Plans made to keep Kandahar base until 2015: officials
Last Updated: Wednesday, December 12, 2007 | 7:37 PM ET
The Canadian Press
The Foreign Affairs Department has developed plans to keep a Canadian provincial reconstruction base in Kandahar until at least 2015, say federal officials.
The department has also started recruiting diplomatic staff to fill posts at the base for one-year assignments that stretch beyond Parliament's self-imposed February 2009 deadline for an end to the military mission.
Sources within the department told The Canadian Press the two diplomatic openings currently being filled run from the fall of next year to the fall of 2009.
The provincial reconstruction base, nestled in an old fruit canning factory in a Kandahar suburb, was set up in 2005. It functions as the headquarters for Canada's reconstruction efforts, giving development officials, the RCMP and correctional officers a secure location from which to help Afghans rebuild their shattered country.
The base, while protected by the Canadian military, is entirely separate from the combat units, located at Kandahar Airfield, NATO's main base in southern Afghanistan.
Contingency plans for a long-term Canadian diplomatic and development presence in the war-torn city were initially drawn up in the spring of 2006, not long after the Conservatives came to power and at the same time an extension to the military mission was proposed, said diplomatic sources.
The proposal apparently has so-called "off-ramps" that would allow Ottawa to withdraw, or hand over the Kandahar base to another country.
But the first opt-out date is not until 2011, the same year an international agreement to rebuild Afghanistan expires, the sources indicated.
Coincidentally, 2011 is the same year the Conservative government chose in their throne speech as an extension for Canada's military commitment.
The Foreign Affairs Department did not respond to requests for comment.
Manley looks to the future
This fall, Prime Minister Stephen Harper assembled a panel of Canadians, headed by former Liberal cabinet minister John Manley, to study Canada's future role beyond the expiry of the current mission.
Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier, appearing before the Commons foreign affairs committee Tuesday, made a distinction between the military and development efforts.
"The mandate of development and reconstruction is a commitment until 2011 … ," Bernier said, responding to a question from Bloc Quebecois defence critic Claude Bachand. "Mr. Manley's mandate just has to do with the military mission."
Liberal MP Dan McTeague, who was at the committee meeting, said his ears perked up after hearing that statement and wondered whether the Conservatives would use an extended development commitment as a pretext to keeping troops in the country.
"We all know development can't proceed without security, at least that's what they keep telling us," McTeague said Wednesday.
"This is troubling and the government needs to explain to Canadians precisely what its intentions are for the PRT [provincial reconstruction team] in Kandahar. I, like many Canadians, was under the impression Mr. Manley was looking at the whole mission.
"We've all been focused on the combat mission. Since we can't have development without security, I think the government needs to explain clearly to Canadians how long it sees our development commitment running until. Is it 2011, 2015, or some time longer?"
Later in the Tuesday hearing, Bernier emphasized that the Conservatives don't believe that Canada "should simply abandon the Afghans in 2009."
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Teen struck by lightning in Ottawa dies
- The victim of a Friday lightning strike during a storm in east Ottawa has died, CBC News has learned. more »
- Syrian children massacred by the dozens, UN says
- More than 90 people have been killed by regime forces in a district of central Syria, with the head of the UN team in the country confirming at least 32 children and 60 adults were killed in an artillery attack. more »
- Missing Winnipeg children found in Mexico, organization says
- Two Winnipeg children reported missing and possibly in Mexico have been found alive, according to unofficial reports from an agency that works to find missing people. more »
- Everest team unable to bring down Toronto woman's body
- Bad weather has hampered the recovery team that is attempting to bring down the body of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest. more »
Latest Canada News Headlines
- Missing Winnipeg children found in Mexico, organization says
- Two Winnipeg children reported missing and possibly in Mexico have been found alive, according to unofficial reports from an agency that works to find missing people. more »
- Montreal student group says Bill 78 must be priority
- Quebec's coalition of student associations says Bill 78 must be a priority if a new round of negotiations start up with the government in the ongoing tuition conflict. more »
- N.L. premier 'at odds' with Peter MacKay
- Kathy Dunderdale, the premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, tells CBC Radio's Evan Solomon she's growing increasingly 'at odds' with Conservative MP Peter MacKay. more »
- Aylmer triple stabbing leads to first-degree murder charges

- The estranged partner of a young mother who was stabbed to death along with her parents at their home in Aylmer, Que., has been charged with first-degree murder Friday. more »
The National
The Current
- What does it take to get fired at the RCMP? May. 25, 2012 5:02 PM After a senior Mountie was demoted for disgraceful conduct including sex with subordinates, exposing himself and drinking on the job, some former employees wonder what you have to do to get fired.
- Everest team unable to bring down Toronto woman's body
- Quebec tornadoes cause millions in damage
- Pope's butler arrested in Vatican leaks scandal
- Aylmer triple stabbing leads to first-degree murder charges
- Teen struck by lightning in Ottawa dies
- Woman's remains found in hockey bag on Cape Breton river
- B.C. premier unhappy with disgraced Mountie's transfer
- Everest victim's husband says family not seeking government help
- The risks and responsibilities of taking on Mt. Everest

