Saturday, January 29, 2011

An older blog

First Prime-Minister of Israel trained at Windsor's Fort Edward

Human Interest



First Prime-Minister of Israel trained at Windsor's Fort Edward
first printed in The Valley Today: Independent News for the Annapolis Valley
January 07

Most Valley residents know of Fort Edward as part of the 18th century British network of blockhouses that dotted Nova Scotia, providing protection for early settlers.
But did you know that Fort Edward was still used by the military into the 20th century? During World War I the British Army used the fort to establish a training depot for Jewish men training to fight against the Ottoman Turks in Palestine.
Known as The Jewish Legion, this unit, was "stood up" for service in 1917 manned by Jews from around the world who came to Windsor for training on the slopes of the fort under Major W.F.D Bremner. Bremner lived in Castle Fredericks and is an ancestor of Falmouth’s James Bremner, who still lives on the family farm. Pictures and first-hand accounts of the time indicate that the men lived in tents on the hillside below the blockhouse.
Many of these recruits came with Zionist ideals and dreams of a restored Palestinian homeland for the Jews. 1,100 Non-commissioned officers were trained in Windsor, Nova Scotia. The first arrived in Egypt on April 29, 1917 aboard the steamer Empress of India, with General Sir Edmund Allenby.
By September 1917 the Jewish Legion composed 4 scout battalions, 2 signals battalions, and one infantry brigade.



"The Son of the Young Lion"
One Zionist who trained here was a man named David Green. Green was born on October 16, 1886 in Plonsk, Poland. In his childhood he was inspired by his father, a Zionist, to dream of someday living in Palestine. Young Green studied biblical history, politics and geography, and he learned Hebrew. By the time he was fourteen he had organized a Zionist youth group in Plonsk.
In 1906 Green, then 20, set out for Palestine as a pioneer settler. He found work as a farm labourer and continued to promote the ideal of an independent homeland. In 1910 Green became the editor of the Palestinian Labour Party’s magazine. One day he signed one of his articles "Ben-Gurion" or "son of the young lion"; a name that he would later be best known by.

"I will never forget Windsor where I received my first training as a soldier and where I became a corporal."
-David Ben-Gurion, former prime-minister of Israel.


           
When world war broke out in 1914, Palestine was ruled by the Ottoman Turkish Empire. The Turks, who had allied with Germany, arrested Green and expelled him from the country. He first found refuge in Egypt and then eventually found his way to the United States.
By 1915 he had begun encouraging Jews to immigrate to Palestine as settlers.Since the Turks still occupied the region it would have to be liberated before any settlers could attempt to make homes there. So in 1917 Green played a lead role in organizing The Jewish Legion. It was a long hard road from Poland to a liberated Palestine and Windsor was just one stop along the way.
Not long after the unit was formed recruits began to flood into Fort Edward to be trained as soldiers; Green was one of them.Within a year Corporal David Green was in Palestine fighting the Turks. When the war ended in 1918, he threw himself into Zionism and politics. Over the next 20 year he would promote the Jewish dream of an independent Palestine; a home for the Jews.
In May 1948, that goal was realized when the British Mandate governing the region expired and Palestine declared its independence as the fledgling nation, Israel. The same day Arab Palestinians declared war on the Jewish settlers; a war that threatened the establishment of the new country. The Arabs were swiftly defeated by a Jewish army that Green helped build. A year later, in 1949, Green, now known as David Ben-Gurion, was sworn in as the first prime minister of Israel and a national hero.
In 1966, a 70 year-old Ben-Gurion fondly recalled his days at Fort Edward in a letter to then Windsor mayor Robert C. Dimock.He wrote, "I will never forget Windsor where I received my first training as a soldier and where I became a corporal."
David Ben-Gurion died in 1973.
He was 97.





