ONE SOLDIER’S WAR: Soldier from Auburn to refuse Iraq deployment
STAFF WRITERS
Published: May 15, 2008
Matthis Chiroux had it all planned out after he graduated from Auburn High School in 2002.
First, he would join the U.S. Army. Then, he would use his G.I. Bill benefits to enroll in college to pursue his dream of becoming a lawyer. After college, Matthis planned to become a public defender and dabble in politics.
And the 24-year-old Army sergeant’s dream was on track when he was honorably discharged last September. He wasted no time moving to New York City to attend college as a journalism and pre-law major.
But less than six months after relocating, the Army came calling again. This time, they needed him to deploy to Iraq.
On Thursday, Matthis, joined by members of the nonprofit organization Iraq Veterans Against the War, publicly announced in Washington, D.C., his plans to ignore the Army’s orders to report to Iraq on June 15.
In a press conference held in the Cannon House Office Building, Matthis read a statement that said, in part:
“As an Army journalist whose job it was to collect and filter service members’ stories, I heard many stomach-churning testimonies of the horrors and crimes taking place in Iraq. For fear of retaliation from the military, I failed to report these crimes, but never again will I allow fear to silence me. “Never again will I fail to stand. … This occupation is unconstitutional and illegal, and I hereby lawfully refuse to participate, as I will surely be a party to war crimes. …”
According to Department of Defense policy, the Army can recall soldiers for up to four years after their active-duty service. If Matthis refuses to report to duty in June, Nathan Banks, spokesman for the Pentagon, said Matthis could be listed as absent without official leave (AWOL) and could possibly face arrest.
His father, Rob Chiroux, said he is worried about his son’s future if he doesn’t return to the Army. He realizes his son could stand to lose everything he has gained in his military career: college funding, veteran health benefits — even his honorable discharge status.
Rob Chiroux was quick to add, however, that no matter what his son decides on June 15 — to serve again or to fight reactivation into the Army — he stands firmly behind his son’s decision.
“I support my son 100 percent,” Rob Chiroux said. “I would support him if he chose to go back to Iraq, and I’d worry about him every day.”
Following his announcement, Matthis Chiroux said he felt at peace.
“I don’t fear any prosecution,” Matthis Chiroux said. “There may be repercussions, and I’m ready to face them.”
Matthis enlisted in the Army days after graduating from high school. During his five-year enlistment, Matthis served as a journalist in the Army, with tours in Germany, Japan, Afghanistan and the Philippines.
While serving in Afghanistan and Palawan, Philippines, Matthis experienced hostile environments fighting against Islamic insurgents.
After receiving the Army’s orders to deploy to Iraq, Matthis was depressed, confining himself inside his New York apartment, he said. He reflected on his values and his views of the Iraq War.
“There was just no way I could carry a weapon, go to Iraq and not be part of the problem,” Matthis said by telephone Thursday, referring to the Iraq War, which, he said, he has opposed from the start.
Rob Chiroux, a Navy veteran and self-described conservative who voted for George W. Bush twice, said he is having second thoughts about the Iraq War.
“He feels strongly that this is wrong, and I feel strongly that this is wrong,” Rob Chiroux said, regarding the Army’s orders to have his son return to active duty.
Taking a stand against issues was something Rob Chiroux and his son often talked about when Matthis was growing up, especially when the topic turned to politics.
Rob Chiroux would sometimes tell his son, “If you want to change the system, you’re going to have to take a stand.”
Army Policy on Conscientious Objection (From the Department of Defense and complied by BRITTANY WHITLEY)
- Army Regulation 600-43, Conscientious Objection, dated 15 May 1998, defines conscientious objection as a firm, fixed and sincere objection to participation in war in any form or the bearing of arms because of religious training and belief.
- Regulation recognizes two types of “conscientious objector” statuses.
- A 1-0 conscientious objector application is when the soldier is sincerely opposed because of religious or deeply held moral or ethical (not political, philosophical or sociological) beliefs to participating in war in any form.
