CBSNews.com
Wednesday 08 December
2004
The Pentagon says more than 5,500
servicemen have deserted since the war started in Iraq.
60 Minutes Wednesday found several
of these deserters who left the Army or Marine Corps
rather than go to Iraq. Like a generation of deserters
before them, they fled to Canada.
What do these men, who have violated
orders and oaths, have to say for themselves? They told
Correspondent Scott Pelley that conscience, not cowardice,
made them American deserters.
"I was a warrior. You know? I
always have been. I’ve always felt that way -
that if there are people who can’t defend themselves,
it’s my responsibility to do that," says
Pfc. Dan Felushko, 24.
It was Felushko's responsibility to
ship out with the Marines to Kuwait in Jan. 2003 to
prepare for the invasion of Iraq. Instead, he slipped
out of Camp Pendleton, Calif., and deployed himself
to Canada.
"I didn’t want, you know,
'Died deluded in Iraq' over my gravestone," says
Felushko. "If I'd gone, personally, because of
the things that I believed, it would have felt wrong.
Because I saw it as wrong, if I died there or killed
somebody there, that would have been more wrong."
He told Pelley it wasn't fighting
that bothered him. In fact, he says he started basic
training just weeks after al Qaeda attacked New York
and Washington - and he was prepared to get even for
Sept. 11 in Afghanistan.
But Felushko says he didn't see a
connection between the attack on America and Saddam
Hussein.
"(What) it basically comes down
to, is it my right to choose between what I think is
right and what I think is wrong?" asks Felushko.
"And nobody should make me sign away my ability
to choose between right and wrong."
But Felushko had signed a contract
to be with the U.S. Marine Corps. "It's a devil's
contract if you look at it that way," he says.
How does he feel about being in Toronto
while other Marines are dying in Fallujah, Najaf and
Ramadi?
"It makes me struggle with doubt,
you know, about my decision," says Felushko.
What does he say to the families of
the American troops who have died in Iraq?
"I honor their dead. Maybe they
think that my presence dishonors their dead. But they
made a choice the same as I made a choice," says
Felushko. "My big problem is that, if they made
that choice for anything other than they believed in
it, then that's wrong. Right? And the government has
to be held responsible for those deaths, because they
didn’t give them an option."
Felushko’s father is Canadian,
so he has dual citizenship, and he can legally stay
in Canada. But it’s not that easy for other American
deserters.
Canadian law has changed since the
Vietnam era. Back then, an estimated 55,000 Americans
deserted to Canada or dodged the draft. And in those
days, Canada simply welcomed them.
But today’s American deserters,
such as Brandon Hughey, will need to convince a Canadian
immigration board that they are refugees.
Hughey volunteered for the Army to
get money for college. He graduated from high school
in San Angelo, Texas, just two months after the president
declared war in Iraq.
What did he think about the case for
going to war? "I felt it was necessary if they
did have these weapons, and they could end up in our
cities and threaten our safety," says Hughey. "I
was supportive. At first, I didn't think to question
it."
He says at first, he was willing to
die "to make America safe." And while Hughey
was in basic training, he didn't get much news. But
when he left basic training, he started following the
latest information from Iraq.
"I found out, basically, that
they found no weapons of mass destruction. They were
beginning to come out and say it's not likely that we
will find any - and the claim that they made about ties
to al Qaeda was coming up short, to say the least,"
says Hughey. "It made me angry, because I felt
our lives were being thrown away as soldiers, basically."
When Hughey got orders for Iraq, he
searched the Internet and found Vietnam era war resisters
willing to show him the way north. In fact, they were
willing to drive him there, and a Canadian television
news camera went along.
Hughey had an invitation to stay with
a Quaker couple that helped Americans avoid the draft
during Vietnam. From Fort Hood, Texas, to St. Catherine's
in Ontario, Canada, Hughey crossed the border, duty
free.
Pelley read letters about Hughey's
desertion that were sent to the editor of a San Antonio
newspaper.
"It makes me sad to know that
there's that much hate in the country," says Hughey.
"Before I joined the Army, I would have thought
the same way. Anyone who said no to a war, I would have
thought them a traitor and a coward. So, in that essence,
I'm thankful for this experience, because it has opened
my eyes and it has taught me not to take things on the
surface."
