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Desertion

Desertion is the abandonment of a military duty or post without permission (a pass, liberty or leave) and is done with the intention of not returning. This contrasts with unauthorized absence (UA) or absence without leave (AWOL /ˈwɒl/), which are temporary forms of absence.

The Defector, by Octav Băncilă, 1906
Deserteur (Дезертир), by Ilya Repin, 1917
Armenian soldiers in 1919, with deserters as prisoners

Desertion versus absence without leave

In the United States Army,[1] United States Air Force, British Armed Forces, Australian Defence Force, New Zealand Defence Force, Singapore Armed Forces and Canadian Armed Forces, military personnel will become AWOL if absent from their post without a valid pass, liberty or leave. The United States Marine Corps, United States Navy, and United States Coast Guard generally refer to this as unauthorized absence. Personnel are dropped from their unit rolls after thirty days and then listed as deserters; however, as a matter of U.S. military law, desertion is not measured by time away from the unit, but rather:

  • by leaving or remaining absent from their unit, organization, or place of duty, where there has been a determined intent to not return;
  • if that intent is determined to be to avoid hazardous duty or shirk contractual obligation;
  • if they enlist or accept an appointment in the same or another branch of service without disclosing the fact that they have not been properly separated from current service.[2]

People who are away for more than thirty days but return voluntarily or indicate a credible intent to return may still be considered AWOL. Those who are away for fewer than thirty days but can credibly be shown to have no intent to return (for example, by joining the armed forces of another country) may nevertheless be tried for desertion. On rare occasions, they may be tried for treason if enough evidence is found.

There are similar concepts to desertion. Missing movement occurs when a member of the armed forces fails to arrive at the appointed time to deploy (or "move out") with their assigned unit, ship, or aircraft. In the United States Armed Forces, this is a violation of the Article 87 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). The offense is similar to absence without leave but may draw more severe punishment.[3]

Failure to repair consists of missing a formation or failing to appear at an assigned place and time when so ordered. It is a lesser offense within article 86 of the UCMJ.[4] See: DUSTWUN

An additional duty status code — absent-unknown, or AUN — was established by the U.S. military in 2020 to prompt unit actions and police investigations during the first 48 hours that a Soldier is missing.[5]

By country

Australia

 
A 1918 cartoon by Cecil Hartt making light of the high incidence of soldiers going absent without leave in the Australian Imperial Force

During the First World War, the Australian Government refused to allow members of the First Australian Imperial Force (AIF) to be executed for desertion, despite pressure from the British Government and military to do so. The AIF had the highest rate of soldiers going absent without leave of any of the national contingents in the British Expeditionary Force, and the proportion of soldiers who deserted was also higher than that of other forces on the Western Front in France.[6][7]

Austria

In 2011, Vienna decided to honour Austrian Wehrmacht deserters.[8][9] On 24 October 2014, a Memorial for the Victims of Nazi Military Justice was inaugurated on Vienna's Ballhausplatz by Austria's President Heinz Fischer. The monument was created by German artist Olaf Nicolai and is located opposite the President's office and the Austrian Chancellery. The inscription on top of the three step sculpture features a poem by Scottish poet Ian Hamilton Finlay (1924–2006) with just two words: all alone.

Colombia

In Colombia, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Spanish: FARC) insurgency were highly affected by desertion during the armed conflict with the Military Forces of Colombia. The Colombian Ministry of Defense reported 19,504 deserters from the FARC between August 2002 and their collective demobilization in 2017,[10] despite potentially severe punishment, including execution, for attempted desertion in the FARC.[11] Organizational decline contributed to FARC's high desertion rate which peaked in the year 2008.[10] A later stalemate between the FARC and government forces gave rise to the Colombian peace process.

France

 
"Convoy of Deserters - Paris" in the book "Cassell's History of the War between France and Germany. 1870-1871"

From 1914 to 1918 between 600 and 650 French soldiers were executed for desertion. In 2013, a report for the French Ministry of Veteran Affairs recommended that they be pardoned.[12]

Conversely, France considered as highly praiseworthy the act of citizens of Alsace-Lorraine who during WWI deserted from the German army. After the war it was decided to award all such deserters the Escapees' Medal (French: Médaille des Évadés).

