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Strategic, bold, direct and discursive action to disrupt militarism in Australia and our region.

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Toxic SAS

#ToxicSAS – Toxic in Afghanistan – Toxic in Australia: Activists Sue ADF

The Swan Island 3 Settle

Activists from the Victorian based #SwanIslandPeace #ToxicSAS projects, share news below regarding their civil case which has been settled.

From Greg, Sam and Dave:

“We wanted to update you all on our case against the Australian Defence Force. Early in the process the Commonwealth stepped in and took vicarious liability for the actions of the Australian Defence Force members who committed the assaults, so our case was against the Commonwealth.

Near the beginning of the proceedings we plaintiffs Greg, Sam and Dave agreed we wanted an acknowledgement of wrong doing, and a public apology from the ADF.  It is now four years since the assaults and the ADF have made it abundantly clear that there will never be an apology, public or otherwise.

On Friday (15/6), a mandatory mediation occurred before the expected trial.  In mediation we agreed on a settlement, meaning that this long gruelling process is finally over.  It was a very difficult decision, and while we have questioned whether or not to see it as a victory, disappointment and relief seemed to be the biggest feelings of the day.  We are confident that procedures have already changed as a result of our experiences.

Our case has resulted in changed procedures in Australia, but not in war theatres.  We will keep working for change for our sisters and brothers in affected war theatres, and encourage you to do the same.

As with most mediation, the settlement requires that we do not talk about the details of the settlement itself, so we ask you to accept our decision not to share those details.

There will be more to do around media in the weeks to come. We will keep you in the loop on that.

Thanks for all your support.  We appreciate all who had planned to come to court with us.”

Cheers,

Sam, Dave & Greg


Peace Activists Sue the ADF!


Wage Peace Banner

Hey Wage Peace Friend,

September 2014:  Protesters are hooded, zip-tied, have their clothing cut from their body. They are then beaten and threatened with rape and drowning at the secretive SAS military base at Swan Island, Victoria.

A 2015 defence report admits it.[1]

Join with these protesters who are now suing the ADF in Melbourne in August.[2] Despite mediation the ADF has refused to apologise or identify the assailants. [This case has now settled]

symbols-of-death-abc-fnq.jpg

ADF Atrocities

The abuse of protesters is on the lower end of atrocities committed by SAS and ADF members in Afghanistan and elsewhere overseas.[3] A secretive inquiry is currently being conducted by the Inspector General of the ADF.[4][5] Its subject matter: the murder of innocents, cover-ups, obstruction of justice –  matters raised by whistle-blowers as revealed last year in #theAfghanFiles.[6]

In April, the Chief of Army Lieutenant General Angus Campbell banned insignia of death from their subcultures. He noted that the use of these cultish symbols indicates “arrogance”. It is more than an arrogance. Death symbols are a sign of a festering culture of violence and deceit.

This culture was cultivated by their masters in Afghanistan and Iraq, the shadowy US Special Operations Command (US SOC).[7]

After 15 years of war under US Special Operations, and without oversight from the Parliament or the people of Australia, the SAS, Commandos and other special forces developed a culture of abuse, normalised atrocity. Rogue elements of the ADF have their own codes of “death cult” behaviours which include killing children outside any “code of engagement” and forcing team members to lie and hide incidents.[3]

Domestic Militarism and Domestic Safety

This culture of military immunity may be understandable in an oppressive dictatorship but must never be tolerated in a democracy. To allow this toxic culture to continue, is to risk infection of the entire ADF and create homecoming threats to domestic safety.

Thanks to journalists there has been a lot of pubic discussion about toxic militarism. The #ourADF knows that secretive inquiries do not result in culture change. Only widespread open discussion of problem behaviours, systems and structures create change.

Focus on these individuals who have leadership roles.

Right click and download these images to your computer if you would like to upload them to Twitter or Facebook

Require Accountability – Ask Questions

Angus Campbell

We call on the incoming Chief of Defence Angus Campbell – as he will be after July – to continue his work addressing the culture of abuse. The command lost control. And Angus Campbell knows that for the mental health of his soldiers he must demand open discussion.


