Scott Gilmore: A mass rescue on that scale has been done before, and we owe it to those who believed and trusted us to do it again
Tag Archives: Kandahar
As Kandahar finds peace, Canada finds its own kind of vindication
Adnan R. Khan returns to Afghanistan’s formerly fraught southern region, where lessons from Canada’s failed mission more than a decade ago are inspiring America’s next steps
What good did we do?
The National Post obtains an audit of Canadian foreign aid in Afghanistan that does not entirely flatter this country’s efforts.
Another year’s federal politics in 12 chapters
Stages in the legislative process that make a bill law in the Canadian Parliament; ministers (not including the Prime Minister) on cabinet’s powerful Priorities and Planning committee; former political figures (not including sovereigns or social activists) memorialized in bronze around Parliament Hill—twelve is the number in each of these interesting categories. But for our purposes here, in this second annual stocktaking of the year just ending, it’s the 12 calendar months that matter. Pick just one political story for each page, and 2011’s kaleidoscope might just take a turn from jumbled to intelligible.
A series of fortunate events on 9/11
From 2011: Without 9/11, Jody Mitic wouldn’t have lost his legs in a blast, met the love of his life and had his daughter
Leaving hope behind in Kandahar
In the embattled region, a legacy of respect, but no peace
The Commons: Two words to say so much
Would a Taliban prisoner by any other name seem just as evil?
The early reviews
The Canadian Press reviews some of what was disclosed in yesterday’s document release.
Afghanistan: Progress reports, in more than name
We have paid fairly constant attention to the quarterly Afghanistan progress reports the federal government has submitted since special advisor John Manley recommended greater transparency (along with other things) in 2008. The tale has been pretty consistent, and bleak: progress against limited, quantifiable goals on specific projects, in a general context of worsening violence and despair. It wouldn’t have been too unfair to summarize most of these reports as, “Construction continues on schedule, but the locals who haven’t died yet are terrified that they’ll be next.”
Covering Afghanistan: logistics and ethics
Michael Petrou on reporting from Kandahar