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Pte. Mark Anthony Graham 1 RCR - 04 Sept 06

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Friendly fire kills Canadian soldier
Donald McArthur, CanWest News Service
Published: Monday, September 04, 2006

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- A Canadian soldier was killed and dozens wounded, five seriously, in a friendly fire incident Monday morning near the front lines of a battle where four Canadian soldiers were killed and several wounded the day before.

Stretcher after stretcher ferried the wounded into the beleaguered hospital at Kandahar Air Field as Brigadier General David Fraser and a military chaplain rushed to the grim scene to offer their support. Some soldiers limped gingerly into the hospital under their own power as Operation Medusa, the coalition offensive against stubborn Taliban insurgents clustered in villages west of here, began its third day.

"An aircraft flying in support of ISAF operations accidentally engaged a Canadian position in Panjwaii at approximately 5:30 this morning, killing one soldier and wounding a number of others," said Brig.-Gen. Fraser, the Canadian commander of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in southern Afghanistan.

"An investigation has been ordered into this event and while this event is tragic, operation Medusa and the Canadians continue to operate in the Panjwaii district in support of Afghan government efforts to rid the area of Taliban."

Five of the wounded soldiers were injured seriously and will be transported from Kandahar to other hospitals. The other soldiers are expected to return to duty shortly. The name of the deceased soldier has not been released. Canadian military officials have asked that the media not report the precise number of casualties for security reasons related to the ongoing offensive.

Warrant Officer Richard Francis Nolan and Warrant Officer Frank Robert Mellish, based in Petawawa with the first battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment, were killed Sunday as insurgents disabled multiple Canadian vehicles with rocket propelled grenades. Two other Canadian soldiers were also killed in fierce fighting Sunday but their names have not been released at their the request of their families.

The Canadian soldiers wounded Monday were not bombed but came under fire from an airplane, believed to be an American Warthog, which is armed with rockets and high-powered machine guns. Four Canadian soldiers were killed in a friendly fire incident in April 2002 when they were bombed by an American F-16 fighter jet while they were conducting training operations.

"The soldiers out there understand the risk and they manage the risk everyday...They understand sometime things happen, " said Brig.-Gen. Fraser. "The investigation, they know,   will get to the bottom of this but their training, their dedication, the passion for what they're doing over here for a worthwhile cause will see them through these difficult times."

Brig.-Gen. Fraser said the wounded soldiers he visited Monday in hospital, as well as the families of fallen soldiers he met in a memorial service in Edmonton last week, remain committed to the mission here to destroy a stubborn Taliban insurgency and improve the lives of ordinary Afghans.

"I spoke to a lot of families out there who I wrote letters to and they all came up to me and said 'we believe in your mission, we believe in you, our son or daughter was committed to this' and I don't see any change in those families," he said.

"The soldiers themselves are dedicated and passionate and professional about this mission and their determination has not waned one iota since we started this and we're going to see it right to the end."

Monday's casualties occurred near the same Taliban stronghold where four Canadian soldiers were killed and ten injured in pitched fighting on August 3. Dozens of Canadian soldiers have been wounded in the volatile area over the past four months and at least 11 have now been killed there. The area has symbolic significance to the Taliban. It is militarily defensible with tunnels, maze-like fences and mud-walled compounds and is used by insurgents as a staging ground for deadly ambushes and terror attacks in Kandahar City.

Thirty-two Canadian soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since Canada joined the war on terror here in 2002 and 24 of those have fallen since operations moved to the volatile south in February. Glyn Berry, a diplomat, was killed in a suicide strike in Kandahar in January.

More than 200 militants have been killed, 80 suspected insurgents have been captured and about 180 have fled the fighting since it began Saturday, according to NATO. Brig.-Gen. Fraser stressed Canadian soldiers were not only winning the fight on the battlefield but also the fight for the hearts and minds of impoverished Afghans tired of the destruction and intimidation of Taliban insurgents. He said Afghans were supporting coalition forces and that aid workers were already on the ground planning reconstruction projects in areas secured by coalition forces over the weekend.

"It's all happening out there but everywhere we go there's going to be a fight to get in there but, while we're in there, the people are glad to see us, the people are coming in behind us and supporting their Afghan security forces and we're making a difference," he said.

"The Canadian forces and the rest of the armed forces of the world and the international community wouldn't be here if it wasn't dangerous. It is a dangerous place. The Taliban only offer one thing -- destruction. What the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the international community offers is construction. Whatever we build, if the Taliban want to destroy it, we will rebuild it, but we also offer the Taliban choices and that's a lot more than they offer their people."
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/story.html?id=bb2964ed-a5c3-4ccc-98d0-df1ebc2fea9d

Another bad news day.
 
Damn, on top of everything else we have this.  Go bravely soldier, you stood up for us and we thank you for the sacrifice.  The thoughts and prayers of the MacQueen family go with you and yours.  RIP  :salute:
 
Five killed, and an unknown number injured, is a high cost indeed.

Operation Medusa is achieving its stated goals, but at a cost.  By forcing the Taliban insurgents to battle, and inflicting a huge  number of casualties on them, we are, slowly, starting to bring desperately needed stability to the region.

