Hundreds welcome home Army Spc. Agustin Aguayo

Aguayo in Stockton
Agustin Aguayo (rear center) welcomed in Stockton, California 5/11/07. Photo Jeff Paterson

Agustin joined by other Iraq War vets and resisters on whirlwind speaking tour

“Before I left for Iraq I searched deep within me, I concluded that if I go over there I can’t take a life. I ultimately say I’ll go, but I’m definitely a conscientious objector. I’m not willing to cross that line, no matter what I can’t take a life.” Two years later, after his application for discharge was a conscientious objector was denied by the Pentagon, Army Spc. Agustin Aguayo went AWOL in order to resist redeploying to Iraq.

resisters
Iraq War resisters Agustin Aguayo, Robert Zabala, Pablo Paredes & Camilo Mejia, Watsonville CA 5/14/07. Photo Jeff Paterson

Last Thursday, Courage to Resist supporters joined his wife Helga at the Sacramento airport to welcome Agustin home from a U.S. military prison in Germany where he was held for eight months as a prison of conscience for his unjust conviction for desertion.

Since then, Agustin has shared his story of resistance at community gatherings in Sacramento, Carmel, and San Francisco. Highlights of Agustin’s first week as an anti-war activist also included presentations to day labors, farm workers, and their families in Stockton, and high school and college students in Watsonville.

View the Courage to Resist photo gallery of Agustin's Northern California tour.

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Courage to Resist launches MySpace operations

MySpace

U.S. Army bans MySpace!

www.myspace.com/couragetoresist

Courage to Resist. May 17, 2007

In the name of limited bandwidth and national security, the Army has banned MySpace, YouTube, and nine other social networking websites. Not only does this come only days after Courage to Resist launched our own MySpace outreach effort, it comes the day after the Army itself opened a YouTube channel dedicated to sharing the “good news that goes unreported” in Iraq! No word yet that www.couragetoresist.org has been banned.

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Gulf War objector arrested at library for opposing recruiting

Yvette and Tim Coil
Yvette and Tim Coil

On March 12, Tim and Yvette Coil peacefully objected to military recruiting in the Stow Monroe Falls public library in Stow, Ohio. The library director later called the police and Tim Coil was arrested.

"My husband, Tim Coil, and I, Yvette Coil, went to the Stow Monroe Falls library in Stow, Ohio. Soon after two uniformed military recruiters arrived and proceeded to recruit a young man. Frustrated with this happening in the public library, I told a library employee that I was going to set cards on the window of the room in which the recruiters were recruiting stating my opinion of the military and this war. She said that as long as there was no confrontation she didn't mind. On 3x5 cards I wrote, "There is no honor in fighting for a lying President," and "Dont do it! Recruiters lie!" and set them outside the window..."

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Army Pvt Marc Train marches on DC instead of Iraq

marc train
Marc Train at the 'March on the Pentagon' 3/17/07. Photo: Jeff Paterson / Courage to Resist

"Just because we volunteered, doesn't mean we volunteered to throw our lives away for nothing. You can only push human beings so far," says Marc Train, a 19-year old soldier from America's heartland. "Soldiers are going to Iraq multiple times. The reasons we're there are obviously lies. We're reaching a breaking point, and I believe you're going see a lot more resistance inside the military."

By Sarah Olson, Truthout. April 19, 2007

Train's a private in the US Army, stationed at Fort Stewart in Georgia. But the last time anyone saw him on base was March 16, just before he headed to DC to protest the war he is expected to fight.

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Audio: Army interrogator on why he resisted Iraq War

ricky clousing
Ricky Clousing at 8/12/2006 press conference in Seattle. Photo: Jeff Paterson / Courage to Resist

April 18, 2007

Sgt. Ricky Clousing did three months in an Army brig for refusing to return to Iraq. He speaks with independent journalist Sarah Olson about his experiences in Iraq that led him to find the courage to resist an illegal and unjust occupation war. 20 min. MP3 audio (13.7 MB)

“He was bleeding. I’m looking down at his eyes, and he looked up at me. It was an intense moment. I feel like this communication, questions he might have been feeling or asking. Like, “why did he get shot?” “Why does it hurt so much?” “Why are we there?” “What’s going on?” “Why is this happening to him?” I was asking these questions… I was on the same team of people that just took this person’s life so casually and unnecessarily...”