ToxicSAS Marise Payne

Minister of Defence @MarisePayne must also come clean on the report. She must allow the discussion in the open. Ask Minister Payne ‘Where is the #toxicSAS Report??’.

 


ToxicSAS Richard Marles

ALP Shadow(y) Minister @RichardMarlesMP must stop colluding with the bipartisan BS on military affairs.

 


Keep them in your tweets or write to them direct. Speak up whenever you hear them in public. Remind them that the core issue is not the symbols of death they wear but the illegitimate directions of the US Special Operations Command and its relationship with the US Army.

Only a transparent discussion will allow for widespread culture change.


CANCELLED: Melbourne Peace Convergence to Support Activists from August 12, 2018

Defend Protesters Rights! Stand up for our Social and Cultural Liberties! [How ‘freedom’ is actually fought for!]

The domestic threats posed by unrestrained militarism are displayed in the assault on the protesters at Swan Island.

You can help make big difference with us by joining us in Melbourne or volunteering where you are.

Protesters at Swan Island were charged with trespass, appeared in court and were found guilty. Those who attacked them were never charged and their identity has been protected. Greg, Dave & Sam with the support of Maurice Blackburn legal firm are now pursuing a civil case. They are suing the Australian Defence Force.

Militarism is toxic and a threat to the best parts of our culture and ‘real’ Australian values 🙂 . Last year you made a fantastic contribution and put a bright spotlight on Pine Gap. Now help us shine the light on the #toxicSAS.

 

www.WagePeaceAu.org

 


P.S. Read Greg Rolles’ personal reflection on what this situation means to him.

“When I was younger I dreamed of being in the army…”.

Herald Sun article protesters abused - greg


Footnotes

[1] Defence blasted over ‘contradictory’ Swan Island report

[2] Anti-war protesters claim they were abused on Swan Island intelligence facility

[3] Unarmed men, children among the casualties of elite forces

[4] Supreme Court Judge Examining Special Forces Conduct

[5] Defence Inquiry Calls for Information on Conduct of Soldiers in Afghanistan

[6] The Afghan files

[7] Australian special forces veteran breaks silence on ‘insidious, infectious’ culture

[8] Army Bans Troops from Wearing Skulls Death Symbols 

­­­


Resources

Afghan Files ABC Report

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-07-11/killings-of-unarmed-afghans-by-australian-special-forces/8466642

symbols of death

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-04-19/army-bans-troops-from-wearing-skulls-death-symbols/9673242

What is Swan Island?

https://nautilus.org/publications/books/australian-forces-abroad/defence-facilities/swan-island-training-area/

Incident as reported in The Age

https://www.theage.com.au/opinion/alleged-abuse-of-protesters-against-war-in-iraq-disturbing-20141016-116rns.html

Report of the Incident

http://www.defence.gov.au/publications/coi/Reports/IOIReportintotheSwanIslandTrespasson2Oct14.pdf

 

 

Volunteer with Wage Peace 


 

The SAS Culture

MARCH 8, 2018 Greg Rolles

The SAS Culture 8 March 2018 When I was younger I dreamed of being in the army. I wanted to be the guy who saved the innocent child by shooting the crazy bad guy. I wanted to help people by doing the hard work no one else wanted; to serve my country, protect the innocent, be the good guy. Anzac, G.I. Joe – you name it. I wanted the adventure, the excitement and, as I saw it at the time, to spend my life doing the best I could to do the right thing.

I spent most of my childhood wanting to be a fighter pilot, but I was never committed enough at school to get the required marks, and getting my pilot’s license was something well beyond my working class family’s comprehension and/or means. So I started dreaming about intelligence: being a spy like James Bond, cool, sophisticated, confidently killing the bad guys one martini at a time.

Once I was in the army, doing officer training, the biggest conversation amongst cadets was what we wanted to do when we finished training. A lot of cadets wanted to join the Special Forces. I had mucked around, failed uni and worked at Woolworths for a few years between school and going to ADFA (university and the army), so I was a little more realistic about what being in the Special Forces meant. Trying to join the SAS would require hard work and determination. I had felt completely unmotivated. Yet, when a guy came and gave a talk at ADFA about the SAS and Special Forces; it triggered something in my mind. Maybe I should try and join?

