Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Soldier is deported from Canada/Probe of Tillman Misinformation Goes Nowhere

US soldier who deserted over Iraq is deported

• Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington and agencies

guardian.co.uk,

• Wednesday July 16, 2008

Canada yesterday deported to the US the first American army deserter fleeing the Iraq war across the US-Canadian border.

Robin Long, 25, faces a possible court martial and jail, and even redeployment to Iraq .

He joined the army in 2003, after the invasion of Iraq , but became troubled by the war.

In 2005 he fled to Canada and applied for refugee status, because the US army wanted him to participate in what he called an "illegal war of aggression in Iraq ."

On Monday, the Federal court of Canada Justice Anne Mactavish ruled that Long could not provide clear evidence that he would suffer irreparable harm if returned to the US .

The Canada border services agency confirmed Long's removal, but declined to give other details, citing privacy laws. Long's refugee claim had already been rejected and he could not appeal this latest court ruling.

Some 200 other US soldiers are in Canada , counting on its history of welcoming 50,000 Americans fleeing the Vietnam draft.

Last month, Canada 's parliament urged the government to allow war resisters to remain.

However, opponents of granting refugee status to deserters argue that, unlike during the Vietnam war, the United States does not now have a military draft and members of its military are volunteers who know the potential risks.

This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Wednesday July 16 2008. It was last updated at 02:49 on July 16 2008.

• guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008

Published on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 by Associated Press

Probe of Tillman Misinformation Goes Nowhere

Congressional Investigators Fail to Uncover the Origins of Wrongful Accounts About the Former NFL Player’s Death and About the Iraq Rescue of Pvt. Jessica Lynch.

SAN FRANCISCO - A “striking lack of recollection” by White House and military officials has prevented congressional investigators from determining who was responsible for misinformation spread after the friendly-fire death of Army Ranger Pat Tillman in 2004, a House committee said Monday.

Although military investigators determined within days that the onetime NFL player was killed by his own troops in Afghanistan after an enemy ambush, five weeks passed before the circumstances of his death were made public. During that time, the Army claimed Tillman was killed by enemy fire.

The chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Henry A. Waxman (D-Beverly Hills), said in April 2007 that his goal was to learn if the misinformation was “the result of incompetence, miscommunication or a deliberate strategy.”

The panel has failed, it acknowledged Monday. It received a flurry of White House e-mails but no documents about friendly fire. It interviewed several top White House officials: “Not a single one could recall when he learned about the fratricide or what he did in response,” the committee’s 48-page report said.

The committee reported a similar lack of information relating to misinformation surrounding Pvt. Jessica Lynch, who was rescued from an Iraqi hospital after she was badly injured and captured in a 2003 ambush. The committee examined how the story of the ambush of her convoy was changed into a tale of her heroism.

“As the committee investigated the Tillman and Lynch cases, it encountered a striking lack of recollection,” the report said.

The panel concluded that the lack of information “makes it impossible for the committee to assign responsibility for the misinformation in Cpl. Tillman’s and Pvt. Lynch’s cases.”

Jim Wilkinson, a onetime White House official who was communications director for U.S. Central Command, told the committee he did not know where the false information on Lynch originated or who disseminated it.

White House officials sent or received nearly 200 e-mails about Tillman on April 23, 2004, the day after he died, the committee found. Several came from staffers for President Bush’s reelection campaign, urging Bush to respond publicly.

The White House “rushed” to release a public statement of condolence about noon April 23. In doing so, it violated a military policy enacted into law by Bush himself in 2003, the committee found. The Military Family Peace of Mind Act bars the announcement of a casualty until 24 hours after a family is notified.

The authors of the congressional report carefully avoided assigning blame or intent in either the Tillman or Lynch cases.

But they concluded: “In both cases, affirmative acts created new facts that were significantly different than what the soldiers in the field knew to be true. And in both cases, the fictional accounts proved to be compelling public narratives at difficult times in the war.”

© 2008 Associated Press

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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs


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