- A 1-A-0 conscientious objector application is when the soldier is sincerely opposed because of religious or deeply held moral or ethical (not political, philosophical or sociological) beliefs to participating as a combatant (including training in tactics or weapons) in war in any form.
- Soldiers who consider themselves conscientious objectors must submit their claim to a three-person board
- The Department of the Army Conscientious Objector Review Board (CORB) is composed of one officer from the Office of the Chief, Army Chaplains, a second from the Office of the Army Judge Advocate General and the third member is from the Army Special Review Board. The appropriate offices (OTJAG, Chief of Chaplain, and SRB) identify their respective board member.
- The board forms a decision based on the merits of each conscientious objection claim.
- Each soldier’s situation is reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
- As of Sept. 30, 2005, the number of soldiers applying to be classified as conscientious objectors remains small, about 0.01percent of the force of 492,728 active duty soldiers.
- The Army accommodates genuine conscientious objectors, but soldiers serve in an all-volunteer Army.
- New recruits sign a statement indicating they are not a “conscientious objector.”
- Applicants to the Army who were previously conscientious objectors must sign an affidavit stating that they have abandoned their conscientious objector beliefs and principles and that they are willing to bear arms and give full and unqualified service to the United States.
Source: Department of Defense
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Reader Reactions
Ahhh, how deluded can you be!!! That is exactly the response of the cannon fodder who must rationalize their naivete after the fact, the fact that not 1/3rd finish college for which they joined the Army; that they come back with PTSD, nice words for the nightmares that haunt my school friend from Birmingham, now 40 years after Vietnam. And the neuropathy that he has from Agent Orange echoes the cancer that vets exposed to Depleted (hah) Uranium will and are incurring from our ‘bunker blasters’ in Iraq and Afghanistan. You believe the recruiters, you die a lingering torturous death facilitated by this fantasy of ‘dying for liberty’. So sad, but let the peasants go to their deaths, forever enriching the kings, by whatever name.
Every now and then we Alabamians get it right. What courage!!! I’m forwarding this on to tony andreotti, our Veteran’s Agent in Canton, Ma. who has known that this was was a batch of human fecal matter emitting from Bush’s brain, Rove from the beginning.
Once we become a despotism dedicated to building empire, we will cease to be a great nation ...John Quincy Adams was correct.
As a Yankee born in Birmingham who lived in Alabama for 37 years of my life, can I say how proud I am of the discourse and editorials from this paper? You want a small taste of prejudice, how the blacks of Al were treated most of my life there? Move up here to Boston and see how you’re treated by your fellow engineers…..as a dumbo, someone who fell off a turnip truck (turnip greens, in my case).
I asked a fellow engineer why the younger ones were treating me as though I just hatched, lecturing me on software tricks I knew before they were born. He said, “It’s your accent. They equate the Southern accent with ignorance.“
But this brave young man, this wonderful example of a man who knows what the Nurenberg Trials taught us and should have taught the ignoramuses, the American Nazis who still live among us: “You must not obey an immoral command.“ My son pledged to support the constitution, but the illegally (by the Supreme Court) seated president has trashed the very Constitution HE pledged to uphold, and is now a war criminal. This young man knows he must not obey an immoral command, given by war criminals, the Bush Administration.
The Lord bless him and keep him.
Alice Brown, grandmother of an Auburn freshman and a UA sophomore.
Hey “nosmokes”
How do you know I’m not there? How do you know I haven’t been there? You “ASSUME” that I haven’t done either of the above. You know what assuming does. The point is that he signed a legal document to do whatever the Gov. told him to do. We have carried our end of the bargain and now he needs to do what he is told to do whether he likes it or not. Everyday in life we are told by employers to do something we may not like or want to do. But guess what, you have to do it. He is a coward. He’s not even holding a gun, he’s holding a camera!! I bet he’s never even seen a gun fight! Pay back the pay he kept knowing he wouldn’t go! Pay back the cost of his college education! That or send us his new address and cell # at Levenworth! It’s not whether you agree with this war or not. It’s the fact that he has not fulfilled his contractural obligation!
“We held up our end of the bargain; you serve, we pay.“
NOT QUITE, lwr22.
