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Grenade attack killed soldier
GEOFFREY YORK
From Friday's Globe and Mail
KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — Captain Nichola Goddard was killed by a rocket-propelled grenade while she was riding in an LAV armoured vehicle during heavy fighting with Taliban guerrillas, military sources said yesterday.
The Canadian military still has not disclosed the exact cause of her death, which occurred on Wednesday near Kandahar, but sources said that she was in an LAV III, the latest model of Canada's light-armoured vehicles.
According to one source, the grenade did not penetrate the LAV, but bounced upward and hit the turret, creating shrapnel that hit Capt. Goddard in the face.
As an artillery forward observation officer, she would have been standing in the hatch to help direct Canadian fire at enemy targets.
Capt. Goddard was the first Canadian female combat soldier ever to be killed in battle. Her body was scheduled to be flown home to Canada Friday morning on a C-130 transport plane after a ramp ceremony at the Kandahar Air Field, the main coalition base in Kandahar.
More than 100 people, including Capt. Goddard, have been killed in an unprecedented string of attacks that started late Wednesday and concentrated in the southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, The Associated Press reported.
Islamic militants, some armed with machine guns, battled Afghan, U.S. and Canadian forces and exploded two suicide car bombs Thursday, some of the deadliest violence in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban.
An Afghan army commander, whose troops were involved in the battle, said the Canadian military needs tougher vehicles to survive rocket-propelled grenade attacks. "Canada is a modern country and it should have more modern vehicles or tanks to resist an RPG," General Rahmatullah Raufi said.
"It would be better if they use vehicles that are similar to the U.S. military vehicles," the commander of Afghan army forces in southern Afghanistan added in an interview yesterday. "The RPG is a very modern weapon and it can destroy an armoured vehicle."
Gen. Raufi praised the performance of the Canadian troops who supported the Afghan army and police in battle against an estimated 100 to 200 Taliban insurgents in the Panjwai district on the western gateway to Kandahar.
"In this battle, the Canadians fought well," he said. "We were very happy with them."
But the Canadian troops are not as experienced or as well-equipped as the U.S. soldiers who preceded them in Kandahar, the commander said. "The Canadians are new here, and they don't have enough experience in these areas. We hope they will bring more modern vehicles and equipment."
Canadian officers in Kandahar have promised a briefing today to give details of Wednesday's battle. They are likely to defend the LAV III, which has proven popular among Canadian soldiers for its speed, mobility and its ability to withstand enemy attack.
Capt. Goddard, of the First Royal Canadian Horse Artillery based in Shilo, Man., is the 17th Canadian to be killed in Afghanistan since 2002. The death toll includes 16 soldiers and one diplomat.
She was remembered by soldiers in a sad moment at the beginning of a concert by Canadian music stars at the Kandahar Air Field last night.
"Operations in the last few days have been intense," said General David Fraser, the Canadian officer in charge of the multinational brigade in Kandahar, in a brief speech at the opening of the concert.
"There are some Afghans tonight who are living and sleeping a little bit easier ..... because some very bad people have been taken off the streets. Unfortunately there is a cost to that."
Some of Wednesday's battle took place in a populated area, and doctors in Kandahar reported yesterday that three civilians were injured. They said a five-year-old child was badly hurt by a rocket from a U.S. helicopter that entered the fight to support Canadian and Afghan ground forces. The other two civilians were adults who were wounded by gunfire, the doctors said.
An Afghan soldier was killed and three others were injured in the same battle, Gen. Raufi said yesterday.
The battle left 18 Taliban insurgents dead, while another 26 were captured, according to a statement yesterday by the U.S.-led coalition.
"The defeat of the enemy in Panjwai is a direct result of the skill, valour and commitment of Canadian and Afghan national security forces," the coalition statement said. "This well-organized, co-operative engagement was exactly the operation needed to restore security to Panjwai, where extremists have been intimidating and threatening the people," it added.
"This dynamic, complex operation demonstrates that insurgents do not operate freely in southern Afghanistan, and that Canadian and Afghan national security forces are fully capable of defeating this enemy wherever they operate. No sanctuary is too formidable or too remote. These extremists will be defeated at every encounter."
Female soldiers such as Capt. Goddard are considered to be an oddity by many Afghans. In provinces such as Kandahar, most women are almost always obliged to be shrouded in an all-encompassing burqa when they venture outside.
Gen. Raufi said he would prefer to see female soldiers relegated to back-up roles such as logistics and communications. They should not be on the front lines of battle, he said. "Men are better at fighting," he said.
Yet he praised Capt. Goddard for her sacrifice. "Canada should be proud of this woman. She came to our country to help the people and bring security."
RIP :'(