Top

news

Stories

 

Gimme Shelter

U.S. military deserters once again flock to Canada to avoid war. Looks like this time they picked the wrong country.

Kim Rivera, the first female Iraq war deserter to seek refuge in Canada, waits for a streetcar in Toronto.
Ian Willms
Kim Rivera, the first female Iraq war deserter to seek refuge in Canada, waits for a streetcar in Toronto.
Lee Zaslofsky, a Brooklyn-born Vietnam deserter who runs the Toronto-based War Resisters Support Campaign, protests the deportation of American deserters.
Ian Willms
Lee Zaslofsky, a Brooklyn-born Vietnam deserter who runs the Toronto-based War Resisters Support Campaign, protests the deportation of American deserters.

Just five feet tall, with a baby strapped to her chest and a soft, faltering voice, Kim Rivera is anything but soldierly. Yet two years ago, she was a private in the War on Terror, guarding a gate with an M4 rifle and frisking Iraqi civilians at a base in eastern Baghdad.

Now, on a Wednesday evening in January, the 26-year-old mother of three stands in a room in frigid, snow-covered Toronto. Auburn hair pulled back in a low ponytail frames her fair-skinned face and round blue eyes. She places a hand on her bundled baby as she faces some 100 people seated on folding chairs inside a modest apartment building's community room.

Rivera clears her throat and unfolds a sheet of paper.

"I was fighting your kind for killing my kind," she begins, reading a poem she wrote last summer and dedicated to the people of Iraq. "I was fighting for your liberty; I was fighting for peace." She pauses and takes a deep breath. "But in reality, I was fighting to destroy everything you know and love."

The audience listens in silence. Some nod. A few wipe tears from their eyes. They are peace activists and professors, fellow American Iraq War deserters in their 20s and American hippies in their 60s, Vietnam draft-dodgers and Canadian mothers.

They're all rooting for Rivera, red-state warrior turned peacenik deserter. They're hoping and praying that by some lucky chance or the benevolent hand of a politician or judge, the young mother will escape the deportation order that has been issued here and the court martial that awaits back home.

Three years ago, before Iraq and Canada, Rivera's dreams of going to college and developing a career had faded. She'd spent five years working at Wal-Mart in her hometown of Mesquite, Texas, met her husband in the store's food court, and had her first two children. After several years of living with relatives and struggling to save for their own apartment, Rivera saw the Army as the only way out. Through the military, she could make more than $10.50 an hour plus get health insurance and a higher education.

She enlisted in early 2006. When she signed the contract, she thought of the war in Iraq as a remote and necessary evil. She was raised to praise the Lord and praise her country, and if that meant ridding the world of terrorists while allowing her and her family to get ahead, so be it. Yet after three desolate months in Iraq, consumed by homesickness, missing her children, and disgusted by what she saw of the war, she deserted while on leave in 2007 and fled with her family to Canada.

But the Canadian government ordered her to leave the country by January 27 or be deported to the United States, where there's a warrant for her arrest. Desertion, according to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, carries penalties of up to five years in prison, a dishonorable discharge, and, in wartime, a potential death sentence.

As the first known female soldier to walk away from the war in Iraq and fight for residency in Canada, Rivera has become a poster girl for a new generation of war deserters and, in particular, the small colony of American deserters living in Toronto and hoping they'll get to stay there.

More than 15,000 soldiers have deserted the Army since 2003, and most are thought to be living in the United States, keeping a low profile, and trying to avoid a traffic ticket or anything else that would alert authorities to their presence. Army spokesmen stress that only 1 percent of all soldiers desert and that the problem is not large enough to warrant pursuing them for prosecution. Nevertheless, desertion rates have nearly doubled, rising from 2,610 in 2003 to 4,698 in 2007, and military records show a crackdown on deserters since the war in Iraq began. But although in 2001 only 29 deserters were prosecuted, in 2007 that figure was 108.

