desertfox115 said:Good quote. If its sanction by the suppose U.N. Council ?
Then its legal and binding war.
It is a pretty lame excuse to said you join to do humanitarian work when you train for war and to fight domestic or foreign enemy's.
Flawed Design said:So FastEddie let me get this straight
Deserters should be held in the same regard as rapists and murderers.
Someone who may have serious PTSD from back to back tours who's job may have been picking up body parts for 14 months a go, who has fulfilled their contract but caught under stop loss and told their going BACK again should just STFU because they signed on the dotted line.
Your pissed off that some people in society sometime vilifies LEOs and it burns your cookies that they may have sympathy for deserters?
It pisses you off when someone video tapes a cop/cops physically arresting someone where violence is present.
Anyone who doesn't agree with your point of view is a bleeding heart?
As for the whole comrade dying because you didn't get on the plane. That can go both ways.
Example that US soldier who threw a grenade into his headquarters group killing some of them.
Or even hypothetically speaking if someone just DOES NOT want to be in the fight and has done everything they can to get OUT of the fight but go anyways, ends up freezing up during a firefight, runs away from their post, commits suicide etc.. Is it safe to say by that logic that forcing one of these deserter wanna-be's to deploy actually caused allied soldiers to die?
I'm trying to follow you're point of view but it really seems like you have a chip on your shoulder about how LEOs are treated and I'm not making the connection here.
desertfox115 said:Volunteer army you join up at your own free will.
I believe if you can't full fill your contract then request discharge or be assign to another job till you are discharge.
No soldier wanted an wild card that can't back up his team out in the field that endanger the hole group
safety and compromise there objective. :-[
Forcing a person to fight in a combat role does not work or having them endanger there fellow members.
During the Second World War the Liberal government force draft dodgers to go to Europe mainly because lack of troop manpower.
Nobody wanted them there on there front lines because they were consider not trust worthy and they were force there by the government.
A free volunteer army fight more better than an force enlistment .
Army deserter's bid to avoid deportation rejected
Updated Mon. Jul. 14 2008 7:30 PM ET
The Canadian Press
VANCOUVER -- American army deserter Robin Long could be deported to his country as early as Tuesday after a Federal Court judge rejected his application for a stay of his deportation order.
The 25-year-old fled to Canada in 2005 to avoid serving in Iraq.
Long was arrested in Nelson, B.C. last October on a Canada-wide warrant.
He said he sought refuge in Canada because the U.S. army wanted him to participate in what he calls an illegal war of aggression in Iraq.
In her ruling, Federal Court of Canada Justice Anne Mactavish says Long did not provide clear and convincing evidence that he will suffer irreparable harm if he is returned home.
Outside the court, one of his supporters said he is unaware of any other recourse for Long and that he will likely be deported on Tuesday.
Canada deports U.S. soldier opposed to Iraq war
Updated Tue. Jul. 15 2008 5:46 PM ET
CTV.ca News Staff
A U.S. soldier who fled to Canada because he refused to serve in Iraq has been deported, and now faces a possible court martial.
Robin Long crossed the border into Canada in 2005. Last October, he was arrested in Nelson, B.C., on a Canada-wide warrant.
He called military operations in Iraq "an illegal war of aggression."
On Monday, Federal Court of Canada Justice Anne Mactavish said Long did not provide enough convincing evidence that he will face irreparable harm if he's sent back to the United States.
She noted that the percentage of American military deserters prosecuted in the U.S. has increased since 2002. However, she said the vast majority were not prosecuted, let alone jailed for desertion.
Between 2002 and 2006, Mactavish said about 94 per cent of U.S. deserters only received "a less than honourable discharge from the military."
Long, 25, had argued that he would be "singled out for harsh treatment by the Americans because of the publicity associated with his case."
But the judge ruled that Long failed to provide clear evidence in support of his argument.
Following the ruling, the chairman of the Vancouver War Resisters' Support Campaign said he believed Long's deportation would be the first time an army deserter has been forced out of Canada.
Bob Ages said Long will likely be returned to Fort Knox.
"We will be caucusing, trying to figure out what we can do,'' said Ages.
Long is one of several U.S. army deserters who claimed refugee status in Canada but none have yet been successful.