Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Flag lowers on Canada’s longest-ever military mission.

- MURRAY BREWSTER

KABUL, Afghanista­n — As the Canadian flag inched its way down the pole Wednesday at NATO headquarte­rs in Kabul, Master Cpl. Jordan Taylor didn’t necessaril­y see the red and white Maple Leaf.

The faces of friends who didn’t come home were before his eyes.

Taylor is a fresh-faced kid from Regina, and anyone looking at him would hardly be able to guess he’s a veteran of a unit that saw some of the fiercest fighting during the five-year combat mission in Kandahar.

“I’ve had some good friends who’ve lost their lives here,” said Taylor, who helped haul down the flag on Canada’s longest-ever military mission. “I see their faces all the time, always remember them. So, that’s what I was reflecting on.”

One buddy in particular came to mind: Cpl. Darren Fitzpatric­k. He died in an Edmonton hospital after being wounded in a roadside bomb attack in March 2010. The two of them joined the 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry together. They hung out and watched out for each other.

The wounds this mission has inflicted were on quiet, subtle display at the understate­d ceremony.

Sprinkled through crowd of three-dozen Canadians who stood at attention were troops who’d returned to Afghanista­n three, four, even five times in the dozen years the army has been involved in trying to stabilize the fractured nation.

The first Canadian casualties to die were on the mind of Chief Warrant Officer Bill Crabb, who served the first battle group dispatched by Jean Chretien’s Liberal government in spring 2002.

Four soldiers died when a U.S. air force pilot mistakenly bombed them believing their training exercise was a real attack on Kandahar Airfield.

“I was thinking of the people we lost over here,” Crabb said. “I was involved in the first strike, the friendly-fire incident in 2002.

“I went out to help recover the heroes we brought back that day. And in my (next) tour here we lost 23 guys. I couldn’t help but think of them and the sacrifices they made.”

That kind of raw reflection was etched on many faces.

The finality of what took place was only underscore­d as the last handful of training troops, kitted out in full combat gear, trudged through a soccer field adjacent to the headquarte­rs to board American helicopter­s for a trip to a holding camp before boarding flights out of the country.

The last pair of Canadian boots to step off the grounds of the headquarte­rs and on to the ramp belonged to Col. Ivy Miezitis, who according to officers watching the departure seemed to dawdle in hopes of snagging the historical footnote.

During the understate­d ceremony, dignitarie­s — Canadian and Allied alike — praised the country’s involvemen­t and sacrifices.

“Your strength has protected the weak, your bravery has brought hope to hopeless, and the helping hand you have extended to the Afghan people has given them faith that a better future is within their grasp,” Deborah Lyons, Canada’s ambassador to Afghanista­n, told an assembly of the last 100 soldiers who served on a three-year training mission.

The war cost the lives of 158 soldiers, one diplomat, one journalist and two civilian contractor­s.

“We can wish that the families of the fallen do not lament their fate, but we know that this is not the case. The only small comfort comes from the knowledge that the sacrifices of lost loved ones has been worthwhile, that they made a difference, and that their grief is shared by a grateful nation,” Lyons said.

“It is said that the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing. Your actions and those of your fallen colleagues have stopped the triumph of evil.”

Canadian commandos, sent to hunt al-Qaida, were the first troops to hit the ground in late 2001 and they were followed by as many as 40,000 more rotating through different campaigns, including the five-year combat mission in Kandahar.

British Lt.-Gen. John Lorimer, the deputy commander of NATO in Afghanista­n, said the Canadians “repeatedly proved their courage and capability” alongside coalition and Afghan troops, especially in Kandahar “where you not only fought hard, but you fought smart.”

Calling it the end of a significan­t era, Lorimer said he viewed the departure of the Canadians with “mixed emotions” given the shared experience­s of the last 12 years.

“I am sad to see you return home, yet grateful for opportunit­y to have served alongside such great Canadian leaders along the way,” he said.

Lyons said Canada will remain engaged in Afghanista­n and the focus will be on helping build the ruined nation’s economy, particular­ly in the resource sector.

 ?? MURRAY BREWSTER/The Canadian Press ?? Master Cpl. Daniel Choong, left, Cpl. Harry Smiley, centre, and Cpl . Gavin Early, right, take
down the Canadian flag for the last time in Afghanista­n on Wednesday.
MURRAY BREWSTER/The Canadian Press Master Cpl. Daniel Choong, left, Cpl. Harry Smiley, centre, and Cpl . Gavin Early, right, take down the Canadian flag for the last time in Afghanista­n on Wednesday.

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