’s ambassador, awaits Trump’s … – Washington Times

Pakistans military has swept terrorist groups from the nations once-lawless tribal areas, but the gains could be put at risk if the security situation across the border in Afghanistan is not brought under control, Islamabads diplomat in Washington said, stressing that his nation is waiting for the Trump administration to clarify its strategy for the Afghanistan conflict.

Ambassador Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry said his countrys reputation as a source of instability and a haven for jihadis is badly out of date. He argued that Pakistans economy is on a sharp upswing and that relations with Washington are stronger today than at any other time since the covert American commando raid that killed al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden in his Pakistani hideout six years ago.

There are some perceptions which are not fully up to speed with the new reality of Pakistan, a reality that has changed only very recently, Mr. Chaudhry told editors and reporters of The Washington Times. We have reversed the tide of terrorism, which had come down heavy on us.

Having just arrived in Washington in March, Mr. Chaudhry took care to neither openly praise nor criticize the Trump administrations foreign policy. As an honored guest of the U.S., he is eager to deal with the man whom American voters chose as their president, he said.

At the same time, he said Pakistan was a strong supporter of the global Paris climate accord. President Trump withdrew the U.S. from the agreement last week.

There are issues on which Pakistan has its own positions regardless of what the U.S. position is, said Mr. Chaudhry, noting that Pakistan is at risk of flooding as Himalayan glaciers melt. We supported the Paris talks. We committed to it.

On another front, the ambassador went to lengths to credit China just as much as Washington for helping spur remarkable economic progress. Pakistans economy is on pace to grow at an annual 6 percent rate next year, and predictions say it could emerge among the worlds top 20 by 2030 a dramatic rise from its current rank in the 40s.

The stock market in the predominantly Muslim nation of roughly 200 million people is booming, said Mr. Chaudhry.

The biggest foreign investment some $60 billion in recent years is from Beijing, which sees Pakistan as a key conduit for development in Chinas mainly Muslim western region, he said. China has poured money into energy projects aimed at easing Pakistans electricity shortages.

But the boldest investment is the development of a major deep-sea port in Gwadar, designed to open Pakistans southern coastline to trade routes in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean, a critical link in Chinese President Xi Jinpings One Belt One Road growth strategy for wider Asia and beyond.

Moment of stability

The Chinese investments have coincided with a rare moment of political stability in Pakistan, after the nations first-ever successful transition from one democratically elected government to another in 2013.

The transition of power, which brought back former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, followed decades of military coups, assassinations and other upheaval, including massive anti-corruption demonstrations that marred the nations 66-year history.

Over the past decade, the instability was spiked by a bloody campaign of suicide bombings and other attacks by al Qaeda and other jihadi groups on civilian and government targets. But an aggressive counterterrorism campaign launched by the Sharif government in the northwest Federally Administered Tribal Areas has sharply reduced such violence, Mr. Chaudhry said.

The number of terrorist incidents, which used to be very high, up to 150 terrorist incidents per month on the average right up to 2014, is today down to single digits, the ambassador said. That has sent a very positive wave all across the country.

Mr. Chaudhry said hopes are high that foreign investment will grow amid prospects for another smooth transition after elections next year.

Pakistans improving economic picture means that the Koreans, the Turks, the European and corporate America are also coming in, with energy plants being built along the nations southern coastline. The next phase for us is to build a series of industrial zones, he said. We are expecting and attracting investments, and many of the European countries are particularly keen.

So with our labor, the Chinese want to bring in capital, and if the technology can come in from the West, I think it would be an ideal combination for everybody, the ambassador said.

The U.S. has sent roughly $2 billion a year in aid to Pakistan in the past two decades. The majority of the money was aimed at supporting the Pakistani military. But Mr. Chaudhry said corporate America is beginning to sense opportunities.

I think they are able to see what, perhaps, you and I are not able to see, he said.

General Electric Co. recently won a project bid to generate 3,600 megawatts of electricity in Pakistan, and Exxon Mobil Corp. has put together a consortium to spend roughly $800 million to build a liquefied natural gas terminal and gasifying plant near the new southern seaport.

[Its] why Procter and Gamble is there, why PepsiCo is there, why many companies are going there, Mr. Chaudhry said. Theyre not going because they want to put their money at risk; they are going there because they can see that there is some money to be made.

The trouble next door

But the ambassador stressed that all of Pakistans regional and economic ambitions could be derailed if the situation continues to deteriorate in neighboring Afghanistan, where the number of attacks by extremists, including the Islamic State, is on the rise.

On Wednesday, a massive truck bomb rocked the heavily fortified diplomatic quarter of Kabul, killing 90 people and underscoring the challenge facing Afghan leaders and American and Pakistani officials seeking to stabilize the war-torn country, Mr. Chaudhry said.

How does the United States want to deal with their huge investment in Afghanistan, both militarily and economically? We are waiting for it, the ambassador said. He was referring to a highly anticipated shift in U.S. strategy that the Trump administration has said will be announced in the coming weeks.

We think that the United States also wants to stabilize Afghanistan, he said. Why? Because you have invested hugely in blood and in treasure for the last 15 to 16 years [there].

One plan reportedly being circulated through the White House and the Pentagon calls for up to 5,000 more U.S. troops, with a matching commitment from NATO, which could bring to roughly 15,000 the total number of foreign troops in Afghanistan.

Mr. Chaudhry did not take an explicit position on a proposed troop increase but said any use of military force should be tied to a push for a political solution to the conflict in Afghanistan. Such a push, he said, should include the pursuit of a peace process with the Taliban.

