Two soldiers, one American and one British, have spoken out against the war in Iraq. The American, Joseph DuRocher, has returned his pilot’s wings:
Until your administration, I believed it was inconceivable that the United States would ever initiate an aggressive and preemptive war against a country that posed no threat to us. Until your administration, I thought it was impossible for our nation to take hundreds of persons into custody without provable charges of any kind, and to “disappear” them into holes like Gitmo, Abu Ghraib and Bagram. Until your administration, in my wildest legal fantasy I could not imagine a US Attorney General seeking to justify torture or a President first stating his intent to veto an anti-torture law, and then adding a “signing statement” that he intends to ignore such law as he sees fit. I do not want these things done in my name.Ben Griffin is an eight-year veteran of Great Britain’s SAS. He left the service after three months in Baghdad.
Mr Griffin, 28, who spent two years with the SAS, said the American military’s “gung-ho and trigger happy mentality” and tactics had completely undermined any chance of winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi population. He added that many innocent civilians were arrested in night-time raids and interrogated by American soldiers, imprisoned in the notorious Abu Ghraib prison, or handed over to the Iraqi authorities and “most probably” tortured.Bravery can be many things. There are brave soldiers of many nationalities in Iraq who serve their countries with honor and with their consciences at ease. They are there to do the job they have been handed, and they can be admired for doing so. But those to speak up against what they see as immoral acts on the part of their governments have their own brand of courage. We ignore their words at our peril.Mr Griffin eventually told SAS commanders at Hereford that he could not take part in a war which he regarded as “illegal”.
He added that he now believed that the Prime Minister and the Government had repeatedly “lied” over the war’s conduct.
“I did not join the British Army to conduct American foreign policy,” he said. He expected to be labelled a coward and to face a court martial and imprisonment after making what “the most difficult decision of my life” last March.
Instead, he was discharged with a testimonial describing him as a “balanced, honest, loyal and determined individual who possesses the strength of character to have the courage of his convictions”.



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April 13, 2006 at 6:59 am
buddy don
well sed, my frien.