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Brother of N.F.L. Star Posts Antiwar Essay
RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD, New York Times
October 24, 2006
A brother
of Pat Tillman, the National Football League player who was killed in
combat in Afghanistan after leaving his sports career to serve in the
Army, has lashed out at the Iraq war in an essay published online.
The brother, Kevin Tillman, who was in the same Army Ranger unit as Pat
Tillman, a corporal who was killed on April 22, 2004, by fire from his
fellow soldiers under circumstances that the Pentagon continues to
investigate, sharply criticized American political leadership and
called the war ''an illegal invasion.''
''Somehow the more soldiers that die, the more legitimate the illegal
invasion becomes,'' Mr. Tillman wrote in the 660-word essay that was
posted on Thursday on Truthdig.com, a Web magazine offering news and
opinion from a ''progressive point of view.''
''Somehow,'' Mr. Tillman added, ''American leadership, whose only
credit is lying to its people and illegally invading a nation, has been
allowed to steal the courage, virtue and honor of its soldiers on the
ground.''
In what are apparently his most expansive public remarks since the
death of his brother at age 27, he also does not spare the American
public, which he suggests too often relies on superficial gestures to
support the troops instead of holding politicians accountable.
''Somehow back at home, support for the soldiers meant having a
5-year-old kindergartener scribble a picture with crayons and send it
overseas or slapping stickers on cars or lobbying Congress for an extra
pad in a helmet,'' he wrote.
Mr. Tillman ended with a suggestion that the elections on Nov. 7 are an
opportunity for people opposed to the war to send a message.
''Luckily this country is still a democracy,'' he wrote. ''People still
have a voice. People can still take action. It can start after Pat's
birthday,'' Nov. 6.
Despite Pat Tillman's fame and the outpouring of emotion after his
death, the Tillman family has generally kept a distance from antiwar
protesters, though they have often spoken of their efforts to find the
truth about what happened. Family members did not answer messages for
comment on Kevin Tillman's posting.
A spokeswoman for the Pat Tillman Foundation in San Jose, Calif., where
the Tillmans grew up, said, ''It is our understanding that Kevin
Tillman is not accepting interview requests.''
Pat Tillman, a safety for the Arizona Cardinals, left the team in
spring 2002 to join the Army along with Kevin Tillman, motivated in
part by the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and eventually training as a
Ranger. After a stint in Iraq, the brothers were sent to Afghanistan.
Pat Tillman died, the Army eventually concluded, after members of his
own unit shot him as they searched for enemy fighters in a canyon in
southeastern Afghanistan. An Afghan soldier fighting next to him also
died.
Kevin Tillman's essay was posted as Pentagon investigators close in on
the latest of several investigations into the case. Initially, the Army
had suggested that enemy fire had killed Pat Tillman. Later, the Army
conceded that his comrades had shot him.
Under pressure from the family and members of Congress, the inspector
general of the Defense Department and the Army Criminal Investigation
Command are examining the actions of members of Mr. Tillman's unit and
the initial investigation.
Daniel Kohns, a spokesman for Representative Michael M. Honda of
California, a Democrat from San Jose, who pushed for the
investigations, said Pentagon representatives said a month ago that
they expected to complete their work by the end of November or early
December.
A spokesman for the Pentagon said Monday that the investigations were
continuing. He declined to comment on Kevin Tillman's essay.
Robert Scheer, a liberal syndicated columnist and the editor of
Truthdig, based in Santa Monica, Calif., said he had written about the
case and had spoken to family members in the past.
Kevin Tillman's article was not solicited, Mr. Scheer said, and the
site agreed to Mr. Tillman's conditions for posting it. The conditions
were that it be posted unchanged aside from grammatical editing,
including the headline he had written, ''After Pat's Birthday.''
Mr. Scheer said Mr. Tillman had made it known that, after leaving the
military last year, he felt now was time to speak out, with his
brother's birthday approaching. Pat Tillman also had expressed anger
about the war to friends, several published reports have said.
''He is not proselytizing, he is not a political person,'' Mr. Scheer
said of Kevin Tillman. ''He just decided because his birthday was
coming up he felt strongly that he had to say something.''
Since the article went up on the Web site, it has received more than
4,000 responses, though Web server limits have prohibited publishing
that many, Mr. Scheer said.
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