"Altalena"
Another Zionist who trained here in Windsor was a young Ukrainian journalist named Ze’ev Jabotinsky. Born in Odessa, Ukraine in October 1880, Jabotinsky was raised in a traditional Jewish community. As a youth he became fascinated with the Zionist movement in the city.
Jabotinsky also began writing as a youth and his first writings were printed in Odessa papers when he was just 16. After his schooling Jabotinsky went to Switzerland and then Italy where he reported for the Russian press.  It was there that he first wrote under the pseudonym "Altalena"; the Italian word for "swing".
In 1903 he joined the Zionist movement. He quickly gained notoriety for his talent at speaking. When World War I broke out Jabotinsky conceived the idea of forming Jewish units to fight with the British Army against the Ottomans. With another Zionist, Joseph Trumpeldor, he founded the Zion Mule Corps; a unit which fought with distinction in Gallipoli.
The mule corps was disbanded soon after and Jabotinsky traveled to London to continue to lobby for the formation of Jewish fighting units for service in Palestine.

        
In 1917 the British government approved the establishment of three units. The Jewish Legion was one of them and Jabotinsky served as its Regimental Sergeant-Major.He fought in the Jordan Valley and in 1918 was decorated for bravery. At the end of the war Jabotinsky was discharged from the British Army for being and "indiscreet political speaker". He then led an open effort in Palestine to train and arm Jewish men for self- defense against the Arabs.
In 1920 the British searched Jabotinsky’s home and found weapons and ammunition. An inquiry blamed unrest in the region on Zionist provocation of the Arab population. He continued to promote a Zionist state in Palestine with such fervour and militancy that the British eventually exiled him from the region in 1929.
He died in New York on August 4 1940.

Copyright 2007 Kel Hancock

Thursday, May 04, 2006

An Ear to the Ground and an Eye on Afghanistan

Don’t let Anti-Americanism and the fear of George Bush Overshadow our Global Responsibilities.
“We shouldn’t be in Afghanistan”. This is familiar refrain that I hear many times each day. Well we aren’t in Afghanistan are we? Our Troops are. The troops have spoken openly about their mission and it is now rather clear that they want to be there and are rather proud of this opportunity to provide stability to that country while it is reborn as a freer state. It is also ever more increasingly clear that some are willing to die for such a cause. Quite frankly, the anti-Bush rhetoric is getting both tiring and annoying. It is muddling our perception of just what it is that our men and women are doing over there.
First of all, we are not fighting “Bush’s War”. That war is in Iraq. What we are contributing to is a sanctioned multi-national mission of regional security and reconstruction. Let’s not forget that as members of both NATO and the UN we have responsibilities. These responsibilities include the very type of commitment we have made to Afghanistan. How long could we keep bowing out of such duties?
So the US started and led the multi-national action in Afghanistan. Now they are turning it over to NATO and, moreover, under Canadian leadership. If we are so afraid of Bush then what can be wrong with this change? The Americans will move onto the War in Iraq while Canadians and their Allies will finish the job in Afghanistan. The US has already taken the greatest losses there and did most of the dirty work. Regardless of their own reasons there is no negative side to removing the oppressive Taliban and routing Al Qaeda from the region. And for those that think that Al Qaeda posed no threat to us well¼ .I beg to differ. When I served under the UN flag in Eritrea and Ethiopia in 2001 it was evident that Al Qaeda had trained and supported the groups that posed the most threat to our personnel and to peace and stability in the area. When the Eritrean Islamic Salvation Front threatened to take UN personnel hostage to protest the peace agreement intelligence showed that those threats, and support for them, came from Afghanistan. Yes, that’s right Afghanistan; and a mere 4-5 months before the tragic events of 911. Now, most won’t see that as a threat to Canada but is was a threat against Canadians and many other westerners working in the region to secure peace. Any threat to Canadians is a threat to our nation.
The fight against global terrorism is both a responsibility and a necessity. Just because the Yanks led the way this time doesn’t mean that it is the wrong thing to do. So the US is having a little trouble keeping a pure and democratic separation of church and state; the tide will change. And when Bush and his bible-pounding cronies are gone; wouldn’t it be nice to still have the respect and trust of our allies?

