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Home Front: WoT
U.S. deserter faces deportation from Canada
2008-05-22
A U.S. soldier who deserted to Canada will not face persecution if he returns to the United States, Canada's refugee agency ruled Wednesday.

National Guard Sgt. Corey Glass, 25, says he fled to Toronto in 2006 after serving in Iraq because he did not want to fight in a war he did not support. "What I saw in Iraq convinced me that the war is illegal and immoral. I could not in good conscience continue to take part in it," Glass said Wednesday. "I don't think it's fair that I should be punished for doing what I felt morally obligated to do."

Glass, who's still on active duty and is considered absent without leave, applied for refugee status at the Canadian border in August 2006 on the grounds of objection to military service.

But Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board denied his application for refugee status Wednesday, prompting the Canadian Border Services Agency to issue a June 12 deportation order. The agency says it evaluates each case on its own merits to determine whether the applicant faces a "well-founded fear" of persecution or cruel and unusual punishment if he returns to his home country.

"All refugee claimants have a right to due process," said Danielle Norris, a spokeswoman for Customs and Immigrations Canada. "When they have exhausted all legal avenues, we expect them to respect our laws and leave the country."

Glass, of Fairmont, Indiana, says he joined the National Guard believing that he would be deployed only if the United States faced occupation. After he returned from his first tour of duty, he said, he tried to leave the Army but was told that desertion was punishable by death. Penalties for desertion range from a demotion in rank to a maximum penalty of death, depending on the circumstances, said Maj. Nathan Banks, an Army spokesman.
If we can't prosecute Pelosi or Carter for meddling with foreign affairs, I somehow doubt he'll get more than a bit of time in the brig and a DD.
"The first thing we try to do is rehabilitate and retrain the soldier to see if we can keep him," he said. "Remember, we're at war, so everybody counts. When you decide to desert, you let everybody down."

Banks said that it is up to the deserter's commanding officer to decide on an appropriate punishment if the soldier refuses to return.

Members of War Resisters Support Campaign in Canada, which is providing transitional support to Glass and at least 13 other deserters in Canada, are holding out for a political avenue of appeal through the Canadian House of Commons.

In December, the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration adopted a motion calling on the Canadian government to initiate a residency program for conscientious objectors who have left military service "related to a war not sanctioned by the United Nations." The motion has yet to receive approval from the entire House of Commons.

Norris says the agency has received about 40 applications for refugee claims from U.S. deserters since the Iraq war began in 2003. Of the claims that have been addressed in public, only five have made it to the country's Federal Court of Appeals, a venue of last resort. All five appeals were rejected, according to Norris.

The high court has yet to rule on its sixth challenge of this kind from Army combat engineer Joshua Key, who fled to Saskatchewan with his wife and four children in 2005. "This has been our home for three years now. It's a lot like the U.S., and it's as close to the U.S. as you can be," said Key, who served on the front lines in Falluja before he returned to the United States in 2002.
As close to the U.S. as you can be without any of the responsibility for the land of your birth. He pro'ly said that with a smile, too.
Key said that fleeing to Canada was a difficult but obvious choice when faced with returning to Iraq. "There was nothing but violence and innocent civilians dying in our hands for no justification," Key said. "We became the terrorists."
So if we can prove that this isn't the case, will you pick up a rifle and get to work?
Posted by:gorb

#23  Jimmeh pardoned Slick Willie?
Posted by: Bobby   2008-05-22 19:57  

#22  He was probably hoping to hang out in Canada until President Obama can pardon him, just like Jimmeh pardoned all the Viet Nam draft dodgers and deserters.
Posted by: Rambler in California   2008-05-22 14:03  

#21  "I don't think it's fair that I should be punished for doing what I felt morally obligated to do"

Great big DUH to this pinhead. Moral obligations HAVE A COST! If you are not prepared to pay them then shut the hell up about morals.

Tell that "I dont think its fair" to the bus riders in Selma, tell that to the victims of the USSR who were in the Gulag, tell that to Sait Maximillian Kolbe who died in a Nazi concentration camp... the list goes on and on.

Whinging bastard. Have the courage to stand for your belief, and the courage to face the consequences like a man.
Posted by: OldSpook   2008-05-22 13:06  

#20  Expect some more of these guys to be coming back to you soon. The Conservative minority government can turf them out and the Liberal opposition won't do anything about it for fear of overturning the government and forcing a federal election that they can't win.

