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Canada Isn't The Sanctuary She Used To Be

lewistoblaine.jpgEverything we know about dodging the draft by heading to Canada we learned from The Brothers K and popular mythology. So, we don't know much. Little before our time, there. Despite the fact that today's army is all volunteer (and today's Canada is more Conservative) there are still some soldiers waiting out Iraq up north. Almost everyone that this Salon article mentions seems to have already pulled a shift in the Middle East and is in Canada dodging a redeployment. The article talks about these soldiers (they estimate some 250 of them) and the great lengths that Canada has gone to to see that they are returned to the U.S. military.

May 3, 2007 | TORONTO -- One morning in late February, Canadian police arrived at a house in the small town of Nelson, British Columbia, and arrested Kyle Snyder, a U.S. soldier who had gone AWOL from the Army. Snyder, a former combat engineer who left the United States in April 2005 to avoid deployment for a second tour in Iraq, was detained for several hours but never charged with a crime. It remains unclear why he was arrested.

The local police said they were told to detain Snyder by the Canadian Border Services Agency but acknowledged that the immigration agency was not their "original source" for information on Snyder. In fact, Snyder was released after a Canadian immigration official contacted the local police and informed them there was no basis for Snyder's detention. After he was back home, Snyder said he was told by Josie Perry, the Canadian immigration official who ordered his release, that his arrest had come at the behest of officials from the U.S. Army.

A few weeks later, in Toronto, three men wearing trench coats knocked at the home of Winnie Ng, a Canadian resident who harbored an American soldier named Joshua Key. Key, who'd also been a combat engineer, went AWOL from the Army in 2003 after serving in Iraq. According to Ng, one of the men announced they were Toronto police officers and told her they wanted to speak to Key, though Ng was suspicious about their identities. One of the three was in fact a local police officer, but according to a local news report, a spokesperson for the Toronto police department acknowledged that at least one of the other two men was an official from the U.S. Army's Criminal Investigation Command, or CID.

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Comments [rss]

  • Dave F.

    drrew, what a cunning bumper sticker! Of course, fitting reality onto your small sheets of vinyl doesn't work well. For instance, the type would be illegibly small for what you are really saying:

    "Don't join the military if you aren't interested in going to war on a false pretext, understaffed, against people who mostly are not interested in attacking you or your family. Don't join unless you are willing to have your tour of duty extended repeatedly and your mission made more and more unclear by the government. Don't join unless you are interested in seeing civilians killed before you--and sometimes by you--for no positive outcome."



    The idea that all of these AWOL soldiers are just afraid of "war" is asinine. Never mind the fact that people could find out that "war" is a lot different from what they had thought it would be and decide that, after all, it is not for them.



    I have a bumper sticker for drrew and others who enjoy glibly passing judgment on the life-shattering choices these young people are making: "Try some humility."

  • drrew

    Don't join the Army if you're not interested in going to war. It's a fairly simple concept.

  • American Patriot

    Canada, like Mexico, and the USA will fall victim to the North American Union. We are about to lose our nation in the name of corporations....wake up!

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