Kel Hancock has served with the Canadian Forces. As a career infantry soldier he has seen active duty in the Balkans, East Africa as well as on domestic operations.
He is now retired from the military and resides in the Annapolis Valley, NS.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Public Not Bound by Federal Flag Policy

The fact that the Federal Government has decided not to lower flags on federal buildings has little or no bearing on individuals, organisations and other levels of government. In this writer’s opinion it is an appalling decision made by a “half-mast” government that I was actually starting to have a little faith in. Or it could be a brilliant device to unify the country behind our troops through good old fashioned reverse-psychology? Naw…couldn’t be, but it seems to be working.
Recently, upon the death of a Canadian soldier, I brought up the subject of lowering the flags at the War Memorial in the town in which I live. I was informed by a town official that the Province dictates when to lower flags. Further investigation revealed that this is not the case. In fact, the Honorable Cecil Clarke, Speaker of the House, informed me that municipalities are free to make their own decisions when it comes to honouring the fallen. I was also advised that the province was revisiting flag protocol and policy in light of the Canadian Forces involvement in Afghanistan. This was, indeed, refreshing and reassuring in light of the fact that many civil servants are apparently confused.

“The manner in which flags may be displayed in Canada is not governed by any legislation but by established practice….The rules applied by the federal government are in no way mandatory for individuals or organizations; they may serve as guidelines for all persons who wish to display the Canadian Flag and other flags in Canada.”
- Flag Protocol, Heritage Canada.



Most Canadians, because we are not generally the “flag-waving” type, have little or no understanding of the etiquette and traditions for displaying national or provincial flags. Not since the days of the British Empire when Britannia ruled the waves have we seen flags, banners and bunting lining our streets and avenues. Not since the end of the Second World War have we seen troops welcomed home with fanfare and patriotic pageantry. Why is it that we only wave our little paper flags on Canada Day or in the event of a visit from our aged and obsolete monarch? Does it hark back to the days when we were fervent supporters and loyal subjects of an empire? What are we afraid of now that we are not part an empire? Pride? Is it wrong to be proud who we are now? Most Canadians are quick to sew a maple leaf on our back packs for a trip abroad, but rather reticent to commit to an outward public display of national pride by flying a flag in our yard. What is the stumbling block that prevents us from showing each other that we are proud to be Canadian?
Few people likely realise that lowering of a flag in mourning is by choice not by edict or proclamation. In fact one of the provisions in Canadian flag protocol allows for the lowering of a flag to half mast for, “whom it is desired to honour.” This means that we are not bound by the Government’s decision not to lower the flag on our federal buildings. Provinces, Municipalities, organisations and individuals are free to conduct this solemn observance if they so choose. And if the occupants of a federal building did lower the flag outside, what would the implications be? Would it be a federal crime? I think not. I think it would be a display of respect and dignity and would send a clear message to the Harper government.
Some organisations, inclusive of some branches of the Royal Canadian Legion have informed me that they have voted not to lower their flags because they feel it is too complicated. Too complicated? Combat. Now that’s complicated. Leaving hearth and home and putting your life on hold to serve your country. That’s complicated too.

Media coverage of our war dead

If military personnel, veterans and their respective families are split over the issue of allowing media coverage during the transferral our war dead, then why can’t we let it be decided on an individual basis? I’m not a big fan of media hype turning such a sombre and solemn occasion into pageant, but I am also not a big fan of arbitrary totalitarian decision making either. The Harper government should be willing to compromise and allow military families to decide for themselves. Let’s remember the singular fact that it is the soldier that is subject to DND policy not the civilian. When a soldier comes home draped in flag DND policy likely does not effect him/her anymore. It does however effect the family and treads awfully close to infringing upon their rights.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Mines Road Falmouth in January

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Haliburton House

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Mayflower

(NS Museum) Posted by Picasa

Sea Creature

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At Bayswater

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Bayswater
















(Hancock) Posted by Picasa

Bayswater















(Hancock)
Bayswater, NS Posted by Picasa

Bayswater, NS















(Hancock) Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda...