The message was that these guys not only get the excitement, they do the greatest good and kill the hardest to reach bad guys. It was the culmination of all of the action movies I had ever watched. More than that, maybe I would be missing on truly living if I wasn’t doing secretive missions, sniping bad guys who were trying to hurt innocent Australians. The SAS were the best of the best, the epitome of the good guy, moral, upright defenders of all that is just in the world. What a way to spend my life.

Around the same time as the SAS presentation, I was doing some training near Canberra. I was enjoying myself immensely. We pushed ourselves physically, learnt a lot and were living life to its fullest. After walking up a particularly steep hill at the end of a navigation exercise, I caught my breath and we rested for a bit. I felt so happy to be there, so alive.

I looked down at my rifle and realised, not for the first time, the irony that I was enjoying life so much and here I was training to take someone else’s.

Usually I could tell myself that they were the bad guys and I was the good guy, but sitting there, staring at my rifle, that line held no truth for me anymore. It was the first time that I seriously doubted the morality of killing anyone for any reason. Something about it just seemed wrong.

It was on the same exercise I learnt to use a claymore mine. My feelings were confirmed as I realised that I didn’t ever want to use that weapon on anyone; not even if they were planning on killing me.

In the following ten years of university, teaching and living in Christian Community I learned that the Australian Military was never, in my life time, involved in defending Australia. We were an attacking army that invaded and killed people for their resources.

Throughout that decade, I still thought of the SAS as the good guys, although I don’t know why. Perhaps there was some residual hope in my head that those who I had perceived to be the ‘best of the best’ were decent people.

I had read a lot of stories and allegations of the SAS in Afghanistan and Iraq, but on 2 October 2014, I learnt a brutal truth.

I knew SAS 4 Squadron that trains on Swan Island was intimately connected to US Special Forces through the Joint Special Operations Command, even being ordered around by and taking part in US missions. I knew JSOC had committed water torture, illegal imprisonment and illegal battlefield executions. I knew they hooded and cuffed people for no reason. But in my heart of hearts, I believed Australian SAS soldiers couldn’t be involved in these horrendous crimes.

While I was peacefully protesting the killing of innocent people, an SAS soldier crashed tackled me to the ground and my last illusion was shattered.

I was bound, hooded and tortured by an SAS soldier.

I had read a lot about these things, but not until that point could I understand that generating feelings of fear, terror and hopelessness was at the apex of Australian military training. This is what we were doing to people in other countries, just because we could take what we wanted. There was no honour here, no glory, no justice and no righteousness. There was just power and pain.

On 12 August 2018, Maurice Blackburn will be representing myself and two others at a civil case to sue the Commonwealth for the way we were treated that morning. I am luckier than most of the victims of the Australian SAS. I have a chance to hold my captors to account.

Along with other members of the Swan Island Peace Convergence, I will speak the truth of the bloody fruits of the SAS before a court and the Australian public. Most of us believe the lie that we need a military, or that, even if our leaders are misleading, the troops are just doing the best job they can. Because of this lie I have faced ridicule, with people close to me saying I copped what I deserved and should even have been shot for the crime of trespass.

But the truth is as clear to me now as that day 13 years ago, staring at my rifle: Killing and hurting people is wrong.

Ignoring that basic truth has created a culture in the SAS of impunity, torture and violence against people who never did anything to us. I will speak that truth for many others who have wrongfully found themselves at the receiving end of an SAS weapon or boot.

I will speak for the humanity in all of us who know, deep down, that things can be different.

See the original on Greg’s blog

https://gregsrole.com/2018/03/08/the-sas-culture/

Submission to the #ADFInquiry

Graeme Dunstan

August 2017

To the Inspector General of the Australian Defence Force

Dear Sir,

As a deeply concerned Australian citizen, I want to contribute to the inquiry into rumours of possible breaches of the Laws of Armed Conflict by members of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) in Afghanistan, between 2005 and 2016.

Let me introduce myself.

I am a 75 year old Duntroon drop out who subsequently devoted his life to advocacy for peace and social justice, a nomad who travels around Australia in a van equipped with banner rigs and PA.

In many different public places and on many occasions i have been vocal in my opposition to the engagement of the ADF in US wars, first in Indo China and now the US wars without end in the Greater Middle East.

In particular I have been vocal about the corrupting influence on the Australian Special Air Service of extended service in Afghanistan (17 years!) under the command of US Joint Special Operations Command (SOCOM).

Service without accountability!

But while the Australian government has been successful in keeping the murderous business of the SAS secret from the Australian people and its media, enough information has come out from US and UK reporting to give us an understanding of what the Australian SAS have been doing.

In short this so called networked warfare has been murder and mayhem on a more or less daily basis for 17 years.

The best that can be said of the SOCOM strategy of systematic violence against Muslims and their indigenous communities in far away foreign lands is that it had some temporary success in reducing armed resistance to the US led invasion of their country. But it also produced ghastly blow-back, namely the rise of the Islamic State.

Then there is the human cost to consider. It is fantasy and delusion to believe that daily murder and mayhem comes without cost to the minds and spirits of those who perpetrate it.

In some these scars become overt as in PTSD, in others they may remain hidden in a persona of super efficient business as usual, either as commanders in the ADF or as corporate mercenaries and security personnel. Either way the benefit to civil society is negative.

In 2015 I was part of a peaceful protest against the SAS and it’s US war service at the gates of the SAS/ASIS base at Swan Island.

Eight of the protesters entered the base pre-dawn on Friday 10 October. Four were arrested by Victoria Police officers. Four others were apprehended by two ADF personnel in plain clothes (likely SAS) who hooded them, cable tied their wrists, cut off their clothes, assaulted and verbally abused them. See 7.30 Report here.

Raised at Senate Estimates the incident was later the subject of an inconsequential ADF internal inquiry. The assailants were not named. To the contrary they were deemed Protected Persons and as such declared immune from the processes of criminal law. A civil action against the ADF for damages is in train.

In the same way as a single litmus test shows a general acidity, I suggest that this abuse was not freak or abhorrent behaviour but rather an indicator of a general contempt – a SAS culture of contempt – for civilians and their civil law.

This is the war that the SAS has brought home from their long and irresponsible service to the failed US war in Afghanistan.

This violent form of policing has been referred to as “rendition”. It’s a CIA derived descriptor for what happened to Australian David Hicks when he was arrested, tortured and held without trial in Guantanama Bay 2001-07.

Worse I have reason to believe that at the time of the attack on the peace protesters, the Swan Island SAS was training State police counter terrorism units, plus counter terrorism police units from our Pacific neighbours, in just such policing techniques.

From a war of state terror in Afghanistan to training for state terror in Australia, it’s a pernicious consequence.

For this reason I want to address your inquiry.

The Swan Island assault is not a rumour. It actually happened though the perpetrators were protected. But isn’t that the way with the SAS and its cult of secrecy and why your inquiry is in progress?

At core what I want is to inquire of your inquiry what actions might be recommended to re-civilise the SAS into Australian civil society after its extended corruption under the command of US Special Operations Command.

Best we can.

For peace.

Swan Island Peace activists will have their day in court – in the news

You can support the Swan Island Peace activists in August…

Anti-war protesters sue the defence force. | Herald Sun

Swan Island intelligence accused of abusing protesters - Herald Sun article

Oct 2, 2017 – According to separate writs filed in the County Court the protectors intended to engage in a nonviolent protest and after hanging and taking photos of an anti-war banner on buildings separated into two pairs before being caught by plain clothes defence force personnel. Swan Island protester Greg Rolles … read more …

Swan Island protesters claim they were hooded and stripped at … – ABC

ABC News video: ASIS base protesters claim mistreatment in Guantanamo Bay style
Oct 9, 2014 – Swan Island, 90 minutes from Melbourne, is used for training by the Australian Secret Intelligence Agency (ASIS), the overseas arm of the country’s spy network. It is not open to the public without Defence or ASIS approval. Early last Thursday, eight protesters from the Swan Island Peace Convergence …

 

Defence Force Report into the Swan Island Trespass on 2 Oct 2014 (pdf)

Swan Island Peace Convergence

Website swanislandpeace.org
Facebook group Swan Island Peace Convergence

SAS absorbed toxic US military culture

Wage Peace supports the exposure of the toxic effect of the US alliance on Australian troops, particularly the SAS.

This is written in response to The Afghan Files by Dan Oakes and Sam Clark published by the ABC. 11 July 2017.

Graeme Dunstan 12 July 2017

As at July 2017 Graeme Dunstan and others are protesting the US/Australian Alliance practicing for war at Talisman Saber, Shoalwater Bay near Rockhampton.

The Special Air Service Regiment deployed to Afghanistan in December 2001, along with other special forces units of other invading countries, were made part of US Special Operations Command (SOCOM). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Special_Operations_Command

This meant that although the Australian SAS conducted operations as all-Australian units, it took its operational orders for SOCOM.

Neither the Australian Parliament nor the Australian people have had much information about what exactly the Australian SAS have been doing in Afghanistan, journalists and publishers are forbidden reporting on “operations matters” and what’s more the SAS is especially secretive.Which means the SAS have been operating without effective accountability to anyone outside of the SAS itself for 16 years. One should not be surprised that the SAS has gone rouge, killing without accountability – because they can.

They have “Rules of Engagement” of course, but the interpretation of these Rules and any investigations done in regard to infringements are from within the SAS itself. Naturally enough the Regiment protects its own.

The SAS consider itself an elite force. The training is intensive and physically demanding. Many a young soldier aspires to be part of it, but only the best get to join the regiment. Morale is high. But the shadow side of this is that it is cult-like and, since assassination is central to the dark arts they practice, it can be understood as a death cult.  (peacebus.com)

Furthermore they have, by association, absorbed the the culture of abduction and torture practiced at “black sites”  by the US military.  Ignoring the UN conventions on torture, this toxic US military culture produced the cruelties of Abu Grahib and Guantanamo Bay.

Three years ago the Australian Military Police, which is responsible for the processing of prisoners of war, complained about the pressure being put upon them by the SAS to “render” prisoners, which means acts of violence and humiliation aimed at terrorising prisoners before interrogation. 

The British SAS also operated within SOCOM since 2001. At present it too is being investigated by the Royal Military Police for similar offences – covered up acts of abduction, murder and abuse towards prisoners armed, unarmed or just plain innocents.

The bigger picture though is the question what have the SAS being doing these past 16 years and what good has come of it?

The truth is that they are invaders, killing native people in their native lands.

They claim to be saving Australia from Islamic terrorism. There is no significant Islamic terrorist threat to Australia and never has been. Just four deaths in 4 years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_terrorist_incidents_in_Australia).

Yet for 16 years we have had the SASR on constant deployment and the US-led War on Afghanistan has cost taxpayers heaps. (Google Australian war expenditure)

Furthermore after 16 years they is no sign that resistance to the US led invasion has lessened.

Indeed the US military recently called for more Australian troops because the security situation was deteriorating. We offered a mere, tokenistic 30. 

The SAS has served to help train the Afghan National (Puppet) Army. Like the SAS, this army takes its orders from the US military. The casualties it has been taking are of the order of 6,000 a year for the past three years or more. It ain’t sustainable. A generation of young men who join the army to escape the poverty that endless war has brought the Afghan people, blown to pieces. For what?

Yet the SAS keeps killing and training killers and generating more and more special operations just so as to keep themselves cashed up and the adrenaline rush of killing pumping.

As the Afghan National Army implodes the SAS can expect more and more “terrorists” (aka freedom fighters) to take up arms, ever more demand for “special ops”.

But for no gain in terms of securing peaceful civil society in Afghanistan.

The SAS is a culture that works to normalise killing. They act as if their actions have no consequences. But of course they do.

To train young men and women in remorselessness is to curse them for this can only have evil consequences for the individual and the community that must harbour them.

The truth is these killer SAS come back to their families and their communities with the war inside them. If not physically maimed then morally maimed.

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