Canada takes charge north of Kandahar city
Taliban attacks intensifying in district
Last Updated: Tuesday, December 1, 2009 | 10:17 PM ET
CBC News
Related
In depth: Afghanistan
- Crossroads Afghanistan
- 2009 presidential election coverage
- Country profile
- Afghanistan: Beset by war, beleaguered by poverty
- Quick facts: Afghanistan at a glance
- A narrated Google Earth tour
The military mission
- Overview: Canada's forces in Afghanistan
- One bomb, many lives
- Canadian Press interactive on a Dec. 30, 2009 IED blast that killed four Canadian soldiers and a journalist.
- Database: Canada's casualties
- Analysis: Who's paying the ultimate price?
- Joint operations
- The pros and cons of teaming up with the U.S.
Background
Photos
- On the front line
- Photos from operations inside Afghanistan
- Soldiers and civilians in Afghanistan
External links
A Canadian soldier stands on alert at a roadside checkpoint in Arghandab district. (Allauddin Khan/Associated Press) NATO commanders in Afghanistan have put Canada in charge of a district north of Kandahar city that has seen heavy fighting in the past two years.
Brig.-Gen. Frederick Hodges, director of operations for NATO's southern command, said Canada would take control of the Arghandab district.
The district was Canada's responsibility until August this year, when Canadian forces handed over its duties to the U.S. as part of a scaling back of military operations to Kandahar city and a few turbulent outlying regions.
It's not clear what impact the renewed duties in Arghandab will mean for Canada's forces, most of whom are currently stationed in and around Kandahar city.
The fertile Arghandab region has seen an increase in fighting as Taliban-led militants have made efforts to move into the area.
3 soldiers killed in IED blast
Afghan troops, under the guidance of Canadian forces, launched an offensive in June of last year to counter Taliban gains, but attacks have continued.
In March of this year three Canadian soldiers were killed in the region after a roadside bomb exploded near their armoured vehicle.
Warrant Officer Dennis Raymond Brown, Cpl. Dany Fortin and Cpl. Kenneth O'Quinn were sent into the area in response to a call by the Afghan National Police to dispose of an improvised explosive device. They were able to defuse the bomb and were returning to base when they were struck by another IED.
Eight American soldiers and an interpreter were also killed in separate IED attacks in the district on the same day in October of this year.
The shift in responsibility for Canada comes as U.S. President Barack Obama is set to announce a new strategy in Afghanistan on Tuesday evening. He is expected to commit thousands of American troops to the NATO effort to secure the southern part of the country.
More U.S. troops expected
Hodges said Task Force Kandahar will have an additional American battalion and an Afghan National Army unit by the new year. He said the changes would come regardless of whether Obama decides to deploy additional troops.
NATO spokesperson James Appathurai said a number of countries, such as Slovakia and Italy, have announced increases in recent weeks, and on Monday British Prime Minister Gordon Brown committed 500 more troops to the region.
(CBC) NATO is planning to use Obama's announcement to spur other countries to make further troop commitments, Appathurai said.
"What we want to see from NATO headquarters is for all of the allies to see what more they can do," he said.
Appathurai added that Canada's performance in Afghanistan is considered "A-1" by the NATO alliance.
There are 2,800 Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan, primarily in Kandahar province. The government has said all Canadian troops will be withdrawn in 2011.
With files from the Canadian PressShare Tools
Liveblog: Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks to the National Fish and Wildlife Conservation Congress by Kady O'Malley May. 30, 2012 6:10 PM Event sponsored by Canadian and American conservation groups
Top News Headlines
- Troubled Air Canada plane dumped tonnes of fuel
- An Air Canada passenger jet that was forced to make an emergency landing in Toronto likely dumped many tonnes of fuel over Lake Ontario before the aircraft touched down safely, according to an aviation expert. more »
- Photos show where abducted Winnipeg kids were kept
- CBC News has obtained photos showing the inside of the home where Abby and Dominic Maryk were held in Guadalajara, Mexico, after they went missing nearly four years ago. more »
- 'Gay-straight alliance' name forces debate in Ontario

- Ontario politicians are debating legislation on bullying in schools, while the province's Catholic bishops object to using the name "gay-straight alliance." more »
- RCMP kill double-homicide suspect in B.C.
- The suspect in a Metro Vancouver manhunt has died in hospital after being shot in a standoff with police in Maple Ridge. more »
Latest Politics News Headlines
- 'Oilsands fever' seen as Canada's Dutch Disease
- On the eve of NDP Leader Tom Mulcair's visit to Alberta's oilsands, two new reports offer competing evidence about his claim that Canada's economy suffers from a high dollar driven by the resource sector. more »
- Canadian wine may flow more freely if MPs get their way
- A proposal by a B.C. backbencher to allow Canadians to buy wine outside their province is being rushed through the House after a squabble over which party most supports local wineries. The bill could become law as early as this summer. more »
- Calgary MP Lee Richardson quits for a job with Redford
- Conservative MP Lee Richardson announced Wednesday that he's stepping down as the representative for Calgary Centre and taking a job with Alberta's premier Alison Redford. more »
- Wednesdays with @Kady replay: Mulcair and 'oilsands fever'
- On Wednesdays, CBCNews.ca's Politics blogger convenes a "people's caucus" to discuss and debate the issues of the week. Today: Mulcair heads to the oilsands, plus your thoughts on that severed foot mailed to Tory headquarters more »
The National
The House
- Qc students open the door to compromise May. 30, 2012 4:18 PM This week on The House, Evan Solomon explores the ongoing student protests in Quebec. The conflict that began as a disagreement between certain student associations and the provincial government over tuition hikes seems to have morphed into something larger. Evan talks to Leo Bureau-Blouin, the president of Quebec's College Student Federation, about the ongoing dispute. Then, Quebec's Finance Minister Raymond Bachand talks about what it will take to resolve the conflict, and if an election is the only solution.
- Body parts suspect may have filmed killing
- Donald Trump insists Obama was born in Kenya
- Police find 2nd body part after foot mailed to Tory HQ
- RCMP kill double-homicide suspect in Maple Ridge, B.C.
- B.C. seniors devastated as homes face bulldozer
- Alberta couple, child found dead in Saskatchewan ditch
- Troubled Air Canada plane dumped tonnes of fuel
- Photos show where abducted Winnipeg kids were kept
- 'Gay-straight alliance' name forces debate in Ontario