We the people were lied into a “war” by a well connected draft dodger and his chicken hawk cronies; he served; and we borrowed from our children to pay for it all.
Hey Lizabutt, Sine you feel so strongly about the choice Sgt Chiroux is making after fulfilling his requirement except for this bogus stop-loss deal, why ain’t you all outfitted out and over there instead of being the real embarassment by sitting on your rear over here and spouting off with your mouth when you don’t know whatcha be talkin about.
http://tcoverride.blogspot.com/2008/05/matthis-chiroux.html
In the above link, I do, in detail, address what he said. I have a few questions for him (assuming he’s smart enough to understand them.)
1. For the record, he never served a single day in Iraq, and has no personal, first-hand knowledge of what goes on in-country, other than what he heard from others, in non-sworn testimony, correct?
2. As a photojournalist, not an oral historian, did he ever gather any corroborating evidence to support the stories he was told?
3. Does he, a photojournalist, have one single photo showing the horrors and crimes committed by US forces in Iraq?
3a. Did he base all of his decisions off barracks hearsay?
4. Did any/all of these stomach-turning stories start with “no shit, there I was, true story…“?
“For fear of retaliation from the military, I failed to report these crimes.“ [and]“...deployment and support of illegal war violates all of my core values as a human being.“
5. So, by his own admission, do he places his integrity and honor, which are two core army values, beneath his personal fears?
The second-to-last last line of the Army’s NCO creed states that “I will not compromise my integrity, nor my moral courage.“
6. Did he sell out his values then, or is he doing so now, because of an ulterior motive to avoid deployment?
7. Does he honestly believe that if he were not safe while in the Army because of speaking out, that he would be even more safe from the black helicopters in Whisper Mode TM, and foreign service operatives contracted by the DoD for rendition?
“This occupation is unconstitutional and illegal, and I hereby lawfully refuse to participate as I will surely be a party to war crimes.“
The congress passed the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002, in October 2002 as Public Law No: 107-243, authorizing the Iraq War. The Supreme Court of the United States determined that this law was in fact, constitutional.
8. So how is this occupation unconstitutional or illegal, exactly?
The oath of enlistment he signed and swore to, explains in very clear language that his enlistment is for eight years, and delineates that a portion will initially be served on active duty, or in the active reserve or national guard. After the aforementioned duty period, you are placed in the inactive reserve, and are eligible to be recalled to active duty at any time until the eight-year enlistment is over.
9. Did he ever apply for conscientious objector status, or did he only recently object to our presence in Iraq once he was selected to deploy?
CONGRATS for your COURAGE
but honestly, i don’t think its THAT hard to stand up to these hypocritical cowards that should be IN iraq if they believe in it or their idiot president so much. I mean how many of these morons does it take to screw in a light bulb? They have got to be the most gullible wankers ever on earth.
Thank you, Matthis, for following your heart. You knew that what the government was ordering you to do was wrong adn illegal, and you are obeying a much higher command than the Army, and that is your soul. A good friend of mine, and a wonderful person, spent 4 years in Afghanistan, in his own words, “murdering innocent people and destroying innocent lives.“ Now everyone who loves him is left worrying whether PTSD for him will lead to suicide, insanity, or some other terribly way to live. I’m glad that you don’t face the same fate as he does.
I’m not sure what kinds of repercussions you will face for your brave and just decision, but they may be very, very difficult. I’m glad that you have found a support system with IVAW, and I support your decisions 100%. I only wish more people were as dedicated to living life according to their convictions, because surely the world would be a better place.
Good luck with your trial, if there is one, and good luck in everything you do.
How very sad and embarrasing for his parents. If my daughter grows up to serve this country, I will be so very proud. She will understand the commitment and sacrifice it takes to serve this country. I have taught her to be strong and accept responsibility for her actions. This country is a great one and takes those of the most upstanding character to serve . . . some are just not cut out to serve. Some lack pride. Some lack fortitude. Those are the whiners and complainers . . . I feel sorry for the Chiroux family. Their son has shamed them.






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