The New York Times
October 13, 2006
A Soldier
Hoped to Do Good,
but Was Changed by War
By
Laurie Goodstein
FORT BRAGG, N.C., Oct. 12 — Sgt. Ricky Clousing went to war in
Iraq because, he said, he believed he would simultaneously be serving his
nation and serving God.
But after more than four months on the streets of Baghdad and Mosul
interrogating Iraqis rounded up by American troops, Sergeant Clousing said, he
began to believe that he was serving neither.
He said he saw American soldiers shoot and kill an unarmed Iraqi teenager, and
rode in an Army Humvee that sideswiped Iraqi cars and shot an old man’s sheep
for fun — both incidents Sergeant Clousing reported to superiors. He said his
work as an interrogator led him to conclude that the occupation was creating a
cycle of anti-American resentment and violence. After months of soul-searching
on his return to Fort Bragg, Sergeant Clousing, 24, failed to report for duty
one day.
In a court-martial here on Thursday, an Army judge sentenced Sergeant Clousing
to 11 months in confinement for going AWOL, absent without leave. He will
serve three months because of a pretrial agreement in which he pleaded guilty.
“My experiences in Iraq forced me to re-evaluate my beliefs and my ethics,”
Sergeant Clousing said, sitting stiff-backed in the witness chair. “I
ultimately felt I could not serve.”
The case against Sergeant Clousing, a born-again Christian from Washington
State, is a small one in a war that has produced sensational courts-martial.
The same stark courtroom where Sergeant Clousing testified on Thursday was the
site of the courts-martial of Pfc. Lynndie England, who mistreated and posed
with naked Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib, and Sgt. Hasan K. Akbar, who rolled
grenades into tents of American troops.
Yet the military prosecutors made it clear on Thursday that the stakes were
high. Although they did not challenge his motives, they said if one young
soldier disillusioned by the reality of war could give up the uniform without
punishment, what of others?
“A message must be sent,” Capt. Jessica Alexander, the Army’s trial lawyer,
said in her closing argument. “There are thousands of soldiers who may
disagree with this particular war, but who stay and fight.”
Sergeant Clousing’s allegations resulted in criminal and administrative
investigations. The soldiers in the Humvee were disciplined, said Maj. Richard
Wagen, the investigating officer, who testified at the trial. Major Wagen said
that the Iraqi teenager who was shot was close enough to the soldiers to be
considered a threat.
Sergeant Clousing’s defense lawyer argued that the sergeant had experienced a
“crisis of conscience,” tried to resolve it through official military channels
and should not be treated like a criminal.
“Some might say a person of such convictions should never have enlisted,” said
the lawyer, David W. Miner, who is based in Seattle, “but the Army needs
soldiers with the strength of their convictions and personal courage to speak
up when they see abuses.”
The number of soldiers who go AWOL declined from 4,597 in 2001 to 2,479 in
2004, said Maj. Tom Earnhardt, a public affairs officer at Fort Bragg. “The
vast majority of our soldiers are serving our country admirably,” Major
Earnhardt said.
Sergeant Clousing said in an interview that he had been a partyer and
snowboarder until a sudden born-again experience in high school. He grew up in
Sumner, Wash., south of Seattle. His father was an Army officer in Europe, and
he lived with his mother, who was not religious.
“It sounds really cheesy,” he said, “but all of a sudden I knew that God had a
different plan for me.”
He attended a Presbyterian church, studied the Bible and spent four
consecutive summers on mission trips to Mexico. He joined Youth With a
Mission, an evangelical group that sent him to Thailand, where he was on Sept.
11, 2001.
Out of patriotism, idealism and curiosity, he said, he joined the military. He
signed up to be a “human intelligence collector,” and trained in Arizona and
at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, Calif. He was assigned to the
82nd Airborne Division.
Arriving in Iraq in November 2004, he said he was stunned at the number of
Iraqis he was assigned to interrogate who were either innocent or disgruntled
citizens resentful about the American occupation. He said he told his
commander: “Your soldiers and the way they’re behaving are creating the
insurgency you’re trying to fight. It’s a cycle. You don’t see it, but I’m
talking to the people you’re bringing to me.”
Sergeant Clousing said he looked into the eyes of the Iraqi teenager as he
died and saw the unjustifiable loss of a life that unhinged him. He wrote in
his journal, “I want to be a boy again, free of this.”
Back in Fort Bragg after five months in Iraq, Sergeant Clousing took his
misgivings to his superiors. They sent him to a chaplain, who showed him in
the Bible where God sent his people to war, the sergeant said. Then they sent
him to a psychologist who said he could get out of the military by claiming he
was crazy or gay. Sergeant Clousing said he had not been looking for a way out
and found the suggestion offensive.
He called a hotline for members of the military run by a coalition of antiwar
groups. The man who took the call was Chuck Fager, who runs Quaker House, a
longtime pacifist stronghold in Fayetteville.
“This call was unusual,” Mr. Fager said in an interview. He said hotline
receptionists took more than 7,000 calls from or about military members last
year.
“I don’t have these kinds of probing discussions about moral and religious
issues very often,” he said. “I said to him, you’re not crazy or a heretic for
having difficulty reconciling Jesus’ teachings with what’s going on in Iraq.”
Sergeant Clousing said he could not file for conscientious objector status
because he could not honestly say he was opposed to all war. After several
months of soul-searching, he went AWOL.
He tried to talk with his church friends in Washington. Some understood him,
but others said he had to support the government because of a biblical
injunction to “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s.”
“They felt that God established government and we’re supposed to be submitting
to authorities, and by me leaving it’s rebelling again the authority that God
established,” Sergeant Clousing said. “Their politics has infiltrated their
religion so much, they can’t see past their politics.”
After 14 months, he turned himself in at Fort Lewis in Washington. He was
returned to Fort Bragg, where he was assigned to a brigade made up of other
soldiers who had gone AWOL. Five sat in the courtroom on Thursday, in uniform,
waiting to hear clues about their future in the judge’s sentence.
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