“I knew that I could finish my time and realistically end up going back to Iraq at least once. Or I could go AWOL… I thought. "wow," I actually do have a choice.”

 
War resisters welcomed in Canada

brandon hughey
US Army soldier Brandon Hughey applying for refugee status in Canada. Photo: Lewis / AP

By Reuben Apple, Eye Weekly (Toronto, Canada). April 5, 2007

Americans, insurgents, militiamen and others fighting in Iraq have killed 30,000 Iraqis, if you believe US President George W. Bush, or over 600,000, according to researchers at John Hopkins University. There is near-unanimous agreement that the United States did not invade Iraq in self-defence, and the United Nations did not say America could attack. The new Iraqi oil law and Abu Ghraib are examples of systematic plunder and torture.

Related news about US troops in Canada resisting the Iraq War: Denver Post's "Fight or flight" (4/15/07) and Newsweek's "The number of soldiers deserting the U.S. Army is rising" (3/27/07).
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Resistance then and now

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"As a counselor on the GI Rights Hotline, I know that, for every GI in the news refusing to fight, there are thousands more GIs quietly saying, "No!" to this war."

By Susan Galleymore, Courage to Resist. Published in Left Curve Journal Spring 2007.

One of the best kept secrets of our time is the ferocious GI resistance to the war in Vietnam. It covered the gamut from individual, passive, and unorganized to overtly active, collective, and organized. It sprouted in military barracks and on aircraft carriers. It flourished in army stockades, navy brigs, and in the dingy towns that surround military bases. It penetrated elite West Point, spread through Vietnam's battlefields and, according to a Vietnam-era military officer, by 1971 it had infested the entire armed services. Until the recent screening of the documentary, Sir, No Sir!, the American public knew little about the resistance to that war.

Today, there is budding GI resistance to this war, the Global War on Terror (GWOT). So far, resistance has not blossomed into the near-epidemic of that time but the ground is fertile and thanks to Sir, No Sir! GIs are learning their history and emulating their forebears.

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Robert Zabala ordered discharged as a conscientious objector

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Civilian federal judge sides with Marine objector

By Aaron Glantz, posted on AntiWar.net. April 6, 2007

University of California Santa Cruz student Robert Zabala joined the Marine Corps thinking it would be a "place where he could find security" after the death of his grandmother in 2003.

But when he began boot camp in June 2003, Zabala said he had an ethical awakening that would not allow him to kill other people. He was particularly appalled by the boot camp's attempts to desensitize the recruits to violence.

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It's time for our government to follow the will of the people
ImageBy Army Sgt. Kevin Benderman. April 13, 2007

“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” Benjamin Franklin

Isn’t that exactly what is happening in Iraq and the war of choice?

We now hear from many who say the troop surge is working but they present no facts to back their claim. On the other hand there are many facts being presented everyday to show that the level of violence is not going down in Iraq.
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Darrell Anderson, Iraq combat veteran and war resister, needs support

ImageDarrell Anderson was deployed to Iraq with the Army's 1st Armoured Division in the spring of 2004. Darrell served most of his time in Baghdad where he was wounded by a roadside bomb after serving for 7 months. Facing the possibility of a second deployment to Iraq, Darrells conscience kept him from returning to the military. After witnessing the abuse and killing of Iraqi civilians and being ordered to fire on an automobile containing Iraqi civilians, Anderson concluded that the war is wrong. He fled to Canada rather than face the possibility of returning to Iraq. On October 6, 2006 Darrell returned to the United States and turned himself in at Ft. Knox in KY. Before turning himself in he held a press conference in which he stated, "I believed it was my human right to choose not to kill innocent people" Darrell was released from the Army three days later and is now organizing support for other miliatry resisters as member of Iraq Veterans Against the War.

