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LONDON, March 12 (Xinhuanet) -- A Special Air Service
(SAS) soldier from Britain has refused to fight in Iraq and left the Army over
the "illegal" tactics of United States troops and the policies of coalition
forces.
Ben Griffin, 28, who spent two years with the SAS, told his commander after staying three
months in Baghdad that he was no longer prepared to fight with American forces,
the Sunday Telegraph reported.
He said he had witnessed "dozens of illegal acts" by
U.S. troops, which he claimed regarding all Iraqis as sub-human. Many innocent
civilians were arrested in night-time raids and interrogated by American
soldiers, imprisoned in the notorious Abu Ghraib prison, or handed over to the
Iraqi authorities and "most probably" tortured, he added.
"I did not join the British Army to conduct American
foreign policy," said the soldier.
This is the first time an SAS soldier has refused to
go into combat and quit the Army on moral grounds, said the report.
Griffin also noted that he now believed that Prime
Minister Tony Blair and the British government had repeatedly "lied" over the
war's conduct.
The move not only marks an end to Griffin's
eight-year career with the Parachute Regiment but also serves an embarrassment
to the government while exerting great impact on other soldiers who have refused
to fight.
Coincidentally, a Royal Air Force doctor who has
refused to return to Iraq for a third tour of duty on the grounds that the war
is illegal will face pretrial on Wednesday.
So far there has been no comment from the Ministry of
Defense. Enditem |