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#1
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He’s now home after his second tour over there!
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#2
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Really glad to hear that John. Happy for both of you. Mine goes in 2011 but as part of the new, gentler, mission.
Clive
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Those who live by the sword will be shot by those of us who have progressed. - M38A1, 67-07800, ex LETE |
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#3
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The war in Afghanistan has claimed another Canadian, with the 154th soldier killed in combat Saturday.
Cpl. Steve Martin, from 3rd Battalion, Royal 22e Regiment, was killed Saturday 12:30 p.m. local time by a bomb detonated while he was on patrol in the Panjwaii district of Kandahar Province. Martin was serving with 1st Battalion, Royal 22e Regiment Battle Group, based at CFB Valcartier, Que. "Our thoughts are with the families and friends of our fallen soldier during this difficult time," said the department of national defence in a statement. "We will not forget the sacrifice of this soldier as we continue to bring security and hope to the people of Kandahar Province." Prime Minister Stephen Harper also expressed his condolences at Canada's latest war casualty. "Corporal Martin was a brave Canadian who made the ultimate sacrifice while proudly serving his country," he said in a statement. "Thanks to Canadian Forces members like him, we continue to make real progress in Afghanistan, rebuilding the country and contributing to the peace and security of its people. "We will never forget Corporal Martin's bravery and his sacrifice to make life better for others." Martin's death pushed the NATO mission's overall death toll to 700 this year alone. ![]() ![]()
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#4
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The new Herc's have started to arrive and have began their service in Afghanistan,..
Here are the new Herc's spec's.. Some difference from when I used to fly around in them back in the late '60's and early '70's.. Technical Specifications Aircraft Description The CC-130J Hercules is four-engine turboprop tactical transport aircraft with a rear cargo ramp, rugged landing gear, good short-field performance and high ground clearance for engines and propellers. It is used for troop transport, tactical airlift (both palletized and vehicular cargo) and aircrew training and qualification. It is designed to operate from rudimental airstrips in an active theatre of operations. The CC-130J has the same look as its predecessors, but in fact is a greatly improved airplane. The new "Hercs" fly faster, higher, and farther, carrying heavier loads while burning less fuel. They deliver cutting edge technology to provide the Canadian Forces with a cost-effective, operationally-proven tactical airlift capability. Length 112 ft 9 in. / 34.37 m Height 38 ft 9 in. / 11.81 m Wingspan 132 ft 7 in. / 40.38 m Horizontal tail span 52 ft 8 in. / 16.05 m Power Plant Four Rolls-Royce AE2100D3 4,591 SHP (shaft horsepower) turboprop engines; Dowty R391, 6-blade propellers (all composite) Maximum take-off weight (MTOW) 164,000 lb / 74,389 kg Maximum payload 48,000 lb / 21,772 kg Maximum cruise speed 355 KTAS / 660 km / hr Landing/take-off ground roll (typical assault mission) 1,500 ft / 457 m Payload at 500 n. mi /926 km 47,000 lb / 21,319 kg Maximum range without tanks 3,700 nautical miles / 6,852 km Cargo compartment length 55 feet (15 feet longer than the C-130J-Short) Crew Minimum 2 pilots and 1 load master Passengers 128 Combat paratroops 92 Year procured Delivery began in 2010 Quantity in CF 17 to be delivered Location 8 Wing Trenton, Ont. Manufacturer Lockheed Martin Corporation
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
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#5
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Department of National Defence 5 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group
5 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group Jan 18, 2011 13:05 ET Death of Soldier at CFB Valcartier CFB VALCARTIER, QUÉBEC--(Marketwire - Jan. 18, 2011) - A soldier died at approximately 10:00 hrs Monday morning after falling from the roof of a building at CFB Valcartier. Corporal Jean-Michel Déziel, a member of the Headquarters and Signals Squadron, was in the process of installing a telecommunications antenna when the incident occurred. The soldier was immediately evacuated to the Laval Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. "It is with great sadness that we learned of the death of Corporal Déziel this morning. I would like to express my sincere condolences to his family, those close to him, and to his colleagues," said Colonel Jean-Marc Lanthier, the Commander of the 5th Canadian Mechanized Brigade. "This young soldier who served a tour in Afghanistan had a resoundingly promising career ahead of him in the Canadian Forces. His unexpected and premature death represents a profound loss to our organization." The incident is under investigation by the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service. As a result, no further details will be released in connection with the circumstances surrounding the fatality at this time. Corporal Jean-Michel Déziel had served with the Canadian Forces since October 2006. A signals operator, he served a tour in Afghanistan in 2009. One of the key roles of the soldiers of the Headquarters and Signals Squadron, an integral unit of the 5th Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group, is to provide communications links between command elements and operational forces. For more information, please contact 5th Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group Lieutenant Dennis Noel Public Affairs Officer 418-844-5000. Local 4688 418-260-3082 (FAX) Click here to see all recent news from this company