The jihadi insurgent group, which once harbored al Qaeda and bin Laden in Afghanistan, has extended its grip on territory since U.S. forces ended their combat mission in Afghanistan in 2014.

A modest surge of American forces now, said Mr. Chaudhry, might pressure the Taliban to embrace peace talks with the U.S.-backed government in Kabul that have stalled for years. Once [the Taliban] are weakened, they will come to the table, the ambassador predicted, but he said the Afghan government should lead the peace process.

Pakistans proximity to the situation is delicate. Despite its internal success against jihadi groups over the past three years, Islamabad faces accusations that its intelligence services are clandestinely backing certain extremist groups inside Afghanistan.

Pakistan also harbors millions of Afghan refugees. The ambassador said Islamabad hopes they will be allowed to return home soon.

Afghan intelligence officials claimed that one that of those groups, the Haqqani network, was responsible for the attack in Kabul last week.

Mr. Chaudhry vehemently rejected the accusation during his interview with The Times. Pakistan has absolutely nothing to do with the Haqqanis and the Taliban, he said. They do not represent the views of my people and we have squeezed the space on them in Pakistan.

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Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry, Pakistan's ambassador, awaits Trump's ... - Washington Times

Is the war in Afghanistan "unwinnable"? – Home | The Sunday … – CBC.ca

While world attention shifted to two terrorist incidents in the centre of London on Saturday, June 3, citizens of another capital were coming to grips with more terror.

At least 90 people were killedWednesday, May 31 when a bomb exploded outside the German embassy in Kabul. More than 400 were injured.

The blast was just the latest in a series of deadly attacks in Afghanistan's capital over the past year. In March, gunmen dressed as medics shot more than 50 people at a hospital. In January, 33 people were killed and more than 70 wounded near the new parliament building.

Afghan residents wounded in a car bomb attack receive treatment at a hospital in Kabul on May 31, 2017. (WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images)

This week's carnage once again shines an international spotlight on the on-going trauma of Afghanistan. After 16 years of foreign intervention, the country remains plagued by war, corruption, lawlessness and grinding poverty. Some estimate that the Taliban controls more territory nowthan it did before the NATO mission began. Afghanistan remains a haven for more than a dozen recognized terrorist groups,which undoubtedly have tentacles into the West.

The cost to the U.S. alone has been more than 800 billion dollars; 2,000 Americans have been killed. Canada's Afghan war ended in March of 2014. 158 soldiers were killed, and more than 2,000 were injured.

The United States is now considering sending as many as 5,000 more troops, to help fight the longest war in its history.

But will an infusion of troops make a difference? And what would victory in Afghanistan look like?

Michael talks to Paul Rogers,professor of peace studies at Bradford University, and International Security Advisorfor openDemocracy. His most recent book is "Irregular War: ISIS and the New Threat From the Margins."

Click 'listen' above to hear the interview.

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Is the war in Afghanistan "unwinnable"? - Home | The Sunday ... - CBC.ca

West Indies Clinch T20 Series Against Afghanistan – TOLOnews

West Indies won the second of three T20 matches in the series, ensuring them a win against visiting Afghanistan.

West Indies clinched the three-match T20 series against Afghanistan on Saturday with a 29-run victory in St Kitts.

The win, on the back of Friday's six-wicket win at Basseterre, means West Indies now hold a 2-0 lead in the three-match series.

In a game reduced to 15 overs due to rain, West Indies totaled 112-3 after winning the toss.

Skye News Sport reported Afghanistan slumped to 19-3 in pursuit of a revised target of 123 and they were well short on 93 when top scorer Karim Janat was the last man out for 20, with nine balls remaining.

The third and final match in the series takes place at the same venue at Warner Park on Monday.

This match will offer Afghanistan a chance to re-strategize and prepare for the One-Day International series against West Indies that will follow.

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West Indies Clinch T20 Series Against Afghanistan - TOLOnews

Is Pakistan Pulling China into Afghanistan? – The American Interest

Senior U.S. intelligence officials are warning thatthe India-Pakistan rivalry could pullChina into Afghanistan.First Posthas the highlights:

Pakistan is concerned about international isolation and sees its position through the prism of Indias rising status, including New Delhis expanded foreign outreach and deepening ties to the US, said National Intelligence Director Dan Coats

Pakistan will likely turn to China to offset its isolation, empowering a relationship that will help Beijing to project influence in the Indian Ocean, the Dawn quoted Coats as saying. []

Pakistan desires for Afghanistan some of the same things we want: a safe, secure, stable Afghanistan. One addition there is no heavy Indian influence in Afghanistan, said Defence Intelligence Director Lt General Vincent Stewart.

They view all of the challenges through the lens of an Indian threat to Pakistan. So they hold in reserve terrorist organisations so that if Afghanistan leans towards India, they will no longer be supportive of an idea of a stable and secure Afghanistan that could undermine Pakistans interests, the General said.

The basic geopolitical dynamics here are hardly new: Pakistan has long worried about Indias influence in Kabul, and not without reason. William Dalrymples2013 essayon the three countries deadly triangle lays outa fuller picture. China is the freshingredient, however, and its role is going to be closely watched by an Indian leadership already wary of its growing involvement in South Asia.

As the United States ponders sending an additional 5,000 troops to the countrya number that increasingly seems perfectly calibrated to do very little to tip the balance decisivelythe situation on the ground could be getting messier still.

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Is Pakistan Pulling China into Afghanistan? - The American Interest