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When a US soldier in Iraq won't soldier

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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-13-07 07:16 AM
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When a US soldier in Iraq won't soldier


Agustín Aguayo joined the US Army to support his family. He claims to be a conscientious objector. The Army convicted him of desertion.
Mary Wiltenburg


When a US soldier in Iraq won't soldier
By Mary Wiltenburg | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
from the August 13, 2007 edition


WÜRZBURG, GERMANY - No one looked comfortable at the sentencing hearing. Not family and friends who packed the US military courtroom's straight-backed benches. Not the rookie Army prosecutor in stiff dress greens who flushed with every "Your Honor." Not Judge R. Peter Masterton, whose usually animated face was now grave.

And not the convicted deserter – Army medic Agustín Aguayo – on the stand in a US military court in central Germany last March, pleading for understanding.

"I'm sorry for the trouble my conscience has caused my unit," Private 1st Class Aguayo said, his voice thick with emotion. "I tried to obey the rules, but in the end was at the very core of my being."

Colonel Masterton, a veteran military judge, stared down at his bench. The defense wanted him to free this man of conscience. The prosecution asked that he put the coward away for two years to show other soldiers that "they are not fools for fulfilling their obligation."

Aguayo craned to face the judge. "When I hear my sergeants talking about slashing people's throats," he said, crying openly, "if I'm not a conscientious objector, what am I when I'm feeling all this pain when people talk about violence?"

Next door in the press room, where reporters crowded to watch the proceedings on bleached, closed-circuit TVs, a soldier guarding the door wiped tears from his face.


more


uhc note: Tomorrow will have a segment titled 'A desperate escape, a prison cell, and a political awakening.'
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