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However, he adds: "I have to say
that my image of my country always being the good guy,
and always fighting for just causes, has been shattered."
Hughey, and other deserters, will
be represented before the Canadian Immigration and Refugee
Board by Toronto lawyer Jeffry House.
His clients will have to prove that,
if they are returned to the United States, they wouldn't
just be prosecuted for what they did -– they would
be also be persecuted. How will House make that claim?
"People should have a right to
say, 'I'm not fighting in that war. That's an illegal
war. There's illegal stuff going on the ground. I'm
not going,'" says House. "And anyone who says
soldiers should go to jail if they don't fight in an
illegal war is persecuting them."
And it’s something House has
experience with. In 1969, he graduated from the University
of Wisconsin, got drafted, and spent the rest of his
life in Canada.
House's legal strategy will focus
on his contention that President Bush is not complying
with international law. But how will he defend volunteers
who signed a contract?
"The United States is supposed
to comply with treaty obligations like the U.N. charter,
but they don’t," says House. "When the
president isn’t complying with the Geneva Accords
or with the U.N. charter, are we saying, 'Only the soldier
who signed up when he was 17 - that guy has to strictly
comply with contract? The president, he doesn’t
have to?' I don’t think so. I don’t think
that is fair."
The first deserter to face the Canadian
refugee board is likely to be Spc. Jeremy Hinzman of
Rapid City, S.D. He joined the military in Jan. 2001,
and was a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne.
He wanted a career in the military,
but over time, he decided he couldn’t take a life.
"I was walking to chow hall with my unit, and we
were yelling, 'Train to kill, kill we will,' over and
over again," recalls Hinzman. "I kind of snuck
a peek around me and saw all my colleagues getting red
in the face and hoarse yelling - and at that point a
light went off in my head and I said, 'You know, I made
the wrong career decision.'"
But Hinzman said he didn’t want
to get out of the Army: "I had signed a contract
for four years. I was totally willing to fulfill it.
Just not in combat arms jobs."
While at Fort Bragg, Hinzman says
he filled out the forms for conscientious objector status,
which would let him stay in the Army in a non-combat
job.
While he waited for a decision, he
went to Afghanistan and worked in a kitchen. But later,
the Army told him he didn’t qualify as a conscientious
objector, and he was ordered to fight in Iraq.
Hinzman decided to take his family
to Canada, where he’s been living off savings
accumulated while he was in the military.
Wasn't he supposed to follow orders?
"I was told in basic training that, if I'm given
an illegal or immoral order, it is my duty to disobey
it," says Hinzman. "And I feel that invading
and occupying Iraq is an illegal and immoral thing to
do."
"But you can't have an Army of
free-thinkers," says Pelley. "You wouldn't
have an Army."
"No, you wouldn't. I think there
are times when militaries or countries act in a collectively
wrong way," says Hinzman. "I mean, the obvious
example was during World War II. Sure, Saddam Hussein
was a really bad guy. I mean, he ranks up there with
the bad ones. But was he a threat to the United States?
Still, isn't it worth fighting to
free the people of Iraq? "Whether a country lives
under freedom or tyranny or whatever else, that's the
collective responsibility of the people of that country,"
says Hinzman.
Hinzman and the other American deserters
have become celebrities of sorts in the Canadian anti-war
movement.
Only a few of the reported 5,500 deserters
are in Canada, but House says he's getting more calls
from nervous soldiers all the time.
Wouldn't the right and honorable thing
for deserters to do be to go back to the United States,
and turn themselves in to the Army?
"Why would that be honorable?"
asks House. "(Deserters signed a contract) to defend
the Constitution of the United States, not take part
in offensive, pre-emptive wars. I don't think you should
be punished for doing the right thing. What benefit
is there to being a martyr? I don’t see any."
Hinzman began his hearing before the
Canadian Immigration and Refugee board last Monday.
But there's no telling when he'll find out if he'll
be allowed to stay in Canada - or be sent back to the
United States to face the consequences.
The maximum penalty for deserting
in wartime is death. But it's more typical for a soldier
to draw a sentence of five years or less for deserting
in wartime. |