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View Full Version : 3 Canadian Soldiers Killed in Afghanistand - 13 Dec 08


Des
12-14-2008, 01:39 PM
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2008/12/13/afghanistan-canada.html

Roadside blast claims 3 N.B.-based soldiers in Afghanistan


The Canadian military has identified three soldiers based at CFB Gagetown who were killed Saturday when their armoured vehicle was hit by an improvised explosive device in southern Afghanistan.

Cpl. Thomas James Hamilton, Pte. John Michael Roy Curwin and Pte. Justin Peter Jones, based at CFB Gagetown in New Brunswick, were killed around 9 a.m. local time as they were responding to reports people were planting a suspicious object west of Kandahar city, Brig.-Gen. Denis Thompson told reporters in Kandahar Airfield.

Another soldier was injured and was transported to the hospital at the base, where he is in fair condition. The injured soldier's name was not released.

The three were members of Golf Company, 2nd Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment, said Thompson, the commander of Task Force Kandahar.

Hamilton was on his third tour in Afghanistan, while Jones was originally from Newfoundland, Thompson said. Two of the men were parents — Curwin the father of three children, Hamilton the father of a daughter, Annabella.

"I would like to extend my personal condolences to the families and friends for these men and I look to all Canadians during this Christmas season to hold their memories dear," Thompson said.

"We share this moment of grief together today and think of these young men who were so full of life and full of promise."

Canada has now lost 103 soldiers and one diplomat since the military mission began six years ago.

The blast occurred in an area that until this summer was largely free of insurgent activity, the CBC's David Common reported Saturday from Kandahar.

"It’s an area that Canadian soldiers know very well, having been in that area repeatedly certainly over the past few days but, of course, over the past few months," he said.

The Canadian military has been using new technology in recent months — including spy drones and X-rays of entire roads — in its attempt to prevent IED attacks, as well as acting on more tipoffs from Afghan citizens who see something out of the ordinary, Common said.

The recent attacks against Canadian troops in Kandahar province have come during the harsh Afghan winter, when Taliban fighters traditionally have gone back to Pakistan to regroup.

"There continues to be a presence, certainly of the IED bomb-making factories — they have not let up," Common said.

reddog
12-15-2008, 02:54 PM
I guess it really doesn't matter what patch is on a man's shoulder, the price for freedom is the same everywhere. Sorry for the loss, Des and may these Heroes rest in peace...
Easy Brother,
Reddog...

Javier
12-16-2008, 07:20 PM
Rest in peace, brave.

Des
12-17-2008, 12:53 AM
I guess it really doesn't matter what patch is on a man's shoulder, the price for freedom is the same everywhere. Sorry for the loss, Des and may these Heroes rest in peace...
Easy Brother,
Reddog...

Thank you, Brother.

It's gotten to the point that our military is so small, that even if you don't know one of our KIA's first-hand, you know someone who did.

It's a piss-off that our MSM only looks at them as numbers, and not as the men and women whom they were.