Germany

During the First World War, only 18 Germans who deserted were executed.[13] However, the Germans executed 15,000 men who deserted from the Wehrmacht during the Second World War. In June 1988 the Initiative for the Creation of a Memorial to Deserters who deserted the Wehrmacht came to life in Ulm.[14][15]

Ireland

Éire/Ireland was neutral during the Second World War; the Irish Army expanded to 40,000 men, but they had little to do once it became clear in 1942 that invasion (either by Nazi Germany or by the British Empire) was unlikely. Soldiers were put to work cutting trees and cutting peat; morale was low and pay was bad.[16] Of the 60,000 men who passed through the army in 1940–45, about 7,000 men deserted, about half of them deciding to fight on the Allied side, most joining the British Army.[17][18][19]

Once the war was over, EPO 362 order meant deserters were allowed to return to Ireland; they were not imprisoned, but lost rights to an army pension and could not work for the state or claim unemployment benefits for 7 years. They were also seen as traitors by some Irish people in their homes.[20]

Decades after, the morality of their actions was debated; on the one hand, they had illegally abandoned their country's armed forces at a time when it was threatened with invasion — indeed, it was argued that their acts were treasonous at a time when Britain may have been planning to seize control of Ireland's ports (see Plan W); on the other hand, they chose to leave a safe if tedious posting in order to risk their lives fighting against fascism, and many were motivated by genuine idealism.[21][22]

In 2012, the Minister for Justice and Equality Alan Shatter issued a pardon and amnesty to all World War II-era deserters from the Irish Defence Forces.[23][24][25]

New Zealand

During the First World War 28 New Zealand soldiers were sentenced to death for desertion; of these, five were executed.[26] These soldiers were posthumously pardoned in 2000 through the Pardon for Soldiers of the Great War Act.[26] Those who deserted before reaching the front were imprisoned in what were claimed to be harsh conditions.[27]

Soviet Union

World War II

Order No. 270, dated 16 August 1941, was issued by Joseph Stalin. The order required superiors to shoot deserters on the spot.[28][dead link] Their family members were subjected to arrest.[29] Order No. 227, dated 28 July 1942, directed that each Army must create "blocking detachments" (barrier troops) which would shoot "cowards" and fleeing panicked troops at the rear.[29] Over the course of the war, the Soviets executed 158,000 troops for desertion.[30][better source needed]

Soviet–Afghan War

Many Soviet soldier deserters of the Soviet–Afghan War explain their reasons for desertion as political and in response to internal disorganization and disillusionment regarding their position in the war.[31] Analyses of desertion rates argue that motivations were far less ideological than individual accounts claim. Desertion rates increased prior to announcements of upcoming operations, and were highest during the summer and winter. Seasonal desertions were probably a response to the harsh weather conditions of the winter and immense field work required in the summer. A significant jump in desertion in 1989 when the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan may suggest a higher concern regarding returning home, rather than an overall opposition towards the war itself.[32]

Inter-ethnic explanation for desertion

In the beginning of the Soviet invasion, the majority of Soviet forces were soldiers of Central Asian republics.[32] The Soviets believed that shared ideologies between Muslim Central Asians and Afghan soldiers would build trust and morale within the army. However, Central Asians' longstanding historical frustrations with Moscow degraded soldiers' willingness to fight for the Red Army. As Afghan desertion grew and Soviet opposition was strengthened within Afghanistan, the Soviet plan overtly backfired.[33]

The personal histories of Central Asian ethnic groups – especially between Pashtuns, Uzbeks, and Tajiks, caused tension within the Soviet military. Non-Russian ethnic groups easily related the situation in Afghanistan to Communist takeover of their own states' forced induction into the USSR.[34] Ethnic Russians suspected Central Asians of opposition, and fighting within the army was prevalent.[33]

Upon entering Afghanistan, many Central Asians were exposed to the Koran for the first time uninfluenced by Soviet propagandist versions[clarification needed], and felt a stronger connection towards the opposition than their own comrades.[34] The highest rates of desertion were found among border troops, ranging from 60 to 80% during the first year of the Soviet invasion.[35] In these areas, strong ethnic clashes and cultural factors influenced desertion.