And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda….
an interview with a Canadian soldier in Afghanistan.

By Kel Hancock
The spring air is cold and damp as it whips through the open back of the lumbering army transport full of soldiers. Tired, muddy young men doze in the frigid air, chins on chests, heads bobbing; jammed so tightly together that they are barely jostled by the jerky gear changes of the vehicle. I want to sleep but I cannot. I am enthralled by the sound of a lone voice singing into the wind. The hum of tires and the clink-clank of the truck provide a melodic accompaniment to the soldier’s song. ‘And the band played Waltzing Matilda…’
A young soldier, a Lieutenant, sings the sombre refrain of an old Australian lament of the Great War. It is a haunting solo; chilling and warming all at once…‘as our ship pulled away from the quay…’ It is the first time I have heard this tune…the first of many.
Recently, I spoke with that soldier again. Over twenty years have passed and the young officer, although now a seasoned and hardened veteran, is not without the same inspiring enthusiasm. He is Lieutenant-Colonel Ian Hope, the Commanding Officer of a battalion- strong Battle Group in Kandahar, Afghanistan…

KH: LCol Hope, it is an honour and a pleasure to talk with you. I appreciate you taking this time to speak with me.
LCol Hope: My pleasure.
KH: When did you arrive in Afghanistan?
LCol Hope: I arrived here on the 23rd of January, 2006, on the first flight of Canadian troops that came into Kandahar for this mission.
(courtesy DND Combat Camera)
LCol Ian Hope addresses his troops in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
“Here’s the thing, these soldiers are quite willing to be caught in a Taliban crossfire. They will never be willing to be, nor will never accept being, caught in a political crossfire in Canada about the mission…and neither will I”
-LCol Ian Hope
KH: You’re from the Annapolis Valley. Where is your hometown?
LCol Hope: Well, I consider Annapolis Royal my hometown. I was not born there but it is where my parents, with my brother and I, bought a house in the mid 80’s. It was the first time we had settled down because my dad was in the Army. My father is from Halifax, with a lot of relatives in the Annapolis Valley, so it was like coming home to him and we all adopted it as our home.

KH: Are you married? With Children?
LCol Hope: Yes. My wife’s name is Karen and she is from Baddeck, Cape Breton. We met at Acadia University. I have a five year old boy, Alex, and a seven year old girl named Emma.
KH: How is your family coping with your absence?
LCol Hope: They are very strong. My wife understands this in terms of importance of the mission for Canada and the importance of my part in the overall operations. She has been extremely supportive in all regards. The children are actually behaving. Which they never seem to do when dad is around. (he laughs)
KH: How many men and women are currently under your command and leadership?


LCol Hope: The number fluctuates a bit and it keeps growing, so currently we have about 970 on strength. They are from all different branches and trades. The predominant “crew” are infantry from the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry. I’ve got a Surveillance Troop of armoured soldiers from 12e Regiment de Blinde du Canada, from Valcartier, Quebec. They are superb. We also have artillery gunners from A Battery, The Royal Canadian Horse Artillery in Shilo, Manitoba. We have engineers from the 1st Canadian Engineer Regiment in Edmonton. We have Military Police, Logistics support personnel and Medical personnel mainly from Edmonton. In addition we have a new attachment of Unmanned Air Vehicle operators which has been deployed for the first time. We also have a number of Civil and Military affairs officers. I also have a company of about 150 very professional Romanian Army soldiers under my command. So, I have quite a crew. Our battle group is also in a partnership with both the Afghan National Army and Police. At times our strength is between 1200 to 1300 but to give you an exact number is almost impossible.

KH: What other missions have you been deployed on during your career?

LCol Hope: I have been away quite a bit. I have deployed to Haiti, Bosnia and on many domestic operations. Immediately after 911 I deployed on Operation Apollo. Then I deployed to Afghanistan for the first time in the spring of 2004. Between deployments, training and other assignments I have been away a lot. My wife is used to seeing me come and go.