The War Resisters Support Campaign estimates that several hundred deserters are living in Canada. Of those, just around 40 have come forward to file asylum claims. The others, living under the radar without legal status and likely waiting to see how their peers' cases pan out, have little to stoke their hopes.

While an estimated 25,000 draft-dodgers and deserters migrated from the United States to Canada during the Vietnam War, the notion that Canada will absorb today's deserters as it did their predecessors is dead wrong. The Canadian government — led by conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper — has so far rejected all of the deserters' requests, and the soldiers referred to as "war resisters" by their supporters are awaiting review from the country's federal courts to determine their fate.

The case of Robin Long, a soldier from Boise, Idaho, who last summer became the first deserter to be deported from Canada, provides a preview of what lies in store for deserters upon their return home. Long was handed over last August to officials at Fort Carson, Colorado. He pleaded guilty to desertion and is serving a 15-month prison sentence at Miramar Naval Brig near San Diego. More recently, Cliff Cornell, a deserter from Arkansas who lived in British Columbia since leaving his unit four years ago when he was ordered to Iraq, opted to return to the United States in February after exhausting his legal options. American border agents arrested Cornell and sent him to Fort Stewart, Georgia, to face charges. Meanwhile, a former soldier from Cleveland, Ohio, named Andre Shepherd went AWOL from his base in Germany and is requesting political asylum from German authorities. His case will test a 2004 European Union measure that requires member countries to grant asylum to soldiers resisting unlawful wars and, if it succeeds, will likely result in a flood of American deserters arriving in Germany.

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | Next Page >>
 
  • Jorge 03/16/2009 11:36:00 PM

    Im sorry this girl guarding a fence has no cause to AWOL - perhaps if she saw some action then maybe i would say OK she's got a good reason to want to leave, but being a lazy american as she appears to be is no excuse. The key here is that she voluntered for service, cause she wanted money for school. She left her country and her troops in her platoon to suffer... thanks

  • Oliver 03/16/2009 9:46:00 PM

    Good to know! And thousands of sincere and serious tall people I met on ___Tallmingle C om___ are the most amazing people I ever met! they care nothing but real love and chemistry! that's what we are looking for in today's world! :-)

  • Oliver 03/16/2009 9:45:00 PM

    Good to know! And thousands of sincere and serious tall people I met on ___Tallmingle C om___ are the most amazing people I ever met! they care nothing but real love and chemistry! that's what we are looking for in today's world! :-)

  • js 03/13/2009 11:30:00 PM

    Excuse me, but in case you have not noticed, these people, unlike the Vietnam deserters, actually DID reports to duty. They left for MORAL reasons. If you haven't noticed, none of their complaints are about the fighting or the crappy food or the threat of death. They are not asking for a hand out and most of them are gainfully employed within Canada. If they are willing to work, quite clearly they are not seeking hand outs. What they ARE asking for is for their country not to force them to turn into murderers and thieves. They all tell the stories of the night time raids on innocent civilians where their units ransacked homes and abused civilian families, never turning up any evidence of wrong doing. Every soldier, seaman, marine, pilot, or other serviceman takes an oath when they enlist to complete any lawful order. Clearly they are acting in the name of the oath they took. They are objecting to the fight only after seeing, with their own eyes, the lawlessness of this war. One of the servicemen mentioned in the article served in Afghanistian with no issue and only fled after going to Iraq. Most served full tours before deciding to desert. That is not fleeing responsibility. It is refusing to commit a crime simply because they were following orders. If you can justify commiting crimes and what very much amount to acts of terror, maybe YOU should be court martialed and sent to a military brig or executed. And another thing: They weren't protecting our freedoms. No soldier fighting inIraq is defending US freedoms as Iraq has NEVER been a credible threat to America and did not even attack us. In fact, they couldn't attack us. They barely even have comercial jets. How, pray tell, could they possibly have been a threat to America? Maybe you should stop rurgitating everything you hear from Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter and actually look at the facts that no one in the pro-war bush administration could ever factually deny before calling these people deserters. Whats more, why didn't YOU enlist? These men and women fought for what they believed was a just cause and had the integritity to refuse to continue fighting when they realized they were assisting in the commission of atrocities and they have my sympathy and support. An to you, the derisive poster condemning them, as well as their families who disowned them for honoring their oath, may the misery experienced both by these war resisters and the civilians harmed in iraq be visited upon you; lets see if you continue to feel the same way then.