As Afghan soldiers continued to desert the Soviet army, a united Islamic Alliance for the Liberation of Afghanistan began to form. Moderates and fundamentalists banded together to oppose Soviet intervention. The Islamic ideology solidified a strong base of opposition by January 1980, overriding ethnic, tribal, geographic and economic differences among Afghans willing to fight the Soviet invasion, which attracted Central Asian deserters.[33] By March 1980, the Soviet army made an executive decision to replace Central Asian troops with the European sectors of the USSR to avoid further religious and ethnic complications, drastically reducing Soviet forces.[35]

Soviet disillusionment upon entering the war

Soviet soldiers entered the war under the impression that their roles were primarily related to the organization of Afghan forces and society. Soviet media portrayed the Soviet intervention as a necessary means of protecting the Communist uprising from outside opposition.[34] Propaganda declared that Soviets were providing aid to villagers and improving Afghanistan by planting trees, improving public buildings and “generally acting as good neighbors”.[34] Upon entering Afghanistan, Soviet soldiers became immediately aware of the falsity of the reported situation.

In major cities, Afghan youth that originally supported the leftist movement soon turned to Soviet oppositional forces for patriotic and religious reasons.[34] The opposition built resistance in cities, calling Soviet soldiers infidels that were forcing an imperialist Communist invasive government on Afghanistan's people.[34] As Afghan troops continued to abandon the Soviet army to support the mujahideen, they became anti-Russian and antigovernment.[36] Opposition forces emphasized the Soviets' atheism, demanding support for the Muslim faith from civilians.[34] The hostility shown towards soldiers, who entered the war believing their assistance was requested, grew defensive. The opposition circulated pamphlets within Soviet camps stationed in cities, calling for Afghan freedom from the aggressive Communist influence and a right to establish their own government.[34]

The native Afghan army fell from 90,000 to 30,000 by mid-1980, forcing Soviets into more extreme combative positions. The mujahideen's widespread presence among Afghan civilians in rural regions made it difficult for Soviet soldiers to distinguish between the civilians they believed they were fighting for and the official opposition. Soldiers who had entered the war with idealistic viewpoints of their roles were quickly disillusioned.[33]

Problems in Soviet army structure and living standards

The structure of the Soviet army, in comparison to the mujahideen, set the Soviets at a serious fighting disadvantage. While the mujahideen structure was based on kinship and social cohesion, the Soviet army was bureaucratic. Because of this, mujahideen could significantly weaken the Soviet army by the elimination of a field commander or officer. Resistance forces were locally based, more ready to address and mobilize the Afghan population for support. The Soviet army was centrally organized; its regime structure emphasized rank and position, paying less attention to the well-being and effectiveness of its army.[32]

The initial Soviet plan relied on Afghan troops' support in the mountainous regions of Afghanistan. The majority of the Afghan army support crumbled easily as forces lacked strong ideological support for Communism from the beginning.[37]

The Afghan army, comprising 100,000 men before 1978, was reduced to 15,000 within the first year of the Soviet invasion.[34] Of the Afghan troops that remained, many were considered untrustworthy to Soviet troops.[34] Afghans that deserted often took artillery with them, supplying the mujahideen. Soviet troops, to fill Afghan soldiers' place, were pushed into mountainous tribal regions of the East. Soviet tanks and modern warfare was ineffective in the rural, mountainous regions of Afghanistan. Mujahideen tactics of ambush prevented Soviets from developing successful counterattacks.[34]

In 1980, the Soviet army began to rely on smaller and more cohesive units, a response to mirror mujahideen tactics. A decrease in unit size, while solving organizational issues, promoted field leaders to head more violent and aggressive missions, promoting Soviet desertion. Often, small forces would engage in rapes, looting, and general violence beyond what higher ranks ordered, increasing negative sanctions in undesirable locations.[35]

Within the Soviet army, serious drug and alcohol problems significantly reduced the effectiveness of soldiers.[35] Resources became further depleted as soldiers pushed into the mountains; drugs were rampantly abused and available, often supplied by Afghans. Supplies of heating fuel, wood, and food ran low at bases. Soviet soldiers often resorted to trading weapons and ammunition in exchange for drugs or food.[33] As morale decreased and infections of hepatitis and typhus spread, soldiers became further disheartened.