Bye bye, dudes.
Posted by: Canuckistan sniper   2008-05-22 12:51  

#19  You don't just go running off to Canada, there are procedures for this sort of thing. You can press your case and get assigned domestically, or reassigned to a unit that is not combat related, but humanitarian in nature. This guy is just a spoiled little coward that bugged out and ran to canada where he thought he'd thumb his nose at the Army. For making himself a pain in the ass I think they owe him a long vacation, Kansas is nice this time of year.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-05-22 12:11  

#18  JM3447, unless you're kidding about Venezuela, you really should talk to some Venezuelan ex-pats. I used to work with one, and he absolutely despises Hugo and all he stands for.
Posted by: Rambler in California   2008-05-22 12:11  

#17  He can stay in Canukistan for all I care. If they deport him to the US, toss him in the stockade for a few years and then boot him with a dishonorable.
Posted by: mojo   2008-05-22 12:00  

#16  Hugo is an Indian.

Yup, as I've said before, my impression is that he's playing an ethnonationalim chord in his marxism and populist demagoguery, IE, the "true" (indian) venezuelian "have nots", vs the supposedly european "have"; it seems to be the same with morales, too.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2008-05-22 11:24  

#15  A5089, Hugo is an Indian. He, like most Central and South Americans has more Native American blood than European. In Hugo's case, maybe no European blood.
Posted by: wxjames   2008-05-22 11:16  

#14  Joluse Munster3447, there is a difference between a draft dodger and a deserter.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2008-05-22 11:11  

#13  said Key, who served on the front lines in Falluja before he returned to the United States in 2002.

We didn't go into Iraq until 03...


Posted by: Beavis   2008-05-22 11:00  

#12  I'd go to venezuela, but there are unavoidable issues, for me... apart from State-enforced socialismo, rampant crime and economic meltdown, its leader is a swarthy, overweight man with porcine eyes, always looking like he's sweating profusely, and who makes all kind of weird statements like he doesn't control himself. Kinda like a latin american mussolini, but without the chin.
My standards are very low (sarkozy...), but I expect my Elites to be of at least of average quality, if not better! Thankyouverymuch.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2008-05-22 10:46  

#11  I really, really hate deserters.

At the gut level, actual reality, desertion has nothing to do with politics, let alone a pathetic rehash of moth-eaten 60s memes. It is running out on your mates, abandonment and betrayal in a deeply personal sense. It is worse than treason because it is so personal.
Deserters are scum. Hang or shoot all of them.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2008-05-22 10:12  

#10  Tough to tell. I always thought Keith Olbermann was a parody, but guess what...
Posted by: tu3031   2008-05-22 09:24  

#9  I think JM may have been facetious. Maybe my Snark-o-meter is off, but I thought I could detect a hint of the driest snark.

(And JM forgot "a committment to free speech and free enterprise" in the VZ pitch.)
Posted by: Grenter Protector of the Geats4975   2008-05-22 09:16  

#8  Just for you, Joluse.

http://www.tripadvisor.com/Flights-g316066-Caracas_Central_Venezuela-Cheap_Discount_Airfares.html

I'd act fast before the airfares go up.
Posted by: tu3031   2008-05-22 08:38  

#7  A. The "sarge" doesn't seem the like the brightest bulb on the tree.
B. Let these losers stay there, with the provision being, they're shot if the try to come back.
Posted by: tu3031   2008-05-22 08:32  

#6  You're just the type of person Chavez is looking for, JM. Please consider moving permanently today.
Posted by: ed   2008-05-22 08:21  

#5  Who says America wants him back? Perhaps threatening to send him to Gitmo will help resolve this matter.
Posted by: ed   2008-05-22 08:18  

#4  I didn't know Venezuela is offering refuge for conscientious objectors against this unjust war, venezuela
which has transparent vote counting (unlike our own), highly developed democratic institutions (not tattered ruins like ours), and scrupulously lawful, beneficial leadership, that believes that education, medical care and social justice for the poor are human RIGHTS (unlike our "fuck the poor" leaders who have robbed us all blind).

I hope that the war resisters out there who need a place to go know the truth about Venezuela. It's not all that easy to know the truth, given the relentless lies and slander against Venezuela by the Bush Junta and the corporate news monopolies. And I hope that they are aware of Chavez's offer.
Posted by: Joluse Munster3447   2008-05-22 08:13  

#3  I cannot believe that Canada will not help this poor soul like they did hundreds of others during vietnam. This gentleman exercised his morality in a conscientious objection to an illegal and immoral war. God Bless Canada and DO NOT succumb to the pressures of the U.S!
Posted by: Joluse Munster3447   2008-05-22 08:08  

#2  actually, he didn't listen to much of it, did he? I could've phrased that better...
Posted by: Frank G   2008-05-22 08:01  

#1  Glass, of Fairmont, Indiana, says he joined the National Guard believing that he would be deployed only if the United States faced occupation.

so dickweed gets to determine the terms of his deployment? What part of his oath did he not listen to?
Posted by: Frank G   2008-05-22 08:00  

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