Top Stories -   

1
Soldiers carry the casket of slain Trooper Darryl Caswell down the tarmac at Kandahar, Afghanistan. (Canadian Forces / Sgt. Craig Fiander) Trooper Darryl Caswell, of the Royal Canadian Dragoons, died in a roadside bombing on Monday, June 11, 2007. (Canadian Forces) Trooper Steve Davidson, right, and Cpl. Wade Wick become emotional after speaking about the death of their friend, Darryl Caswell. Trooper Steve Davidson speaks with CTV News from the Canadian Forces base in Kandahar. Cpl. Wade Wick speaks with CTV News from the Canadian Forces base in Kandahar.

Slain soldier's friends grieve for his lost future

Viewer

CTV News Video

CTV News extended: Cpl. Wade Wick and Trooper Steve Davidson
soldier

A A |  Email ThisEmail  | Print Facebook   

Date: Thu. Jun. 14 2007 2:14 PM ET

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Somehow, being dressed in full battle gear makes them look stronger, older. And then you remember that a lot of the Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan are just out of high school, or university.

Some of them still call each other "dude" and like nothing better than a Friday night pub crawl. So why shouldn't they cry and hold each other for comfort when their best friend gets killed?

Still it, was awkward to watch, and not a private, personal moment, but one that was very public. Two young soldiers sitting in front of a TV camera talking about their friend Trooper Darryl Caswell, who was killed in Afghanistan by a roadside bomb.

"He's been the best friend I've ever had in my life," says Trooper Steve Davidson, who has short brown hair, and without his battle gear, seems too young and too delicate to go to war.

"He was truly an incredible person and it was an absolute honour to have a friend like that."

They are words on the verge of tears, and the more he talks, the more difficult it becomes.

On his right is Cpl. Wade Wick. He's a gunner and was in the same armoured vehicle that hit the roadside bomb. They were on a re-supply mission north of Kandahar City, on a route that some of the soldiers had complained was too treacherous, where it was too easy for the Taliban to plant their bombs. And so it happened.

"He'd do anything for you," says Wick. "He'd just be there. If you needed someone to talk to, he'd be there to listen, or to offer suggestions, to help in any way he could. And he never really asked for anything in return."

These three friends were due to leave Afghanistan and fly home together on July 31, what would have been Caswell's 26th birthday. Instead, Davidson and Wick were both pallbearers at his ramp ceremony on June 13.

"It was only fair," says Wick. "He was my driver. He transported us everywhere, and it's only fair that on his last leg..."

At this point, his shoulders shake a little and the tears can't be held back. Wick drops his head to hide his grief. There's a long silence before he can finish his sentence.

"It's only fair that we get to take him somewhere."

Davidson reaches over and puts his arm around his friend's shoulder. They embrace and softly weep. And they're not tough, battle-trained soldiers anymore, they're just a couple of young Canadian boys who have come to a troubled, broken country and lost a good friend.

Their commander is Lieutenant Colonel Rob Walker and with this latest death, he's lost nine soldiers from his Battle Group. There was no more danger on that road, he says, than anywhere else that his troops are now patrolling.

"Everything we do has risks, and as their commander, it's my job to mitigate that risk."

Walker describes the insurgency as "dynamic." That may be an understatement. There's been a recent upsurge in roadside bombings against Canadian targets; half a dozen in a single day. Military planners always vary the routes and tactics, but there's no way they can guarantee the safety of a convoy.

"The attacks that we're involved with, are of our own making," Walker says. "When we go into a specific area, we expect that we're going to have a 'contact,' have some fighting."

In fact, Caswell's convoy was moving into an area that Canada occupied for a while last year, and has now become a Taliban sanctuary. The colonel says a number of Arab and Chechen fighters have joined the local insurgents. He can't -- or won't -- say how many.

Put that together with the latest assessment from the International Red Cross, and the situation in Afghanistan doesn't look great. That may also be an understatement.

"The humanitarian situation is worse now than it was a year ago," says the Red Cross, referring to a steady deterioration in security, especially in the south.

A single, short sentence is their report says it all: "It is incredibly difficult for ordinary Afghans to lead a normal life."

And that is where Davidson and Wick find themselves this scorching Afghan summer, mourning the death of a friend.

"He'll always be a part of me now," says one. "He was a great man, and being so, made him a great soldier."

Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

CTV News

Soldiers with the Canadian Army's 1st Battalion Royal 22nd Regiment return to base on their final operation Thursday, June 30, 2011 in the Panjwaii district of Kandahar province, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Canada in Afghanistan

The latest news, photos and interactives from Canada's mission in Afghanistan.

Canadian Soldiers were injured when a Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV) Turret struck an on coming vehicle, outside Kandahar City, causing it to rotate 360 degrees wounding the two Canadian soldiers. (Cpl. Robin Mugridge / Department of National Defence)

Invisible Wounds

Angela Mulholland: Scope of injury toll in Afghanistan largely a mystery

Brain injuries among soldiers are often overlooked.

Blast-Induced Injuries

Brain injuries among soldiers serving in Afghanistan are often overlooked.

Doctor Louis-Philippe Palerme, right, from Gatineau, Quebec, is assisted by a Danish doctor, Captain Sacha Soelbeck, during a surgery at R3 MMU in Afghanistan.

Medical Advances

Soldiers survived injuries that, even 10 years ago, would have been fatal.

Cpl. Chris Klodt sits in a race chair. Klodt was shot in the neck July 7, 2006 during a Taliban ambush outside Kanadhar. The bullet was lodged in his spinal cord.

Soldiers Overcome Injuries

Wounded soldiers use sports to overcome injuries, adjust to their new reality.

Janis Mackey Frayer in Sperwan Ghar, Afghanistan

Kandahar Journal

Janis Mackey Frayer recounts sombre process of notifying next of kin.

Interactive

War Zone Medics

Lessons Learned

A number of the medical innovations that we now take for granted were conceived and tested during wartime.

Bios and Pictures

Casualties

Canadian Casualties

We remember those who lost their lives in Afghanistan since the mission began in 2002.

In Pictures

Canada's Last Days in Afghanistan

Concluding Combat

50 Pictures: Canadian troops conclude Afghan combat tour after a decade.

Kandahar transfer ceremony

Transfer Ceremony

In Pictures: Canada transfers control of Kandahar region to the U.S

Harper in Afghanistan

Harper in Afghanistan

25 Pictures: Stephen Harper meets with soldiers on his fourth Afghan trip.

Canada in Kandahar

Canada in Kandahar

30 Pictures: New tasks tackled as combat mission nears its end.

Operation Topak Shkar

Operation Topak Shkar

Canadian troops take on the Taliban in Operation Topak Shkar.