Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jan 2004 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2004 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Francine Dube Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/afghanistan CANADIAN-LED RAID UNCOVERS 16 DRUG SUSPECTS IN KABUL Camp Julien Soldiers Launch First Offensive Action Since Arriving In Afghanistan Last August: Operation Tsunami CAMP JULIEN, Afghanistan - The raid dubbed Tsunami began before dawn yesterday as light-armoured vehicles carrying Canadian soldiers and Kabul city police roared out of the base toward a crumbling neighbourhood believed to house drug traffickers with connections to a terrorist group. By the time it was over, 16 men were in custody, a result of the first offensive action by Canadian soldiers since they arrived in Kabul last August. The raid was a significant departure for the Canadians, who have thus far concentrated on forging contacts in the capital and the countryside, training local police and hosting dinners for Afghan National Army officials and tribal leaders. Yesterday those contacts paid off. "If there's a message ... it's that there's more than just one game in town," said Lieutenant-Colonel Don Denne, the commanding officer of Camp Julien, part of Canada's contribution to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. "We're now playing. Does this make us more of a target? Possibly." Regular military patrols by Canadians in troubled Kabul neighbourhoods have had a measurable impact on crime, Lt.-Col said. Denne. The focus has shifted toward rooting out criminal elements. "We're taking the fight to the source," he said. Yesterday's pre-dawn raid by 200 soldiers and dozens of Kabul city police had been in the works for two months, after intelligence sources alerted Canadians to suspicious activity at the compound. It ended yesterday morning as bags of money were removed from one of the two residences on the compound, along with an unknown quantity of drugs and two AK-47s. Handcuffed and hooded before being brought outside and lined up against the wall of the compound, one of the younger men began crying and asked through an interpreter, "What is going on? Am I going to die?" Another suspect asked when they were going to be set free. He said he and others had airline tickets to go on the hajj -- the pilgrimage to Mecca that ends with the largest celebration in the Muslim faith, Eid ul-Adha. They were to have left at 6 a.m. yesterday. It is believed some of the suspects may be associated with Hezb-i-Islami-Gulbuddin (HiG), founded by one of the most notorious right-wing Islamic leaders of Afghanistan, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. The group has been linked to Osama bin Laden. Five of the suspects were brought to Camp Julien later in the day for questioning. The Canadians and Kabul city police used ladders to scale the three-metre-high mud-brick walls of the compound, located at the end of a hard dirt road in a neighbourhood of crumbling mud-brick houses. One soldier's ladder broke. He grabbed on to the railing of a balcony and pulled himself over, escaping injury. Another soldier was slightly injured when he fell into a sewage-filled hole in the street while walking to the compound in the pitch black night before dawn. "Walking through open sewage is a common occurrence for us," said Sergeant Sean Bechard, one of the other soldiers involved in the raid. Sgt. Bechard and his fellow soldiers said they felt confident going in, having trained for years for just such a moment. There were two rehearsals at the camp before the team went in. One shot was fired after a metal battering ram failed to force open a locked door. A second shell jammed in the shotgun. Finally a soldier used his shoulder to force open the door. The raid was somewhat compromised when the soldiers came upon a pack of dogs before they reached the site. The dogs started barking and continued barking almost throughout the raid. "We still had an element of surprise. Not as much surprise as we would have liked," said Major John Vass, the officer commanding the Parachute Company. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin