GySgt. Hartman wrote:If he enlisted with the decision to desert if he had to fight, he should be jailed.
If he enlisted and then grew up to be a different person, they should have transferred him to non-combat duties or discharged him. If that is the case, then he was right in running away before he would be forced to kill someone.
He couldn't have known that he would change that way when he enlisted, so he is not at fault.
I think that many people enlist in the armed forces because they see it as their only chance to get a good education, but don't consider what it really means to be a soldier. I think recruiters should work to clear that up.
1a) His initial motivation for joining up was not due to patriotism or any such ideal, but merely trying to cheat the Army out of $50000 for his college education.
1b) However, at the very beginning, he had no major objection to killing in combat. So I guess if the war occurred in that era, he'd be 'one of the grunts.' He probably won't make hero, but he'd probably shoot in the correct direction.
2a) Later, the guy changes his mind - he wimps out, to put it negatively. So he tries to renege.
2b) They even gave him a chance, and he wasn't good enough to convince them.
2c) So he becomes a traitor to his nation and tries to escape to Canada.
The man has no right to run away. This is not a conscript army and thus his commitment is solely voluntary. He also asked to be and became an
paratrooper, a position that costs more to train than the average grunt, and is one of the more aggressive arms of the Army.
After that he expects to be able to renege on his deal because he changes his mind? What happened to the Contract Spirit? Forget that, what happened to the word "Commitment?" This man seems to think commitment is something to be broken because it suddenly became inconvenient for you.
I'm sorry, but the man should be tried for treason, and since he's going into at least a partial war zone, perhaps Desertion in the Face of the Enemy as well, and shot.