KH: Can you explain your battle group’s mission in the Kandahar region and the extent of your Area of Responsibility?
LCol Hope: Absolutely, yeah, the mission is really one of assistance. We are helping all aspects concerning the Afghan people. We are helping their government at the provincial level and the district level, particularly. We are helping with reconstruction across the province; working with the international community in that. We are helping their security forces, particularly their Afghan National Army and Afghan National Police. In this assistance mission we are doing the same kinds of things as we did in Bosnia, Kosovo, East Timor, however we are doing it in a much more lethal environment, because there is an active enemy. I know some people don’t like that word but I have to use it, as you can understand, because that‘s what it is. They are targeting us as well as our Afghan partners because we are supporting the Afghan government. The stated aim of that enemy is to overthrow the Afghan government. So from my perspective this is very much a conflict even though we are doing a great deal of peacekeeping and peace-support work because the tactical environment makes it a lot different. We are, right now, focusing almost all of our efforts in the Kandahar Province which is the mandate for my Battle Group. We are able to, and have, been able to surge out of Kandahar Province for tasks in other provinces as part of the Canadian-led Multi-National Brigade which has responsibility for southern Afghanistan.


KH: How is your unit’s presence being received by the local population at large and, in your opinion, what is the greatest threat to Canadian soldiers there?
LCol Hope: Yes, good question. It’s the early days for us yet. In Kandahar City the people understand “Canada” and where Canada, what Canada is and the difference between Americans and Canadians. We have been very well received so far because we have a different approach. It is one that, when I say it is an assistance mission for us, it is really a different type of approach then the Americans had before us where they were actively hunting Taliban and assistance was a secondary thing. We put assistance as the first mission and looking for the Taliban is something of a small nuance but is something that is very important to the people. Outside of Kandahar City, though, in the rural villages we are talking about people that are not in touch with provincial or national politics never mind geopolitics. Canada is understood by most as a country but they would not be able to describe it geographically. We are beginning to establish a rapport in the villages we work with and confidence is building. In villages where we haven’t been present or that we just pass through once in awhile, we are not perceived any differently than other forces have in the past. So we are attempting in our plans to push out into the more remote areas where we need to be and let people know that we are here to cover all of Kandahar Province with a presence. Then the confidence levels should go up. But I think it’s going to take the whole of our tour before we are able to reach out to those civilians.
KH: And the greatest threat?
LCol Hope: With regard to the threat, obviously the biggest threat to our soldiers is the use of IEDs, the improvised explosive devices that are planted on the side of the road or in vehicles. The worst of which is the suicide bomber who drives the explosive device into your vehicle or into a crowd. Sometimes he would have the explosives on his body. We have been extremely fortunate in that we have not lost anyone to IEDs. There have been well over a dozen attacks where they have been used since August and Canada lost diplomat Glynn Berry, unfortunately, but in the operations we have commenced in January we have not lost anybody. We did have one soldier seriously injured as he was up out of the LAV III turret waving vehicles off when the vehicle was struck by a car- bomber. His arm was exposed and injured, unfortunately. The number of attacks we have had by IEDs and their lack of success in destroying our vehicles or wounding and killing more Canadians is basically attributed to the type of vehicles we are using. These armoured vehicles are doing their job extremely well.
We are countering the threat with our equipment and we are countering the threat with local co-operation. There is an active information effort on our part to tell the locals that, unfortunately, IED attacks suicide attacks are killing far more Afghans and maiming Afghan children, to a degree that is tragic and they have to help. So we are starting to get some support from the local population.
KH: What are the best and worst aspects of your day-to-day job?
LCol Hope: Um...yeah…I don’t think about my personal day very much because I am totally consumed by the command of the battle-group. I do enjoy getting out with the soldiers. That is the primary thing for me. As much as I need to concentrate on planning and giving orders, the best part of my job is actually being with the soldiers on the ground in the midst of village engagements and looking for the enemy. Of course the worst part of this job is going to be dealing with casualties.

