From CBC:
“Why Canada failed to rescue
'a hell of a lot more' Afghans, according to former generals”
The Liberal government could have
evacuated many more Afghans from the troubled region had it streamlined its
cumbersome bureaucratic process and maintained a stronger military and
diplomatic presence, former top Canadian military commanders and experts say. While
the Canadian government was able to evacuate more than 3,700 people from Kabul,
the number should have been "a hell of a lot more," said retired
major-general David Fraser, who commanded more than 2,000 NATO coalition troops
during Operation Medusa in the Afghan province of Kandahar in 2006. "The
international world was surprised by the speed at which the Taliban took over.
And [the Canadian government] applied the bureaucracy they had for normal
operations," Fraser said. Fraser,
along with retired major-generals Denis Thompson and Dean Milner are all
volunteering to help extract Afghan interpreters from Afghanistan. They are all
former task-force commanders of Afghanistan, and have blamed government
bureaucracy for gumming up the system and creating obstacles for Afghans trying
to flee the country. Those Afghans include former interpreters and support
staff as well as their families who are now at risk of Taliban arrest or worse
for having worked with the Canadian military and other organizations.
'Bureaucratic clumsiness' Earlier
this week, another retired Canadian general, former chief of the defence staff
Rick Hillier told CBC's Power & Politics that Canada had "not shone
greatly" and that the operation had been "so cluttered by
bureaucratic clumsiness, bureaucratic inefficiency, bureaucratic
paperwork." He was joined by other veterans and advocates who had
complained for weeks about Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada's
handling of the crisis, which included complicated forms for Afghans to fill
out, unrealistic and confusing application requirements and complete silence
from the department after paperwork has been submitted. Former
lieutenant-general Andrew Leslie, who is also former Liberal MP, also took the
government to task, tweeting: "Canada's poor initial response in Kabul
points to an extreme of centralized political micro-management." This
week, Canadian officials announced that evacuation operations had finished
ahead of the planned U.S. withdrawal from the country and that no more
Canadian-operated flights were planned to take people out of Kabul.
Canada urges those left in
Afghanistan to stay put and not lose hope However, Canadian citizens,
permanent residents and their families, and those seeking refuge in Canada
still remain and that it's still not known how many potential migrants to
Canada are still stuck in Afghanistan. Officials said they have received
applications representing 8,000 people and that two-thirds of those
applications have been processed. Some of those applications, said Hillier,
would have been difficult to fill out in Canada — "let alone someone in
Afghanistan where paperwork is non-existent and identity forms and background
stuff is sometimes very difficult or impossible to find."
'Nowhere near the numbers' Milner
agreed that the extra paperwork and bureaucracy meant people leaving Afghanistan
were "nowhere near the numbers that we would have liked to have." "When
you've got tight timelines, you've got to understand what to cut out," he
said. "You've got to be able to get to the cut to the chase." Instead,
Afghans with basic documentation should have just been allowed to be airlifted
to third-party locations where they could have been rigorously assessed through
the "normal Canadian bureaucratic process," Fraser said. Thompson,
who has expressed frustration with Ottawa's handling of the evacuation, told
CBC News on Friday that at this stage, with the government airlift operation
over, he didn't feel it prudent to criticize Ottawa for its response. He
said his focus was on the future and securing the passage of as many Afghans as
possible. Still, days earlier, he
told CBC News Network about Afghans waiting outside the perimeter of the Hamid
Karzai International Airport in Kabul and of a family, having dodged Taliban
checkpoints, being denied access even though they had documentation and
Canadian passports. He said he also heard from families who had been split up:
some allowed to go, others denied because of inappropriate paper work. Thompson
said there was a "bottleneck" at the gate entrance, that there needed
to have been a "much more flexible entrance criteria" and that the
measures being applied didn't "even meet the common sense test," he
said earlier this week. Friday, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau defended
his government's actions, saying the speed with which the Taliban took control
of Afghanistan came as a surprise to many around the world. "I think a lot
of people on the ground and around the world thought there would be more
time," he said. "We accelerated our processes over the past number of
weeks and months. We did everything we could." Meanwhile, the government
has said visas issued to those Afghans eligible to come to Canada will remain
valid even if they haven't left the country yet. It also said it's waiving
immigration paperwork fees for Afghans outside and inside Canada.
No robust military presence to
negotiate The Liberal government has also been criticized for failing to
help Afghan interpreters and their families get through Taliban checkpoints to
the airport or negotiate safe passage. "[Canada] had to ask a lot
of favours of a lot of other countries because we don't have a robust military
presence there," former anchor and correspondent Kevin Newman, who
volunteers with Veterans Transition Network, told CBC Radio's The Current. "Many,
many countries have set up a much more robust attempt to get people safely
through Taliban checkpoints to the airport," he said. When Western embassies closed as the
Taliban moved in, many other countries
moved their staff onto the airfield. "But
we folded up our entire shop and came home, which would mean that it would be
almost impossible to negotiate with the Taliban at that point," Thompson
said. That meant, without that diplomatic footprint on the ground,
Canada was unable to negotiate bus convoys inside the airport, he said. "All
of our allies had eyes and boots on the ground this week at Kabul's airport.
Canada did not. It closed its embassy and withdrew all its diplomats and
military by jet to Ottawa just as the Taliban was rolling into town,"
Newman recently wrote for Substack. "The government left no one
behind to talk to the Taliban, or our allies, as they organized and negotiated
the rescue of thousands." Christian Leuprecht, a security expert
and professor at the Royal Military College and Queen's University in Kingston,
Ont., suggested Canada's so-called evacuation strategy was to "basically
piggyback on the Americans and we'll try to get as many people out by putting
as few Canadian resources at risk as possible." "Our footprint
was pretty small," he said. "We didn't send any troops and equipment
that could complement the U.S. effort."
Lacking political direction What
was lacking throughout was political direction, in part, because the election
call meant many of the decision-makers were no longer in Ottawa, said
Leuprecht. "I think basically what the bureaucracy here got was:
'We've got a problem. Go figure it out.' And this sort of crisis requires clear
political direction because the bureaucratic machine is not set up to kind of
figure things out." With no direction, Canada took the minimalist
approach, he said, which meant deploying as few military assets as possible.
"I think that is really sort of ultimately why the Canadian response
was sort of relatively muted."
^ This really sums-up the
failings of many people in the Canadian Government. I hope that there is an
independent investigation done to see exactly who – besides Trudeau – failed and
that anyone found to be in the wrong either resigns from the post or is removed.
Canada has abandoned Canadian Citizens to Terrorists and that is not
acceptable. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/afghanistan-canada-taliban-evacuation-1.6155596
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