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Army Specialist Refuses to Return to Iraq
AWOL Soldier's Arrest Brings Out Supporters
Susan Palmer, Register-Guard
June 13, 2006
A soldier who deserted her Army unit to avoid a second tour of duty
in Iraq will be returned to Fort Lewis, Wash., today after being
arrested in Eugene on Sunday.
Eugene police arrested Suzanne Nicole Swift, 21, a specialist with
the 54th Military Police Company, after receiving a copy of a felony
warrant from the Fort Lewis provost marshal's office on Sunday. The
warrant indicated that Swift could be found at her mother's house and
officers arrested her there, Eugene police spokesman Rich Stronach
said. Swift had been absent without leave since January.
Swift was taken to the Lane County Jail where she was expected to be
handed over to military police today and returned to the Army base
near Tacoma. She could not be reached for comment.
Swift's mother, Eugene social worker Sara Rich, has been a vocal
opponent of the Iraq war, but said she didn't stand in her daughter's
way when Swift decided to join the Army in spring 2003. Swift had
graduated from South Eugene High School the year before and had been
working, but felt she wasn't getting anywhere, Rich said. The message
from Army recruiters - that she could receive an education and travel
- resonated. Rich said recruiters told her daughter if she signed up
for a five-year tour with the military police, she would not be sent
to Iraq.
But it didn't work out that way. After Swift became part of the
military police, her company was deployed to Iraq in February 2004.
She was stationed in Karbala, about 60 miles southwest of Baghdad.
The city - a holy site to Shiite Muslims - has seen its share of the
violence of war. Swift drove a Humvee on combat patrol there, her
mother said.
She came home to Fort Lewis in February 2005, believing she had the
standard 18 months decompression time before she would be redeployed,
Rich said. Mother and daughter visited whenever they could, but Swift
didn't tell her much about what she'd seen of the war.
"She had been through so much, but she didn't want to freak me out,"
Rich said.
Then Swift was asked to sign a waiver agreeing to return to Iraq
early, in January, 11 months after returning to the United States. It
was the last thing Swift wanted to do, Rich said. Having seen the war
first-hand, she had profound doubts about it, and had told her mother
she thought the war lacked purpose and that no one had benefited from
the U.S. presence in Iraq.
While she was in Iraq, she wrote to Rich about being repeatedly
sexually harassed by Army staff and was always anxious about being
assaulted, Rich said. She didn't complain because she thought it
would make things worse, Rich said.
Days before the redeployment in January, Swift was packed and ready
to go, but then broke down, car keys in hand, Rich said.
"She turned to me in the kitchen and said, `I can't go back there.' I
said, `Good, don't do it,' " Rich said.
So Swift stayed behind when the 54th Military Police Company returned
to Iraq. First she stayed with a friend in Brookings on the Southern
Oregon Coast, but in May, she came back to Eugene and moved in with
her mother.
Rich arranged for her to speak with an attorney and begin seeing a
psychologist for help with post traumatic stress disorder. She said
she would rather see her daughter imprisoned for desertion than
returned to Iraq.
Fort Lewis Army spokesman Joe Hitt confirmed that Swift would be
returned to Fort Lewis, but declined to discuss her situation
further. He said that her company commander will
determine appropriate punishment and that no decision had been made
in her case.
According to an Army spokesman at the Pentagon, the number of
soldiers absent without leave - AWOL, which means they are are
missing from their military unit for up to 30 days - is less than 1
percent of the total number of soldiers. In 2005, 2,011 soldiers were
reported AWOL, down from 4,483 in 2002, the spokesman said.
But those numbers don't add up, said the lawyer representing Swift.
Larry Hildes, a Bellingham, Wash., attorney who is part of a National
Lawyers Guild task force on military law, said there are hundreds of
lawyers around the nation representing deserting soldiers. He has
handled a dozen such cases since the Iraq war began and has four
current cases.
A national hotline dealing with the rights of those in the military
gets a minimum of 2,000 calls a month, Hildes said, the majority of
them from soldiers who don't want to return to war.
"An increasing number have been to Iraq and are refusing to go back.
I've got interrogators and military police officers who will not go
back," Hildes said.
Desertion can bring a range of responses, from a reprimand and
re-integration with the unit to the loss of all military benefits,
court martial and a five-year stint in prison.
It carries a powerful social stigma, too, which Rich acknowledged.
But she sees her daughter's refusal to return the way she viewed her
daughter's willingness to serve in the first place.
"She went to Iraq once and she was my hero then," Rich said. "I think
it takes a lot more courage to say no than to go back and be fodder
for an immoral war."
Hildes said he had been in contact with base officials weighing
Swift's case, and the last he heard, they were considering a
nonjudicial punishment, possibly an administrative discharge.
The Register-Guard was unable to talk with the Fort Lewis commander
making the decision in Swift's case. The 54th Military Police Company
returned from Iraq in April. According to a base newspaper, the
company helped operate two compounds at Camp Bucca, the largest
prisoner-of-war facility in Iraq.
About 70 peace activists joined Rich for a vigil on Monday in support
of her daughter outside the Lane County Jail.
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