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
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#6
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Canadian soldier, 24, killed in Afghanistan
![]() ![]() The Canadian Press Date: Sunday Mar. 27, 2011 10:42 PM ET KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Another Canadian soldier has been killed in Afghanistan. Cpl. Yannick Scherrer was on a foot patrol Sunday near Nakhonay, southwest of Kandahar city, when he was killed by an improvised explosive device. The 24-year-old Montreal native was on his first tour in the country. It's the first Canadian death in Afghanistan since Dec. 18, when Cpl. Steve Martin died from an IED during a foot patrol. The latest death brings to 155 the total number of Canadian military members who have died as part of the Afghan mission since it began in 2002. http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopStories...killed-110327/ |
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#7
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Soldier dies in non-combat incident in Afghanistan
CTV.ca News Staff Date: Sat. May. 28 2011 8:30 AM ET A Canadian soldier was found dead in Afghanistan on Friday, following what military officials are calling a "non-hostile" incident. Bombardier Karl Manning, 31, was discovered by fellow soldiers at a military outpost in the former Taliban sanctuary of Zangabad. Brig.-Gen. Dean Milner announced the death from Kandahar Airfield on Saturday. While little detail on Manning's death was released, Milner confirmed that it was not accidental. "While an investigation is still ongoing to establish the circumstances surrounding his death, foul play and enemy action have been ruled out," Milner announced. Manning, a native of Chicoutimi, Que., was an artillery solider and radar operator who had spent most of his tour of duty posted at a remote base in Panjwaii district. Manning became the 156th Canadian to die during the mission in Afghanistan and the second death of 2011. Cpl. Yannick Scherrer, 24, was killed by an improvised explosive device while on a foot patrol southwest of Kandahar city on March 27. A Canadian flag flew at full staff in Kandahar Airfield on Saturday as Milner, Canada's top soldier in Afghanistan, described the circumstances behind Manning's death as a "non-hostile," "non-accident" incident. "His professionalism and dedication were admired by all," Milner said in a brief statement. The flag was lowered to half staff following the announcement, in contrast to other times when flags were lowered the moment headquarters learned of a death. If ruled a suicide, Manning would be the fourth soldier connected to the Afghan mission to have died by their own hands while posted overseas. Maj. Michelle Mendes, an intelligence officer, was found dead in April 2009, shortly after being posted at Kandahar Airfield. Another officer posted to NATO headquarters in Kabul also committed suicide, as did a corporal at Camp Mirage in Dubai. Following Mendes' death, the Canadian military launched a campaign to improve support for soldiers suffering from mental illness and post-traumatic stress disorder. There has also been a recent overhaul of the military's suicide prevention program, while a recent study concluded the Forces could do more to reduce workplace and career stress. Recent figures from the military's health group suggest 16 uniformed members took their lives in 2009 -- double the number reported in 2006, the first year of Canada's current Afghanistan mission. Between 2005 and 2009, 50 men and five women in uniform have taken their own life. ![]() ![]() With files from The Canadian Press http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopStories...nistan-110528/ |
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#8
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A Canadian soldier was found dead Saturday morning in Afghanistan in the southern province of Kandahar, and the Department of National Defence attributed his death to "non-combat-related wounds."
"One Canadian Forces member was found dead from non-combat related wounds at approximately 6:00 a.m. local Kandahar time on 25 June 2011 at a coalition forward operating base in Kandahar City," the Department said in a statement. The soldier's identity has not yet been made public at the request of the family. The soldier is the 157th Canadian to die in combat in Afghanistan since 2002. Canadian combat troops have already started returning from Afghanistan, and will all be home this year. At the same time, Ottawa is planning to send 950 military instructors to train Afghan soldiers.
