Thank you, sir.
By the end of November, about 300 members from the Quebec sector will be sent to Afghanistan with the 1st Battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment. In August of next year, about 2,300 persons, most of them francophone, will be deployed in Afghanistan to ensure that that country succeeds.
The decision to send the soldiers from SQFT is mine. They are superb. They will be based on a battalion group from the Royal 22e Régiment. They're among the finest soldiers I have seen in my career. They are next on deck.
Currently, they are assembling the battle group. They will be going to the United States to do a bit of training on replicating the conditions of the desert, which we can't do in Canada during the winter. Then they will go to Wainwright, where they'll be focusing on development, security, combat operations, and training of indigenous forces. They will go on leave, and they will then deploy into the mission area where they will acquit themselves brilliantly.
In terms of lessons,
we have a team currently in Afghanistan that is trying to understand all the lessons that have been learned on the ground. This team
is with the forward companies in the battle group.
The members of this team are holding discussions with warrant officers, chief warrant officers and officers on a daily basis to find out what lessons are being learned.
When they finish with those lessons, they then send them back to our lessons-learned centre in Kingston.
After about two weeks, they send the answer to Wainwright or to Gagetown, which are respectively our centres for collective and individual training. About 10 days ago, I was in Afghanistan. From there, I went directly to Wainwright.
By the time I got to Wainwright, lessons from a variety of attacks were already being discussed by the training staff, how those would have an impact on how they were going to prepare the next group of soldiers.
You mentioned the interventions led by General Howard. I am not really an expert, because I have not dealt with such things for years. As I said, I only got back a week ago.
At the local level, the children wave and smile at passing Canadian soldiers. Watching them distribute food packages is remarkable. Afghans are a very proud people, and they're grateful to those who help them. At the level of the Afghan commanders, they are effusive in their praise and support for the Canadians alongside whom they fight. They are, quite literally, ties that are forged in blood.
From talking to some of the Afghan civilians, I hear that they are concerned because they want to see visible signs of progress. Afghanistan has 34 provinces, 30 million people, and this is a judgment on my part, but I would say in the vast majority of provinces, perhaps 20 to 25, the conditions are much better than when I was in Kabul in 2003. The conditions are much more problematic in five or six other provinces, of which, obviously, Kandahar is one. So when General Richards and President Karzai say the next year for Afghanistan is going to be decisive, I would listen to them very carefully indeed.
The good news is that of the four to six million--and I think the figure is six million--young children now going to school, 40% of them are young ladies, and that is truly remarkable. Arguably, the future of that country will rest with those educated young ladies, who will be able to impose a certain degree of order on what has been a very tribal warrior society. But that's a generational issue.