[quote]Canada's desert war came to an end Tuesday when soldiers of the Royal 22nd Regiment stood down and formally handed over their Kandahar battlefield to American units.
The country's legal command responsibility for the western district of Panjwaii will continue for several days.
But Brig.-Gen. Dean Milner's headquarters will be directing U.S. combat units.
Almost all Canadian troops are out of the killing fields of Kandahar, save for a handful of soldiers who will serve for a short while longer attached to American platoons.
Parliament ordered an end to the Canadian combat mission in southern Afghanistan back in 2008 and set July 2011 as the deadline.
The Conservative government has since announced that 950 soldiers and support staff will carry out a training mission in the Afghan capital until 2014.
The transfer of battle group command took place at Ma'sum Ghar, the crusted, petrified volcanic mountain soaked in Canadian blood at the onset of fighting in 2006.
The ceremony was an almost understated ending to a war that mesmerized and horrified the country in equal measure, but has now largely fallen off the public agenda.
If Kandahar was a national trauma, Ma'sum Ghar was at its epicentre.
The Van Doos battle group commander says the base is symbolic of much of the sacrifice of Canadians over the last 5½ years.
"Everywhere in battle where Canadian soldiers have sacrificed their lives, we have examples of similar places in a number of our conflicts," said Lt.-Col. Michel-Henri St-Louis. "So Ma'sum Ghar is symbolic and had been at the centre of our deployment and was witness to much of our sacrifices."
The mountain was first captured by troops in the summer of 2006 as fighting raged throughout the districts of Panjwaii and Zhari.
It was turned into camp and used as the launching point for the landmark battle Operation Medusa that fall.
The formal signing ceremony took place in the compound of Afghan National Army troops, whom Canadians have trained and mentored throughout the war.
Lt.-Col. Steve Miller, commander of the 3rd Battalion 21st U.S. Infantry Regiment, said the region he inherited is much quieter than he expected.
"We actually expected this fight to be more kinetic than it had been in the last 30 days," he said. "This area has not seen the spike [in violence] that usually occurs here during the spring following the poppy harvest."
The majority of the lull can be attributed to the Van Doos, who uncovered and seized large weapons caches over the last six months, he said. [/quote]
Source:
[url]http://news.ca.msn.com/top-stories/canada-hands-over-kandahar-battle-to-us-1[/url]
Took long enough.
About time.
I can't quite imagine what it will be like to not be at war
Not like it will last for long anyway, though
next stop iran
Yay. Now we can just loiter around for the next fifteen years as we maintain a presence and not look like we just pissed off and left them twisting in the wind.
Thanks for taking over America.
[QUOTE=Atlascore;30919058]Canada has a military?!?[/QUOTE]
i LAUGHED OUT LOUD hehe
[editline]5th July 2011[/editline]
kidding shut up
If the conservatives keep making good decisions like this maybe they'll even get my vote next time
Is it ironic that this happens a day after the 4th of July?
When I read this thread title happiness filled my heart.
It would've been awesome if the mission ended on Canada day
[QUOTE=Atlascore;30919058]Canada has a military?!?[/QUOTE]
HUEHAERUHERUAHAR
OH MAN I JUST LOVE THAT JOKE ITS SO FUCKING FUNY
[QUOTE=Atlascore;30919058]Canada has a military?!?[/QUOTE]
Not funny.
[QUOTE=Zeke129;30922811]If the conservatives keep making good decisions like this maybe they'll even get my vote next time[/QUOTE]
nooooooo
what'd they do with you zeke
[QUOTE=Zeke129;30922811]If the conservatives keep making good decisions like this maybe they'll even get my vote next time[/QUOTE]
But if they kept making good decisions they wouldn't be conservatives
"Canada's desert war"
Lmao
[QUOTE=JaegerMonster;30934460]"Canada's desert war"
Lmao[/QUOTE]
What is even the joke here
Now we wait for everyone else to leave this stupid conflict.
[QUOTE=Atlascore;30919058]Canada has a military?!?[/QUOTE]
You should be glad they do, they've helped the US Military with plenty of things. Stop making us Americans look stupid.
[QUOTE=TAU!;30935415]
You should be glad they do, they've helped the US Military with plenty of things. Stop making us Americans look stupid.[/QUOTE]
Canada has been so involved in Afghanistan (specifically the Kandahar region) over the years, [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kandahar,_Saskatchewan]we named a tiny village in Saskatchewan after it.[/url] (Actually based on British involvement but they decided to keep the name since)
[img]http://i.imgur.com/2fF3K.png[/img]
[QUOTE=Zeke129;30935025]What is even the joke here[/QUOTE]
implying that a news outlet is so ignorant that they think Afghanistan is a desert. Hint: it's not. Far from it.
Read as "Canadian missing in Afghanistan East"
I need to go to sleep
[QUOTE=JaegerMonster;30938687]implying that a news outlet is so ignorant that they think Afghanistan is a desert. Hint: it's not. Far from it.[/QUOTE]
The majority of Kandahar province is a desert.
[QUOTE=Taepodong-2;30944465]The majority of Kandahar province is a desert.[/QUOTE]
No its not???
Dirt and rocks in a small percentage of the area do not make a desert. If it was a desert it would not support the growth of poppy fields and grains
[img]http://c.photoshelter.com/img-get/I0000N_HBrHFLcP4/s/650/650/Aerial-View-Kandahar-Sebastian-Meyer-03.jpg[/img]
Jaeger is right, by the Köppen Climate Classification Kandahar is warm semi-arid which doesn't count as a desert, but rather steppe
I love this.
-Snip-
Good.
Canada Represent!
[QUOTE=Atlascore;30919058]Canada has a military?!?[/QUOTE]
don't mess with the moose
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