milnewstbay said:The NDP invited Juarez to its policy convention this weekend, its members proud to meet a veritable "war-resister" on the same day their party voted to pull Canadian troops out of Afghanistan.
He says he's no war resister - he was never actually deployed to Afghanistan.
He also describes in vivid detail the issues that soldiers grapple with before heading on a hazardous mission
Well, in 1987 or 88 (or so), The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment did something "similar" to this on a GMT course being run in Point Petre, south of Belleville in Prince Edward County. We had two weeks to train these guys before the infantry portion. Just prior to deploying, the US Navy shot down that Iranian Passenger liner over the Persian Gulf. So, that was the last contact with the real world that these recruits had.rcac_011 said:Hence why I have always said we should have a "snowball" one night and stand up all regs and reserves.Tell them we are leaving tomorrow and see who comes up with excuses.Put all the willing troops on trains/ bus,meet in a central location and have a big *** barbeque.Take all the mir commandos and people here for a paycheck who weasled out and release.
(BTW I know this is impossiable,logistically and human rights bullpoop....but common!)
milnewstbay said:
No whining, no grumbling, just realizing it wasn't for her, and left with no drama.
von Garvin said:Well, in 1987 or 88 (or so), The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment did something "similar" to this on a GMT course being run in Point Petre, south of Belleville in Prince Edward County. We had two weeks to train these guys before the infantry portion. Just prior to deploying, the US Navy shot down that Iranian Passenger liner over the Persian Gulf. So, that was the last contact with the real world that these recruits had.
Anyway, before I digress, the two weeks were almost up, and it became clear that if we were going to do the Escape and Evasion portion, the lads would know that it was coming on TONIGHT. So, over the period of two days, we fed them rumours of war. Not the instructors, but the CQ staff, complaining why they were always late with haybox supper out of CFB Trenton, because "1 RCR was all over the place: doing this, doing that, training a battalion's worth of men and FEEDING them from the same kitchen." and "I have never seen so many aircraft in one spot" and stuff like that. ................................................ (cut for length)
All the observations on cowardice are off-base. Like the individual described by milnewstbay, the guy in the article was getting his first taste of the Army (sure he was Navy, but that is not the same life as Infantry). The individual described by milnewstbay discreetly left (like many a part-time employee that finds a new job does not meet expectations) while the attention whore in the article felt the need to become a hero. His method was to make an ass of himself and then claim to be a victim of issues which never touched him (and issues which never would have touched him unless he volunteered to go).milnewstbay said:No whining, no grumbling, just realizing it wasn't for her, and left with no drama.
He was never supposed to go. He is a lying attention thief.Patrick H. said:I can only imagine how annoying it would be to listen to him bitch and moan all the way to Afghanistan and then more when he got there, possibly getting somebody killed because of his careless attitude.
MCG said:He was never supposed to go. He is a lying attention thief.
Afghan war resister speaks out: Disillusioned Canadian says why 'wrong mission' forced him to quit army reserves
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VICTORIA - Early this year, Francisco Juarez joined the Canadian army reserves intent on volunteering for duty in Afghanistan.
He expected to be dispatched to Afghanistan in 2008 as a second lieutenant. He hoped to act as a liaison between the Canadian military and local Afghan officials.
But Juarez, who describes himself as Canada's first Afghanistan war resister, quit the reserves in June because of his growing disillusionment with Canada's counter-insurgency action in southern Afghanistan.
"I am resisting this war because this is the wrong mission for Canada," said Juarez, a 35-year-old Victoria resident.
"By directly engaging in war in southern Afghanistan, we are escalating rather than reducing opposition to the Western troops and to Canadians."
Juarez, who grew up in Vancouver and the Sunshine Coast, joined the navy in 2002, attracted by the prospect of a steady paycheque. He was based in Esquimalt and considered making the military his career.
He switched to the army reserves last year to have more time to complete a correspondence course in justice studies at Royal Roads University.
His left-of-centre parents were strongly opposed to the possibility that he might serve in the Afghanistan war. They said the new Conservative government was following U.S. foreign policy rather than Canada's peacekeeping tradition.
Eventually, after much reading about the Afghanistan conflict, Juarez came to the same conclusion.
"I decided that I could no longer support the mission and work in that environment."
Juarez felt the Afghanistan conflict was becoming a replay of Iraq, where the aggressive presence of U.S. troops appeared to strengthen rather than weaken the insurgency.
He became convinced that the powerful sense of Islamic group identity among the rural peasants of southern Afghanistan was making them more sympathetic to the Taliban than to NATO soldiers.
Shortly after beginning infantry school in Gagetown, N.B. in June, Juarez decided he wanted out.
He spoke with an army chaplain and wrote a memo to his commanding officers, saying he wanted out of the military for personal and family reasons.
Juarez was hauled in front of two army captains and told he would regret his decision and would feel like a failure for the rest of his life. They told him to go back to work.
A few days later, during early morning training, Juarez refused to walk onto an obstacle course. Under questioning, he told officials that he didn't support the Afghanistan mission.
They fined him $500 for poor discipline but eventually agreed to give him a discharge without a court martial.
As a member of the army reserves rather than the regular Canadian Armed Forces, Juarez was never in danger of being sent to Afghanistan without his consent. He said he quit the military so he would be free to speak out.
After his return to Victoria in the summer, Juarez became an anti-war activist. He criticized the war during a panel discussion at the federal New Democratic Party convention in September.
He is scheduled to speak tonight at an anti-war event at the Unitarian Church at 49th and Oak St. in Vancouver.