Active-duty soldier: “I will not go to war again”

The following sttement was originally published by March Forward! and was written by a March Forward! member who is a
21-year-old active-duty soldier in 1st Battalion, 377 Field Artillery
Regiment at Fort Lewis, Washington. After deploying to Iraq in 2009-10,
he saw the reality of the wars we are sent to fight and developed a
strong moral opposition to what our role is in the U.S. military.

He
has taken a heroic stand and become a conscientious objector. Not only
that, he is speaking publicly about his decision, telling other soldiers
that they too have the right to refuse to take part in wars they do not
agree with.

But he needs our support. His CO paperwork
is still in process, so we must build community support in the event
that he is denied his rights. Share his story widely so it can reach active-duty troops stationed across the country and the world.

My
name is Daniel Birmingham. I am a specialist in the United States Army
and I am a conscientious objector. A lot of you may not know what that
is. Neither did I six months ago. It is something the military does not
want you to know about, something they will never tell you about, so I
will. This may save your life and save you a lot of trouble and finally
let you be proud of something you are doing

A conscientious objector as stated in AR 600-43 is a person with
firm, fixed and sincere objection to participation in war in any form or
the bearing of arms, because of religious training or beliefs. I began
to question my role in the military while I was in Iraq in 2009-10. I
was raised in a low income family, but never had witnessed living
conditions like I saw in Iraq. I joined the military thinking I was
doing a great thing that I would be proud of and that quickly changed.

We
are told that we are helping people and fighting for our freedom.
Instead innocent people are being killed, I have lost most of my freedom
and we have done nothing but generated more hatred in the world. The
people I have waved rifles at have never done anything to me or you.
Some do choose to fight back, but you have to put yourself in their
position. If another country invaded the United States of America, we
would do the same. They beg for water, wash their bodies in water filled
with chemicals and live in destroyed villages. They are far from a
threat to the people of our country and need actual help, not war.

When
I returned from Iraq I was not the same person I was when I first
joined the military. I began to look at situations from a different
perspective. All my motivation for being a soldier was gone and I knew I
could not do it any longer. As I tried to find my way out I felt
trapped as I contemplated going AWOL. I felt trapped just like a lot of
others have before and still do.

Eventually I refused to work; I
did not show up and when I was called I told my chain of command I was
done working for the Army. I did agree to go and talk to my first
sergeant later that day. I was very surprised that he listened and
understood. However I was still not told about the option of being a
conscientious objector. I then met with counselors and a psychiatrist,
but still was not told. Then when I was explaining my beliefs to one of
my NCOs from Iraq he asked why I had not applied to be a CO. After
speaking to him and a chaplain I did my research on it and finally found
what I had been looking for the entire time.

My beliefs are not
based on religion; they are based on personal morals. I cannot kill a
person who has a harder life than I do, who has never done anything to
affect myself or my family. I cannot be morally happy with myself being a
part of this organization. I had a conscience long before religion was
ever introduced to me. I never had to read a Bible or Quran to know that
killing another human being was wrong
—especially
in wars that we know the politicians are lying about, wars that the
majority of the American people oppose. That is psychologically embedded
into us from the beginning as we all have emotions.

I worked on
my CO paper for a little over a month before I was ready to submit my
application. I was told not to tell people about what I was doing but I
could not follow that order. I explained my situation to anyone who was
willing to listen because one day soon they could have views like mine. I
want to let as many people know that they do have power and do not have
to fight in these unethical wars if they do not want to. I want these
new soldiers to ask themselves if their life is worth $35,000 of
deployment money. Ask themselves if they have any idea of why we are in
these other countries because there is not a good answer to that
question, nobody has one.

There are so many people who go AWOL,
do drugs, or, even worse, choose to take their own lives because they
cannot deal with that what they have seen or done and they know they
cannot do it again. You do not have to resort to any of these drastic
options, you just have to have the courage to stand up and say no. You
can stand up for your beliefs and make a true impact, and that is your
right. You still have a voice.

Sign the petition in support of Spc. Danny Birmingham!

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