KH: What are some examples of “Hearts and Minds” operations or humanitarian efforts that are being conducted in your area of responsibility?
LCol Hope: There is a tremendous number of them happening every single day. We have delivery programs that are ongoing to establish vocational training, and equipping local police. The RCMP are in the lead of that. We are working with our government partners CIDA and FAC every day to help organise the provincial government and give them a process to establish reconstruction priorities. We have embedded a Media Officer with the government to let them know how government and media can combine and work together to get messages to the people to improve governance. Soldiers on the ground are actively delivering relief supplies to communities in the form of wood, water and basic needs like water-carrying jugs; small tokens, really but big tokens to the Afghan because we come in with these things consistently. Transistor radios are also very important here and we have delivered hundreds to locals so they can get information. We have two types of programs that are running everyday; those which you might call emergency relief like supplies, the digging of wells and road repairs. Then there is the longer term more expensive projects which we work through the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) here to carry out. These are things like larger scale road construction, vocational training and mentoring of locals. We have locals in the PRT compound which are now training as mechanics to fix Afghan National Police vehicles. This is an initiative started by my mechanics on their own. There is really hundreds of things going on everyday that directly engage the Afghan nationals and build their capacity to do things and give them the materiel they need. In the outlying villages this may be less so, especially where there is a direct over-threat from the Taliban, but in areas where we are everyday the direct focus is on reconstruction efforts.
KH: Are the troops generally pleased or displeased by the way their efforts are being received by the people?
LCol Hope: I wish I could put them on the phone so you could hear it from them. There is a tremendous amount of good feeling amongst the troops for this mission. They understand its importance and unlike other missions in the past they can see the tangible results of their efforts because these Afghans work hard; once you win their loyalty and trust they work really hard for us. Part of my planning is in achieving tangible results; not just for our own satisfaction in Canada, but so that the locals can see and feel these results as well. We are trying to start an unstoppable momentum where the Taliban can no longer come and achieve their initiatives against it. There are villages, I won’t lie to you, that are harbouring and hiding IED-bomber cells. These are places where our soldiers will go in and be seemingly well received by those very people that are supporting insurgents. That is extremely frustrating but it is a minority of villages and individuals and we are finding out, everyday, more and more information about who they are. The soldiers deal with a vast majority of Afghans who are appreciative of their efforts. I think you’ll find when the mission is over and out troops return home there will be a sense of satisfaction in a job well done.
KH: How are the troops responding to the recent deaths and injuries of their comrades and how would you describe the support network that is in place to help them deal with what they may be feeling?
LCol Hope: It is better than I have ever seen in the past. We deliberately had our official ceremonies as part of the healing process and then we got on with business immediately. Orders were passed the same afternoon that we said good-bye and we got back out into the field and on with the mission. There is a mandated process in place here where, if ever a significant incident occurs, soldiers sit with peer-counsellors to talk out the whole incident. This happens within hours of the incident and, as opposed to selecting people to go through it, we make everyone do it who was involved; with no stigma attached. We are finding that that actually enables people to get it all out in the open immediately and deal with feelings well forward and then reintegrate everyone back into their teams and then carry on with the mission. This is something we have learned over the years from ourselves and our allies. It is working very well. There was a feeling in the ’old army’ that if you shed a tear you were weak. The feeling now is, shed the tears, get it all out and get back in business.

KH: How would you describe the performance of the LAV III APC and other LAV variants, in that terrain and tactical situations you are dealing with?
LCol Hope: That’s a great question. When I came here in August for a reconnaissance the Americans said that we may have problems with the LAV. Our own estimates were, yes, we probably will. However, have not been denied, by terrain, access to anywhere. The LAV has taken us into every corner of our Area of Operations. This astounded the Americans when we first did our relief-in-place with them in January. It has astounded us in fact. Everyday I get patrol reports in that show we are going up peaks in the remote mountain area with these vehicles. We have a tremendous respect for it (the LAV) now. It has the manoeuvrability to get into remote and rugged areas, it has great power, it has the armour to withstand the IED attacks, it has a degree of firepower that they (Afghans) have not seen here…ever. We know that the Taliban is watching us; the people always watch us and we know that they have a degree of respect for it. They even have a nickname for the LAV III. They call it “The Monster”. It has won, in many respects, by its sheer presence here. I have personally trained and operated in many vehicles from many countries but I have learned to love this vehicle. I am actually living out of the vehicle. We have a large portion of the battle-group who are out there living out of the back of their LAVs, up in the mountains. It is really impressing a lot of the locals that the LAV can be a sustainment system and not just a fighting or transport vehicle.
KH: With regards to your mission, what is the hardest decision you have had to make? What is the hardest thing you have had to personally do?
LCol Hope: That’s a good one…um…I haven’t been challenged in terms of making extremely hard decisions, yet. Of course maybe the time will come. It has not been a problem for me to decide to go out and put the soldiers in the midst of the enemy areas because I have been a soldier for twenty-six years and I know that this is what they want to do. This is how success is achieved. The local nationals need this. That is not a hard decision; to push the soldiers and keep them out there in the midst of all this. I am out there everyday with them and the feedback I am getting is that this is what we need to do. I’m not sure that we will face any significant battles, so to speak. It was never my estimate, when we came here that we would have any sort of Korea-type of conflict; just fleeting engagements with the enemy now and then. None of those engagements demand of me the typical decision making of a conventional war. The hardest thing to deal with is of course, casualties.
KH: What are some of the things about your troops that make you proud?
LCol Hope: They are resilient. The Canadian soldier is a unique soldier unlike many others in the world because he or she comes from a climate that allows him to withstand the elements, he comes from a people for whom compromise is a normal thing, and he understands the need for diplomacy as well as the need to soldier hard. He can be decisive. The Canadian soldier cannot go by a ruined hospital without thinking, ‘Hey, we need to rebuild that!’. It is part of his makeup. The soldiers under my command, the men and women here, just completely impress me everyday with their ingenuity; solving problems at low levels before they ever get to my level. They have a good moral foundation.
These men and women represent the values of Canadian society and they are extending that here in Afghanistan. They are professional in the highest sense of the word. The combination of their Canadian disposition, their professionalism and experience, and a mission that I think most if not very single soldier truly believes in is vital. Vital to both Canada and Afghanistan. You see it when you are out in the Area of Operations.
KH: Are the troops generally pleased or displeased by the way this mission is being portrayed by the mainstream media?
LCol Hope: That is very difficult for me to answer because like me, they don’t se much of the results. We get noticed if there is bad publicity, right away. That which we have seen has been fairly positive. I personally have an open policy for the media; that is if you come here you have access to us, we will give you whatever we can except that sensitive information which endangers our soldiers. We have gone a long way to follow the program of embedded media, which is I think is new to Canada. It has been working well.
KH: How do the troops feel about the opposition to this mission at home in Canada?
LCol Hope: If you want to lower the morale of the troops here, have very vocal academic debate about it back there about the legitimacy of what they are doing. Here’s the thing, these soldiers are quite willing to be caught in a Taliban crossfire. They will never be willing and will never accept being caught in a political crossfire in Canada…and neither will I.
We have been in Afghanistan four years, many soldiers have been here before and we have a voluntary system. They don’t have to be here. They choose to be here and have sacrificed much already. They want to do the job. We now have a bunch of people who have just woke up to the fact that Canada is in Afghanistan and are trying to educate themselves in the public forum. It takes a long while to understand things like this sometimes. We will be here for the year. If there are going to be decisions made about future deployments, then fine, but until then the soldiers need support. Canadians need to have a degree of trust in the last government and the current government who have both endorsed this mission after the years of strategy formulation that have gone into it. I have been a part of that and I think that it is the most well thought out strategic plan for assisting another nation that we have probably ever done. Everything is connected in a long-term strategy that Foreign Affairs Canada, CIDA, the RCMP and DND have collectively shaped. For the benefit of our morale we are hoping that Canadians will see this mission in the way we have come to see it.