  • js 03/13/2009 11:29:00 PM

    Excuse me, but in case you have not noticed, these people, unlike the Vietnam deserters, actually DID reports to duty. They left for MORAL reasons. If you haven't noticed, none of their complaints are about the fighting or the crappy food or the threat of death. They are not asking for a hand out and most of them are gainfully employed within Canada. If they are willing to work, quite clearly they are not seeking hand outs. What they ARE asking for is for their country not to force them to turn into murderers and thieves. They all tell the stories of the night time raids on innocent civilians where their units ransacked homes and abused civilian families, never turning up any evidence of wrong doing. Every soldier, seaman, marine, pilot, or other serviceman takes an oath when they enlist to complete any lawful order. Clearly they are acting in the name of the oath they took. They are objecting to the fight only after seeing, with their own eyes, the lawlessness of this war. One of the servicemen mentioned in the article served in Afghanistian with no issue and only fled after going to Iraq. Most served full tours before deciding to desert. That is not fleeing responsibility. It is refusing to commit a crime simply because they were following orders. If you can justify commiting crimes and what very much amount to acts of terror, maybe YOU should be court martialed and sent to a military brig or executed. And another thing: They weren't protecting our freedoms. No soldier fighting inIraq is defending US freedoms as Iraq has NEVER been a credible threat to America and did not even attack us. In fact, they couldn't attack us. They barely even have comercial jets. How, pray tell, could they possibly have been a threat to America? Maybe you should stop rurgitating everything you hear from Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter and actually look at the facts that no one in the pro-war bush administration could ever factually deny before calling these people deserters. Whats more, why didn't YOU enlist? These men and women fought for what they believed was a just cause and had the integritity to refuse to continue fighting when they realized they were assisting in the commission of atrocities and they have my sympathy and support. An to you, the derisive poster condemning them, as well as their families who disowned them for honoring their oath, may the misery experienced both by these war resisters and the civilians harmed in iraq be visited upon you; lets see if you continue to feel the same way then.

  • Jose 03/12/2009 9:13:00 PM

    I have no sympathy for people who volunteer for duty then want to use bullshit excuses like "...illegal war" to shirk thier duty. During Vietnam, many were drafted and in spite of this ponied up and did what was needed. These deserters are the worst our country has to offer. They look at the military and every other instituion as just another handout. They should just grow up and realizing there is no free ride. There is a price to pay for the freedom we enjoy, and they looked to turn the military which defends those freedoms into a welfare agency. No sale. If everyone who agreed to perform a job bailed when the going got tough, we would probably be speaking German now, most of the people complaining wouldn't even be around to do so. Want a solution? Want to get on with your life? Complete the service to your country you volunteered for and then carry on. Otherwise, stop whining and go live somewhere that will welcome you, like China or North Korea.

  • Jose 03/12/2009 9:11:00 PM

    I have no sympathy for people who volunteer for duty then want to use bullshit excuses like "...illegal war" to shirk thier duty. During Vietnam, many were drafted and in spite of this ponied up and did what was needed. These deserters are the worst our country has to offer. They look at the military and every other instituion as just another handout. They should just grow up and realizing there is no free ride. There is a price to pay for the freedom we enjoy, and they looked to turn the military which defends those freedoms into a welfare agency. No sale. If everyone who agreed to perform a job bailed when the going got tough, we would probably be speaking German now, most of the people complaining wouldn't even be around to do so. Want a solution? Want to get on with your life? Complete the service to your country you volunteered for and then carry on. Otherwise, stop whining and go live somewhere that will welcome you, like China or North Korea.

 
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy