The Reality of Being a Target

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Description

While on duty, Mr. Palmer speaks about the awareness of becoming a target and realizes that harm could be done at any time during patrol.

Transcription

I really didn’t worry about myself because we sort of travelled in the background and I think of the time you were a target if you were a military convoy. So as we had been there for a series of months and the Canadian Army started arriving en masse, it became obvious that we were becoming a target. But militants at that point were sort of happy to attack military convoys and they had just started… we had become a target halfway through my tour when the 3rd battalion of the RCR were attacked in Camp Julian. One of their patrols had run over a landmine that was deliberately set, an IED, and a couple of their guys had been killed and one or two others had been seriously wounded. People that I knew when I was in the infantry or that I definitely knew of when I was in the infantry and strangely enough people that I worked with a decade later, one of them had been part of the explosion. So at that point we realized we weren’t there peacekeeping. This is not peacekeeping and even though we had moved from Kandahar to Kabul, you know, we were a target. It started off small but it became very clear that the days of blue helmets and peacekeeping were over and that we were being targeted by militants who would do whatever they could to get information on our movements including that of our senior military staff, General Leslie, our politicians and our soldiers. So it was something that ran through your mind quite often.

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