KH: Tell us a bit about the Prime Minister’s visit. What effect did it have for you and the troops on the ground?
LCol Hope: It was tremendous. I came in from the field late on a Sunday night to find out that the PM had arrived and we quickly gathered everyone in. It was quite a moment actually because we never anticipated that high-profile of a visit this early in the tour and it had an extremely positive effect on everybody that participated in it.
KH: What advice would you have for Canadians on how they can best support the troops in Afghanistan?
LCol Hope: I think Canadians are doing a good job at supporting their troops. We are getting positive feedback. I think they need to know that this is a hard mission. It is not a war in terms of a conventional conflict where there are going to be big decisive battles. There is going to be frustration at finding the enemy who are hiding in villages. We need a lot of patience because there will be no big decisive victory here. There will be a longer term winning over of the peoples’ trust that we will not abandon them. And with that winning over they, themselves, will turn in the enemy. So patience is what is required amongst Canadians. There is no short term decisive solution. We need to be prepared to stay here for however long it takes. Personally I think that the counter insurgency and reconstruction effort will take five to six years. That is not to say that the Canadian Forces have to take part in all that. That is not a necessity. We can transfer the responsibilities to other allies. We need to look at this like Bosnia and spend as much time here, as a nation, as it takes to help the Afghan nation. Canadians should feel extremely proud of their troops. They are not only working to rebuild Afghanistan but they are passing on Canadian values every day, to the locals; that will never be catalogued or written in military history. Not only our knowledge and skills but our values are having a tremendously positive impact. Canadians need to know that sustaining that for as long as possible is very important.


KH: What is the first thing you are going to do when you get home?
LCol Hope: The last time I came home I flew into Sydney, Nova Scotia. My wife picked me up at the airport and took me to the cottage in Baddeck, where I had a beer and looked at the green and the blue, and it was wonderful. I think, when the time comes, that my duties will take me directly to Edmonton, but after that I look forward to a quiet leave somewhere; probably in Baddeck.
KH: Lastly, is there anything you would like to say to the people of Annapolis Valley? Is there anyone you would like to say Hi to?
LCol Hope: This may not be able to extend all the way to Edmonton, but I like to say hi to my wife and family. To my relatives in Nova Scotia and particularly my in-laws in Baddeck, I wish them all the best and I’ll see you at the end of the end of the tour. Thanks for your support.
To the people of the Annapolis Valley, where I consider home, and to the West Nova Scotia Regiment, where my military career started, thank-you for your support. I have fond memories of the Valley and I hope to get down there soon.
KH: Colonel, thank-you very much for taking some of your valuable time to speak with us. Good-luck to you and your troops for both a safe mission and return home.

LCol Hope: My pleasure and thank-you.



LCol Ian Hope began his military life as an officer in the West Nova Scotia Regiment while attending Acadia University. His career now spans over twenty-six years.
Since 2001 over 14,000 Canadian Forces personnel have served in Afghanistan. Some have served more than one tour. Many of these personnel are from the Annapolis Valley region. LCol Hope’s 1st Battalion The Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry Battle Group will be relieved and commence repatriation to Canada sometime in February of 2007.

Kel Hancock has served with the Canadian Forces. As a career infantry soldier he has seen active duty in the Balkans, East Africa as well as on domestic operations.
He is now retired from the military and resides in the Annapolis Valley, NS.
Copyright KW Hancock, 2006 Posted by Picasa

Sunday, March 19, 2006


windsor

Tuesday, November 08, 2005


Jaden's Bday


duhhhhhhh.....shadow


Bayswater in July


view from Bayswater


JJ at Bayswater


Rocks at Bayswater


Jeep


Church near Grand Pre, Kings Co


Minas Basin mud flats at Blomidon


Blomidon


Black Hole Cove


Black Hole Cove....Oct