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Olympics could hurt Canada's Afghan military tour
20 Nov 2006 20:22:16 GMT
Source: Reuters

(Refiles to fix typo in paragraph 2) (Adds comments by defense minister, opposition paragraphs 8-10)

OTTAWA, Nov 20 (Reuters) - Canada might not be able to extend the life of its 2,500-strong mission to Afghanistan beyond February 2009 because many troops will be needed to ensure security at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, according to a document released on Monday.

The mission was supposed to end in February 2007 but the ruling Conservatives, who won the election this year in part by promising to boost the overstretched and underfunded military, pushed through a parliamentary vote approving a two-year extension.

Although the government has said little about whether Canadian soldiers will stay beyond February 2009, a formerly secret military briefing document prepared for Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor casts doubt on this possibility.

"Planning and mounting the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games security operation is a high priority activity that will represent a major commitment for the Canadian forces and will have a significant impact on domestic operations in 2009 and 2010," the document says.

"Security commitment for the Games could also affect the Canadian forces' ability to deploy a large number of forces overseas," it continued.

The 2010 Olympics will be held from Feb. 12 to 28 in a series of venues that stretch 75 miles (120 km) from southern Vancouver to the mountain resort of Whistler in the Pacific coast province of British Columbia.

The report from top officials was made available to Reuters under access to information legislation. It was dated Feb. 5, the day before the Conservatives formally took power.

"We recognize there is an Olympics in 2010. We have not been formally requested by the province to provide troops but we are sort of advancing our plans now," O'Connor told Parliament on Monday.

He did not give further details, much to the irritation of Dawn Black, a British Columbia legislator from the minority New Democratic Party.

"Is the minister telling ... (us) that he has no plans for the largest domestic security deployment Canada has seen in decades? Is he actually saying that?" she asked.

Since 2002, 42 Canadian soldiers have died in Afghanistan, most of them in battles in the south of the country over the past few months.

Recent opinion polls have largely shown most Canadians are pessimistic about the future of the Afghan mission and want the troops to come home.
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U.S. Senator John McCain speaks to reporters in Kabul on December 16, 2006, accompanied by (from L) Republican Representative Mark Kirk and Republican senators John Thune and Susan Collins. McCain on Saturday urged European nations to shoulder more of the burden in Afghanistan, by doing more to fight the booming illegal opium trade and easing fighting restrictions on their soldiers.