Soviet deserters to the mujahideen

Interviews with Soviet soldier deserters confirm that much of Soviet desertion was in response to widespread Afghan opposition rather than personal aggravation towards the Soviet army. Armed with modern artillery against ill-equipped villagers, Soviet soldiers developed a sense of guilt for the widespread killing of innocent civilians and their unfair artillery advantage. Soviet deserters found support and acceptance within Afghan villages. After entering the mujahideen, many deserters came to recognize the falsity of Soviet propaganda from the beginning. Unable to legitimize the unnecessary killing and mistreatment of the Afghan people, many deserters could not face returning home and justifying their own actions and the unnecessary deaths of comrades. Upon deserting to the mujahideen, soldiers immersed themselves into Afghan culture. Hoping to rectify their position as the enemy, deserters learned the Afghan language and converted to Islam.[31]

United Kingdom

Historically, one who was paid to enlist and then deserted could be arrested under a type of writ known as arrestando ipsum qui pecuniam recepit, or "For arresting one who received money".[38]

Napoleonic Wars

During the Napoleonic Wars desertion was a massive drain on British army resources, despite the threat of court martial and the possibility of the capital punishment for the crime. Many deserters were harboured by citizens who were sympathetic to them.[39]

First World War

"306 British and Commonwealth soldiers were executed for...desertion during World War I," records the Shot at Dawn Memorial. Of these, 25 were Canadian, 22 Irishmen and five New Zealanders.[13]

"During the period between August 1914 and March 1920 more than 20,000 servicemen were convicted by courts-martial of offences which carried the death sentence. Only 3,000 of those men were ordered to be put to death and of those just over 10% were executed."[40]

Second World War

Throughout the Second World War, almost 100,000 British and Commonwealth troops deserted from the armed forces.[41] Capital punishment for desertion was abolished in 1930 so most were imprisoned.[citation needed]

Iraq War

On 28 May 2006, the UK military reported over 1,000 absent without leave since the beginning of the Iraq War, with 566 missing from 2005 and that part of 2006. The Ministry of Defence said that levels of absence were fairly constant and "only one person has been found guilty of deserting the Army since 1989".[42]

United States

Legal definition

 
A United States wartime poster deprecating absence

According to the United States Uniform Code of Military Justice, desertion is defined as:

(a) Any member of the armed forces who–

(1) without authority goes or remains absent from his unit, organization, or place of duty with intent to remain away therefrom permanently;
(2) quits his unit, organization, or place of duty with intent to avoid hazardous duty or to shirk important service; or
(3) without being regularly separated from one of the armed forces enlists or accepts an appointment in the same or another one of the armed forces without fully disclosing the fact that he has not been regularly separated, or enters any foreign armed service except when authorized by the United States; is guilty of desertion.

(b) Any commissioned officer of the armed forces who, after tender of his resignation and before notice of its acceptance, quits his post or proper duties without leave and with intent to remain away therefrom permanently is guilty of desertion.

(c) Any person found guilty of desertion or attempt to desert shall be punished, if the offense is committed in time of war, by death or such other punishment as a court-martial may direct, but if the desertion or attempt to desert occurs at any other time, by such punishment, other than death, as a court-martial may direct.[43]

War of 1812

The desertion rate for American soldiers in the War of 1812 was 12.7%, according to available service records. Desertion was especially common in 1814, when enlistment bonuses were increased from $16 to $124, inducing many men to desert one unit and enlist in another to get two bonuses.[44]

Mexican–American War

During the Mexican–American War, the desertion rate in the U.S. Army was 8.3% (9,200 out of 111,000), compared to 12.7% during the War of 1812 and usual peacetime rates of about 14.8% per year.[45] Many men deserted in order to join another U.S. unit and get a second enlistment bonus. Others deserted because of the miserable conditions in camp, or in 1849–1850 were using the army to get free transportation to California, where they deserted to join the California Gold Rush.[46] Several hundred deserters went over to the Mexican side; nearly all were recent immigrants from Europe with weak ties to the United States. The most famous group was the Saint Patrick's Battalion, about half of whom were Catholics from Ireland, anti-Catholic prejudice reportedly being another reason for desertion. The Mexicans issued broadsides and leaflets enticing U.S. soldiers with promises of money, land grants, and officers' commissions. Mexican guerrillas shadowed the U.S. Army, and captured men who took unauthorized leave or fell out of the ranks. The guerrillas coerced these men to join the Mexican ranks—threatening to kill them if they failed to comply. The generous promises proved illusory for most deserters, who risked execution if captured by U.S. forces. About fifty of the San Patricios were tried and hanged following their capture at Churubusco in August 1847.[47]

High desertion rates were a major problem for the Mexican army, depleting forces on the eve of battle. Most of the soldiers were peasants who had a loyalty to their village and family but not to the generals who conscripted them. Often hungry and ill, never well paid, under-equipped and only partially trained, the soldiers were held in contempt by their officers and had little reason to fight the Americans. Looking for their opportunity, many slipped away from camp to find their way back to their home village.[48]