March 27 Update: Darrell's fight is not yet over. He still suffers from PTSD and other health issues related to his service in Iraq. He needs and deserves VA benefits that his "other than honorable" prevent him from obtaining. Darrell still has $4,000 in oustanding legal fees that he needs to pay before he can fight for his discharge upgrade to get VA benefits. Please help this Iraq combat veteran and courageous resister get the support and care he deserves.

Please send donations to "Darrell Anderson Legal Fees Fund", P.O. Box 54675, Lexington KY 40555-4675. Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 
Iraq War resister Kyle Snyder arrested in Canada, then released

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Kyle Snyder speaking at a Courage to Resist rally, SF, 12/9/06 . Photo: Jeff Paterson

U.S. Army requested the illegal apprehension

By Gerry Condon, February 28, 2007.

On Friday, February 23, U.S. war resister Kyle Snyder was arrested in British Columbia for unspecified immigration violations. Police in Nelson, BC barged into Snyder’s home, handcuffed him, and hauled him off to jail. The police had no warrant. Snyder, who was wearing only a robe and boxer shorts at the time, was not allowed to put on clothes or shoes. He was not read his rights or allowed to call his lawyer. Nelson police told him he would be deported to the U.S., where he is wanted for unauthorized absence from the U.S. Army.

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Troops urge end to Iraq occupation

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As of March 13, 2007 over 1,700 active duty military, reserve, and guard service members have signed an "appeal for redress" urging congress to end the U.S. military occupation of Iraq.

"As a patriotic American proud to serve the nation in uniform, I respectfully urge my political leaders in Congress to support the prompt withdrawal of all American military forces and bases from Iraq. Staying in Iraq will not work and is not worth the price. It is time for U.S. troops to come home."

www.appealforredress.org

 
How Lt. Watada and GI resistance movement beat the Army
Iraq Vets
Recent Iraq War vets join all-day rally for Lt. Watada, Ft. Lewis WA. 2/5/07
Commentary by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist. February 14, 2007


FORT LEWIS, WA – Last week in the Army court martial of First Lieutenant Ehren K. Watada, the first officer to publicly refuse to fight in Iraq, military judge Lieutenant Colonel John Head orchestrated a legal mulligan. The prosecution had just rested a poorly argued case before the jurors. This “do over” proclamation appeared to offer the government a chance to get their act together and try again in the spring. However, given the likelihood that the entire case against Lt. Watada will eventually be dismissed due to the constitutional protection against double jeopardy, the question is why?

Also from Courage to Resist:
Lt. Watada mistrial clear victory, “very likely” unqualified (Feb. 8)
1,000 rally for Lt. Watada at Ft. Lewis during court martial (Feb. 6)
Stand with Lt. Ehren Watada - court martial underway (Feb. 5)
Army drops activist subpoenas for Lt. Watada trial (Jan. 31)
Lt. Watada prosecutors surrender on journalist subpoenas (Jan. 28)
Judge rules “illegal war” debate forbidden during court martial (Jan. 16)

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Active duty Army Sergeant, Ronn Cantu, speaks out from Iraq about the announced troop escalation
Image"It’s a belief of the soldiers I’ve talked to that any troop increase over here, it’s just going to be more sitting ducks, more targets," said Sgt. Ronn Cantu in a "Democracy Now!" interview the day following the announced troop escalation.

Sgt. Cantu, 28, is a member of the First Cavalry Division stationed in Iraq and a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War . He is currently on his second tour in Iraq and recently signed the "Appeal for Redress" a petition to Congress calling for the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq. The appeal, currently signed by over 1,000 active duty troops, will be delivered to Congress on January 16. Sgt. Cantu also started a forum called Soldier Voices to provide a place for other soldiers to speak about the Iraq war.
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Suzanne Swift released from the brig, supporters rally outside Ft. Lewis
ImageJanuary 3, 2007-Supporters of Spc. Suzanne Swift rallied outside Fort Lewis, Washington this morning to welcome the news that Swift had been released from military prison. Photos: Suzanne Swift released from the brig, supporters rally outside Ft. Lewis
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