RIP, soldiers, knowing you have done well.  My condolences to their families and friends, I hope that they take solace in the fact that they died doing their duty.

To the injured, I pray you all get well soon.
 
Thoughts and prayers to the fallen and the injured, and to those left behind to fight and worry. 
 
According to CTV News another soilder has gone to the great parade square in the sky.  :salute:  :cdn:

Canadian killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan
Updated Mon. Sep. 4 2006 7:47 AM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

A Canadian soldier was killed during a friendly fire mishap in Afghanistan on Monday when a NATO warplane accidentally strafed troops.

The death comes just one day after another four Canadian soldiers were killed and six wounded during a major NATO offensive in the volatile Panjwai district of southern Afghanistan.

The friendly fire mishap occurred around 5:30 a.m. when an A-10 Warthog was called in to support soldiers trying to seize a Taliban stronghold along the Arghandab River.

"Canadian troops were very close to enemy lines, air support had been called in and this A-10 Warthog came roaring in. Instead of hitting the Taliban positions, it hit the Canadians very heavily," CTV's Matt McClure reported on Newsnet from Afghanistan.

"We'd told that dozens of others were injured, including these five who are going to be evacuated. Most of the soldiers received light injuries, however, and are expected to return to duty."

The injured troops were evacuated by helicopter, including a giant twin-rotor Chinook.

"It was a scene of absolute chaos this morning at the airport near the hospital. We were there as helicopter after helicopter ferried in the wounded," McClure said.

The identity of the soldier killed in the friendly fire incident was not released.

"This has been a tough hit, but Canadians are continuing the fight and continuing with operation Medusa," Brig.-Gen. David Fraser, the Canadian in charge of NATO forces in southern Afghanistan, said in a statement released Monday.

Fraser told reporters that an investigation has been launched.

"We do have procedures, we do have communications, we do have training and tactics and techniques and procedures to mitigate the risk but we can't reduce those risks to zero,'' he said in a news conference at Kandahar Airfield.

"The Canadian forces and the rest of armed forces of the world and the international community wouldn't be here if it wasn't dangerous.''

NATO said in a statement that the incident occurred after ground troops called for air support.

"Two ISAF (NATO's International Security Assistance Force) aircraft provided the support but regrettably engaged friendly forces during a strafing run, using cannons," the statement said.

Monday's friendly fire incident was the second similar incident since Canadians began operations in Afghanistan more than four years ago.

Four soldiers were killed and eight others wounded in April 2002 when an American F-16 fighter mistakenly bombed Canadians on pre-dawn training exercise.

The recent casualties came as NATO forces launched Operation Medusa, a mission aimed at purging militants from the Taliban stronghold of the Panjwai district west of Kandahar.

Canadian troops met fierce resistance from Taliban fighters early Sunday in fighting that killed four Canadian and wounded six others.

The deaths occurred when the Canadians moved in with light armoured vehicles after NATO forces had pounded enemy positions for more than 24 hours with helicopter gunships, artillery and bombs.

Taliban insurgents put up a stiff fight, using small arms and rocket propelled grenades to defend their positions.

Two of the dead were identified as Warrant Officer Frank Mellish and Warrant Officer Richard Nolan, both of 1st Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment, based at CFB Petawawa.

The names of the other two soldiers killed have not been released at the request of their families.

Despite the casualties, NATO officials are maintaining that the offensive has been a success, estimating that 200 Taliban militants had been killed and 80 seized.

The latest fatalities came as NDP Leader Jack Layton repeated his call for ending the Afghanistan mission in February 2007.

"Young people have stepped forward to put their lives on the line, fulfilling a mission that they were asked to fulfill," Layton told reporters in Toronto.

"What we as Canadians need to do is consider whether this is indeed the right mission for Canada going forward. Our view is that it is the wrong mission."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not address the possibility of a troop withdrawal in a statement on Sunday, in which he offered his condolences to the friends and families of those killed.

"We are proud of these soldiers' contribution to bring stability and hope to the people of Afghanistan," said Harper.

"These soldiers lost their lives in the service of their country. Canada is grateful for that service, and saddened by this loss."

In total, 32 Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have been killed in Afghanistan since 2002.


BinyonForTheFallen.jpg


 
I hope the family members remember the good times with their sons, brothers, husbands, and do not forget the love and suport of the people of Canada for their loss.
I hope the wounded recover fast and get back to work quick as possible.
Keep up the good work
 
RIP to the dead solder. To the injured, a speedy recovery.  :salute:  :cdn:
 
RIP Soldier and a speedy recovery to the injured. Your sacrifice will not go in vain.
 
I hate reading about friendly fire :(
RIP fallen men and women.  :cdn:
 
LAST POST

Departed Comrades

Royal Canadian Regimental Prayer.

Almighty God; we humbly implore Thy Blessing on The Royal Canadian Regiment and all of us who serve therein.

Help us to prove worthy to accept the high ideals and traditions of the past; to honour and revere the memory of those who have gone before us; to face our responsibilities in the future, in both peace and war, with courage, justice, love, honesty, and faithfulness.

Remove all greed, hatred, selfishness, and envy from our thoughts that we may render true service to The Regiment and for Thee our God; for our fellow man; and "For Country".

May God have mercy on these brave souls. "Pro Patria"

Retired45

 
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