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
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#9
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Memorial to fallen Canadian soldiers buried at front line Afghan base
The Canadian PressBy Murray Brewster, The Canadian Press | The Canadian Press – Wed, 8 Jun, 2011 MA'SUM GHAR, Afghanistan - A symbol of Canadian blood and sacrifice, etched into the crusted hillside of a forward operating base in Kandahar for nearly four-and-a-half years, is being buried and left behind in Afghanistan as the end of Canada's combat mission draws ever nearer. The Maple Leaf rock mural at Ma'sum Ghar started as a tribute to five soldiers killed during the landmark battle of Pashmul, known as Operation Medusa. But throughout the years, the memorial has grown as more and more marker stones were placed to honour additional casualties. A total of 59 stones, representing 72 soldiers who operated out of Ma'sum Ghar, were buried in a trench at the base of the memorial Wednesday in a moving sunset ceremony staged by members of the Royal 22e Regiment battle group. Capt. Joshua Robbins, the commander of 1 Platoon, Para Company, knew three of the soldiers and the family of a fourth. "It's just evidence of how close our army is; how small it is," said Robbins, who is on his first tour of the war-torn country. "The degrees of separation between us are few and far between." He and other soldiers said they found it entirely appropriate to bury the memorial stones in Afghanistan, rather than bring them back to Canada. As each stone was carried to the trench, where the sides were draped in black cloth, the names of the dead soldiers were read out. Some of the markers were personalized with drawings and even tiny regimental and Canadian flags. A few of them had plates drilled into the rock, but the names had been scorched or bleached off by the brutal Afghan sun. "They represent Canada for us," Maj. Graham Thompson, the task force chaplain, said of the stones. "They represent great Canadians for us. They represent honour and honourable service for us." After the moving, unusual ceremony, soldiers — some of them teary-eyed — filed past the trench and tossed poppies and handfuls of Afghan sand atop the markers. The U.S. is about to take over the base, which has been a linchpin in the Canadian army's war in western Kandahar. The memorial was originally built in the winter of 2007 by Americans and South Africans whose bomb-sniffing dogs accompanied troops into the field. Van Thames, of AM-K9 Protection said at the time that he built the tribute in his spare time as a way to say thank you to the soldiers of the 1st Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment, who kept him and his team safe and comfortable. Although touched, some troops were upset that it took someone other than a Canadian to think of the gesture, which has become iconic for anyone who has spent any amount of time in either Panjwaii or Zhari districts, west of the provincial capital. "I had one guy that come up and first of all I thought he was mad with me," Thames said when the memorial was built. "I said, 'What's wrong? What did I do wrong?' He said: 'I'm mad 'cause it took an American to think about it and do it instead of one of us doing it." Thames and his fellow dog handlers, Hollis Crawford and Rogelio Meza, laid out all of the rocks and then proceeded to paint them red and white before they were joined by two South African colleagues to finish the job. It is hard to understate the historic significance of Ma'sum Ghar, an ugly, J-shaped mountain that seems to thunder unexpectedly from the desert floor and overshadow the town of Bazaar-e-Panjwaii. Early in the war, its slopes were soaked in Canadian blood. It was the launching point for Operation Medusa, the first NATO-led offensive in Afghanistan. Most Canadian combat operations throughout the war have been staged out here. The army's contingent of Leopard 2A6M battle tanks have called it home — one that has sustained frequent pounding by Taliban rockets. As a heavily fortified position, the base was a beacon of safety for the untold number of patrols that stepped off — or launched — from its gates into the surrounding nest of insurgent vipers. Lt.-Col. Michael Wright, who was a major in August 2006, won the Medal of Military Valour, along with three of his men, when he fought to hold on to Ma'sum Ghar after the Taliban had encircled it. Insurgents recognized the value of its bluffs soon after Canadians moved into Panjwaii in force that summer. Wright, in an interview with The Canadian Press, said he recalled watching from nearby Patrol Base Wilson as firefights increased and tracers flew around the mountain at night. The Taliban had been using cracks and folds of Ma'sum Ghar to mortar Canadian positions and Wright was told to take and hold the area on Aug. 19, 2006 with a platoon of soldiers. The troops linked up with Afghan police who had been holding the nearby district centre. "I could hear some machine gun fire to the south," Wright recalled. "I sat down to do some confirmatory orders and I heard a pop and saw a (rocket-propelled grenade). It landed about eight feet away, but luckily it didn't explode or things would have been very different." The shot had come from a position that was supposed to have been manned by Afghan police, but had been quietly overrun. "It was very difficult to figure out where the enemy was coming from," said Wright. "The fact they were coming from the south was not what we were expecting at all." Waves of Taliban tried to storm up the mountain and Wright's light armoured vehicle opened up with its 25-millimetre chain gun. Soon other LAVs were firing both to the south and east and an American Predator drone joined in with a few well-placed Hellfire missiles. Wright's platoon hung on, suffered no casualties, but eventually withdrew. A couple of weeks later, as the first act of Operation Medusa, the Canadians took the hill and have never left — until now. Although it will remain a Canadian base for a few weeks, Wednesday's ceremony signals the beginning of the end. The U.S. has already moved in and greatly expanded the rugged outpost.
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
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#10
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Another man down in Kandahar. Enemy action ruled out. No name released until further notice by the family. This morning's paper suggested he was at a camp where Special Forces operate. Most of the guys on those camps are not necessarily SF, but screened augmentees doing a wide variety of support functions. MTF.
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Terry Warner - 74-????? M151A2 - 70-08876 M38A1 - 53-71233 M100CDN trailer Beware! The Green Disease walks among us! |
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