Canadians have a very, very long and proud history, but one of
the things that's consistent through it, we've always been very
diplomatic and we've always been very conscience of the other
person's differences. And growing up in, I grew up travelling
around Canada. I've been across Canada four times. The cultural
differences are they're here, but they're not, they're not
different. They just have a different way of doing things.
And they don't try to force their religion on me and I don't do
it to them and, or their cultural, their cultural differences.
So we, we already have within ourselves this, this calm nature,
this very diplomatic nature as a nation. And the Canadian soldier
from experience of Cyprus and Egypt, and that, where we had
traditional peace keeping missions and that. We learn
from that, and of course those lessons are passed on through
the ranks and to everybody. And now in Afghanistan, I don't
thinkit's any different than when I was an Bosnia. An incident
that we did do, influenced and saved lives and that. The, it
started off that, we weren't real happy, things had been
relatively quiet for a little while, and parliament was sending
over a bunch of people to evaluate the threat situation,
in the efforts to reduce our danger pay.
The colonel had set it up to take them over and, to the Serb
site, actually go across the confrontation line. And go over
there, something no politician had, had done, just certain
Canadian ones, as far as my knowledge was. We were getting
all geared up to go over, and we briefed them on the terrain and
the area and I did my terrain briefing and everybody had
taken their turn briefing, on what we were doing on the
missions and stuff. We load them in the vehicles, and we had to
hold them there for quite a while, somebody had fired a
couple of mortars. Right over top of our observation post in the
school, that I was telling you about earlier. They'd gone down
and they landed in front of the hospital. And that was where we
were planning on taking these people was to the hospital, to
show them some work that our medical staff was doing, as well.
Unfortunately they killed the 16 year old nephew of the Serb
commander and we waited until the situation calmed and we, the
colonel was adamant, they needed to go over. And we had them
dressed in helmets and flak jackets, armoured vehicles and so
they were, they were well protected. We took them over, and
one of the first things he showed them was blood on the road.
Then he told them what had happened. Then we took them on the
tour of the hospital. The colonel went and talked to the Serb
commander, and convinced him that it was a terrible act, and
it was definitely . . . yes he had to agree it was targeted
against civilians, because they were trying to hit a civilian
hospital, not a military target. But he convinced that commander
not to shell the town, but to hit a military target. And he
turned a kilometre of trench lines, into a plowed field. I
have no idea how many people were killed in that, but he was mad
and he was angry, and his way of taking out his anger and
frustration was to, with weapons. And he had them, they were in
his control. But we changed it, he didn't shoot at the town,
where the mortars had come from, he fire . . . he shot at a
military target, it made a difference. People in the town
were safe.
We weren't there to make the peace. Our mission, our
secondary mission was the promotion of peace. So this was
our primary mission, supporting humanitarian aid. Well the only
people who are supposed to get the humanitarian aid are the
civilians, not the militaries. So you protect the civilians how
you can.