Good things come to those who struggle!
Today (Apr. 21), I stood before the Army. I looked a board of officers in the eyes, and I told them I thought they were sending people off to participate in war crimes. And what did they say? Get out of here, Sergeant, and keep your damn G.I. Bill!!!
Indeed, folks! The Army awarded me a recommendation for a general discharge under honorable conditions from the Individual Ready Reserve for my refusal to deploy to Iraq last summer. This landmark decision means not only am I a free man, I’m free to continue school this fall with the “new” G.I. Bill that I earned while on active duty.
Though this discharge is identical to the one I refused in exchange for having this hearing, I can now rest easy knowing I never submitted, I never backed down and the Army has heard my story.
And not just my story, but the stories of those brave veterans at Winter Soldier and those who’ve participated in IVAW’s Warrior Writers’ program. Full texts of both books were submitted to the Army this morning, and I can only imagine the fun they’re having transcribing them into the record.
I testified, Marjorie Conn, the president of the National Lawyers’ Guild, testified, and my mother Patricia testified as to why my refusal to deploy was quite legitimate and not deserving of attack by the military.
Though Maj. Laws, the prosecution, did everything he could to keep my legal arguments from the ears of the board (he even prevented me from reading to them from my Constitution calling the document irrelevant), our voices were heard loud and clear by a board of gentlemen who’ve given me a new respect and hope for our nation and servicemembers world-wide.
The hearing, which lasted around four-and-a-half hours, cemented in my mind that not only is military resistance to our illegal occupations righteous, it is finding new breath amongst troops who are fed up with the status quo.
This all came after a provocative appearance this morning on the local Fox News Channel (http://www.fox2now.com/ktvi-ap-soldier-on-trial-042109,0,1094348.story) in which I wore a patriotic symbol of distress (an upside-down flag) on my uniform.
During the hearing, my girlfriend Alexandra among others were present in the board room to offer moral support. Having them there made all the difference as I squared off with the military over human slaughter that we’ve all been forced to bow down to.
So what does this mean for the military? RESIST!!!! Now’s the time, ladies and gentleman. The flood-gates are open. Your leaders are listening, and more and more, they are agreeing. Resisters are moving away from being the exception, and slowly becoming the norm.
If I can refuse to go to Iraq, climb monuments, march into presidential debates, lobby congress, face the military, not go to jail and not even loose my G.I. Bill, we just don’t have any excuses anymore! Resistance is rising, and IVAW will stand firm underneath it. My story is now history, and I humbly pass the torch.
More to follow soon on my testimony at Winter Soldier and the juicy details of my hearing. Now, I’m going to sleep like I haven’t in a year!
Peace and Solidarity,
Matthis Chiroux
Matthisresists.us
April 22nd, 2009 at 4:46 pm
Very nice job man. Way to represent us and our Country. Nice job standing up to the fox male interviewer who seemed more interested in discrediting you than in listening to you. Never bow down.
April 22nd, 2009 at 8:38 pm
Congrats! Its a long time comming. Many fellow but more silent IRR soldiers have been fearing punishment for not responding to orders, and I am glad you were able to step up and win one for all of us. I wish the mainstream media would give this more of a serious look. I think you did a great job in that interview and were easily able to shut up those news anchors. Next… Hannity. Keep up the fight!
April 22nd, 2009 at 9:59 pm
Way to go, Sgt, and all involved in support. Thank you. Sleep well!
Tom J Kuzma, Sheridan WY HM2 USN-USMC-USNR-GWI, disabled
April 23rd, 2009 at 2:16 am
Congratulations for the mountain you moved. Hope you got a good long sleep but bet you were too excited to when you finally had the time.
April 23rd, 2009 at 3:09 pm
Dear Matthis,
Unbelievable man…
What an amazing letter. Seriously. I have never read something written with so much sincerity and compassion. This will be a letter that can change the world. Tears came to my eyes more then once and I AM AT WORK…
I am so very sorry for all of the mis-justices that have happened to you during your lifetime and am very thankful that you have shared them with me and the world…
What you have accomplished the past 9 months since I have known you has been tremendous. I truly feel special for knowing you in real life…
Let me know if there is anything I can do EVER…
Once again, I am out of breath after reading this letter… I am sure many others are as well…
In support,
EA
May 14th, 2009 at 9:20 pm
Matthis-
i just read the above piece on the IVAW website.
I joined the Army in ‘67, and was a “youth for Goldwater” type conservative. I thought.
I was in Viet Nam 3 whole days before I started thinking this wasnt any fight to defend democracy, no way in hell. And the thing that REALLY turned me against it, at first, was the vile treatment women- and very young girls- were accorded. From that hatred of women all other atrocities flow.
After I got back Stateside, it was the GI Movement for me, and a lifelong appreciation of strong minded, independant women. And a hatred of this foul Empire that hides behind a grotesque parody of a constitutional Republic…..
Your story awakens memories Id rather slept.
good luck…..im an old Staten Island boy……