American Civil War

During the American Civil War, both the Union and Confederacy had a desertion problem. From its 2.5 million or so men, the Union Army saw about 200,000 desertions. Over 100,000 deserted the Confederate army, which was less than a million men and possibly as little as a third the size of the Union Army.[49][50]

New York suffered 44,913 desertions by the war's end, and Pennsylvania recorded 24,050, with Ohio reporting desertions at 18,354.[49] About 1 out of 3 deserters returned to their regiments, either voluntarily or after being arrested and being sent back. Many of the desertions were by "professional" bounty men, men who would enlist to collect the often large cash bonuses and then desert at the earliest opportunity to repeat another enlistment elsewhere. If caught they would face execution; otherwise it could prove a very lucrative criminal enterprise.[51][52]

The total number of Confederate deserters was officially 103,400.[50] Desertion was a major factor for the Confederacy in the last two years of the war. According to Mark A. Weitz, Confederate soldiers fought to defend their families, not a nation.[53] He argues that a hegemonic "planter class" brought Georgia into the war with "little support from non-slaveholders" (p. 12), and the ambivalence of non-slaveholders toward secession, he maintains, was the key to understanding desertion. The privations of the home front and camp life, combined with the terror of battle, undermined the weak attachment of southern soldiers to the Confederacy. For Georgian troops, Sherman's march through their home counties triggered the most desertions.

 
The execution of a U.S. deserter in the Federal Camp, Alexandria

Adoption of a localist identity caused soldiers to desert as well. When soldiers implemented a local identity, they neglected to think of themselves as Southerners fighting a Southern cause. When they replaced their Southern identity with their previous local identity, they lost their motive to fight and, therefore, deserted the army.[54]

A growing threat to the solidarity of the Confederacy was dissatisfaction in the Appalachian mountain districts caused by lingering unionism and a distrust of the slave power. Many of their soldiers deserted, returned home, and formed a military force that fought off regular army units trying to punish them.[55][56] North Carolina lost 23% of its soldiers (24,122) to desertion. The state provided more soldiers per capita than any other Confederate state, and had more deserters as well.[57]

First World War

Desertion still occurred among American armed forces after the U.S. joined the First World War on 6 April 1917. Between 6 April 1917, and 31 December 1918, the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) charged 5,584 servicemen and convicted 2,657 for desertion. 24 AEF troops were eventually sentenced to death, but all managed to avoid execution after President Woodrow Wilson commuted their death sentences to prison terms.[58] Deserters were often publicly humiliated.[13] One U.S. Navy deserter, Henry Holscher, later joined a UK regiment and won the Military Medal.[59]

Second World War

Over 20,000 American soldiers were tried and sentenced for desertion. Forty-nine were sentenced to death, though forty-eight of these death sentences were subsequently commuted. Only one U.S. soldier, Private Eddie Slovik, was executed for desertion in World War II.[60]

Vietnam War

According to the Department of Defense, 503,926 United States servicemen deserted during the Vietnam War between 1 July 1966 to 31 December 1973.[61] Some of these migrated to Canada. Among those who deserted to Canada were Andy Barrie, host of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Radio's Metro Morning, and Jack Todd, sports columnist for the Montreal Gazette.[62] Other countries also gave asylum to deserted U.S. soldiers. For example, Sweden allows asylum for foreign soldiers deserting from war, if the war does not align with the current goals of Swedish foreign policy.

Iraq War

According to the Pentagon, more than 5,500 military personnel deserted in 2003–2004, following the Iraq invasion and occupation.[63] The number had reached about 8,000 by the first quarter of 2006.[64] Almost all of these soldiers deserted within the United States. There has been only one reported case of a desertion in Iraq. The Army, Navy, and Air Force reported 7,978 desertions in 2001, compared with 3,456 in 2005. The Marine Corps showed 1,603 Marines in desertion status in 2001. That had declined to 148 by 2005.[64]

Penalties

Before the Civil War, deserters from the Army were flogged; after 1861, tattoos or branding were also used. The maximum U.S. penalty for desertion in wartime remains death, although this punishment was last applied to Eddie Slovik in 1945. No U.S. serviceman has received more than 24 months imprisonment for desertion or missing movement after September 11, 2001.[65]

A U.S. service member who is AWOL/UA may be punished with non-judicial punishment (NJP) or by court martial under Article 86 of the UCMJ for repeat or more severe offenses.[1][66] Many AWOL/UA service members are also given a discharge in lieu of court-martial.[65][67][68][69][70][71]

The 2012 edition of the United States Manual for Courts-Martial states that:

Any person found guilty of desertion or attempt to desert shall be punished, if the offense is committed in time of war, by death or such other punishment as a court-martial may direct, but if the desertion or attempt to desert occurs at any other time, by such punishment, other than death, as a court-martial may direct.[2]

Legal status of desertion in cases of war crime

Under international law, ultimate "duty" or "responsibility" is not necessarily always to a "government" nor to "a superior", as seen in the fourth of the Nuremberg Principles, which states:

The fact that a person acted pursuant to order of his Government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law, provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him.

Although a soldier under direct orders, in battle, is normally not subject to prosecution for war crimes, there is legal language supporting a soldier's refusal to commit such crimes, in military contexts outside of immediate peril.

In 1998, UNCHR resolution 1998/77[a] recognized that "persons [already] performing military service may develop conscientious objections" while performing military service.[72][73][74][75] This opens the possibility of desertion as a response to cases in which the soldier is required to perform crimes against humanity as part of his mandatory military duty.[citation needed]

The principle was tested unsuccessfully in the case of U.S. Army deserter Jeremy Hinzman, which resulted in a Canadian federal immigration board rejecting refugee status to a deserter invoking Nuremberg Article IV.[76]

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b Joint Service Committee on Military Justice (2012). "Article 86—Absence without leave" (PDF). Manual for Courts-Martial United States (2012 ed.). Fort Belvoir, Virginia: United States Army Publishing Directorate. pp. IV-13–IV-16.
  2. ^ a b Joint Service Committee on Military Justice (2012). "Article 85—Desertion" (PDF). Manual for Courts-Martial United States (2012 ed.). Fort Belvoir, Virginia: United States Army Publishing Directorate. pp. IV-10–IV-13.
  3. ^ Joint Service Committee on Military Justice (2012). "Article 87—Missing Movement" (PDF). Manual for Courts-Martial United States (2012 ed.). Fort Belvoir, Virginia: United States Army Publishing Directorate. pp. IV-16–IV-17.
  4. ^ Anderson, Wayne (1989). "Unauthorized Absences" (PDF). In Winter, Matthew E. (ed.). The Army Lawyer (Department of the Army Pamphlet 27-50-198). The Army Lawyer. Charlottesville, Virginia: The Judge Advocate General's Legal Center & School (JAGS), U.S. Army. p. 3. ISSN 0364-1287. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
  5. ^ "Senior leaders announce results of Fort Hood review". www.army.mil.
  6. ^ Stanley, Peter (2017). "Between Acceptance and Refusal - Soldiers' Attitudes Towards War (Australia)". International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
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  35. ^ a b c d Abdulkader H. Sinno, Organizations at War in Afghanistan and Beyond, (Ithaca: Cornell UP, 2008), 186–7.
  36. ^ Hasan M. Kakar, Afghanistan: The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979–1982, (Berkeley: University of California, 1997), 136.
  37. ^ Hasan M. Kakar, Afghanistan: The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979–1982, (Berkeley: University of California, 1997), 175.
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  41. ^ Garner, Dwight (9 June 2013). "Into the Lives of Three Deserters Who Did Not Have a Good War". The New York Times.
  42. ^ "At least 1,000 UK soldiers desert". BBC News. 28 May 2006. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  43. ^ Sub Chapter 10, Punitive Articles, Section 885, Article 85
  44. ^ Stagg, J. C. A. (1986). "Enlisted Men in the United States Army, 1812-1815: A Preliminary Survey". The William and Mary Quarterly. 43 (4): 615–645. doi:10.2307/1923685. JSTOR 1923685.
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  46. ^ Foos (2002) p 25.
  47. ^ Paul Foos, A Short, Offhand, Killing Affair: Soldiers and Social Conflict during the Mexican-American War (University of North Carolina Press. 2002) p 25, 103–7
  48. ^ Douglas Meed, The Mexican War, 1846–1848 (Routledge, 2003), p. 67.
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  51. ^ Shannon Smith Bennett, "Draft Resistance and Rioting." in Maggi M. Morehouse and Zoe Trodd, eds., Civil War America: A Social and Cultural History with Primary Sources (2013) ch 1
  52. ^ Peter Levine, "Draft evasion in the North during the Civil War, 1863–1865." Journal of American History (1981): 816–834. online 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ Mark A. Weitz, A higher duty: desertion among Georgia troops during the Civil War (U of Nebraska Press, 2005).
  54. ^ Bearman, Peter S. (1991). "Desertion as Localism: Army Unit Solidarity and Group Norms in the U.S. Civil War". Social Forces. 70 (2): 321–342. doi:10.2307/2580242. JSTOR 2580242.
  55. ^ Dotson, Rand (2000). ""The Grave and Scandalous Evil Infected to Your People": The Erosion of Confederate Loyalty in Floyd County, Virginia". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 108 (4): 393–434. JSTOR 4249872.
  56. ^ Otten, James T. (1974). "Disloyalty in the Upper Districts of South Carolina during the Civil War". The South Carolina Historical Magazine. 75 (2): 95–110. JSTOR 27567243.
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Works cited

  • Manual for Courts-Martial United States (PDF) (2012 ed.). US Government Printing Office. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  • Peter S. Bearman; "Desertion as Localism: Army Unit Solidarity and Group Norms in the U.S. Civil War", Social Forces, Vol. 70, 1991.
  • Foos, Paul (2002). A Short, Offhand, Killing Affair: Soldiers and Social Conflict during the Mexican-American War. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807827314.
  • Desmond Bruce Lambley, March in the Guilty Bastard, Zeus Publications, (Burleigh, Qld), 2012. ISBN 978-1-921-91953-4: includes an alphabetical listing of more than 17,000 Australian soldiers who were court-martialled by the AIF during World War I.
  • Ella Lonn; Desertion during the Civil War University of Nebraska Press, 1928 (reprinted 1998).
  • Aaron W. Marrs; "Desertion and Loyalty in the South Carolina Infantry, 1861–1865", Civil War History, Vol. 50, 2004.
  • Nussio, Enzo; Ugarriza, Juan E. (2021). "Why Rebels Stop Fighting: Organizational Decline and Desertion in Colombia's Insurgency". International Security. 45 (4): 167–203. doi:10.1162/isec_a_00406. ISSN 0162-2889.
  • Mark A. Weitz; A Higher Duty: Desertion among Georgia Troops during the Civil War, University of Nebraska Press, 2000.
  • Mark A. Weitz; "Preparing for the Prodigal Sons: The Development of the Union Desertion Policy during the Civil War", Civil War History, Vol. 45, 1999.

Further reading

  • David Cortright. Soldiers in Revolt: GI Resistance During the Vietnam War. Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2005.
  • Charles Glass. Deserter: The Last Untold Story of the Second World War. Harperpress, 2013.
  • Maria Fritsche. "Proving One's Manliness: Masculine Self-perceptions of Austrian Deserters in the Second World War". Gender & History, 24/1 (2012), pp. 35–55.
  • Fred Halstead. GIs Speak Out Against the War: The Case of the Ft. Jackson 8. New York: Pathfinder Press, 1970.
  • Kevin Linch. "Desertion from the British Army during the Napoleonic Wars". Journal of Social History, Vol. 49, No. 4 (Summer 2016), pp. 808–828.
  • Peter Rohrbacher. "Pater Wilhelm Schmidt im Schweizer Exil: Interaktionen mit Wehrmachtsdeserteuren und Nachrichtendiensten, 1943–1945". Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde, no. 62 (2016), pp. 203–221.
  • Jack Todd. Desertion: In the Time of Vietnam. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2001.
  • Chris Lombardi. I Ain’t Marching Anymore: Dissenters, Deserters, and Objectors to America’s Wars. New York: The New Press, 2020.

External links

  • Missing movement 31 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine from About.com
  • Memorial to German World War II deserters in Ulm, Germany at the Sites of Memory webpage
  • Memorial to all deserters in Stuttgart, Germany at the Sites of Memory webpage
  • AWOL Information 6 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine

desertion, other, uses, disambiguation, awol, deserter, redirect, here, other, uses, awol, disambiguation, deserter, disambiguation, abandonment, military, duty, post, without, permission, pass, liberty, leave, done, with, intention, returning, this, contrasts. For other uses see Desertion disambiguation AWOL and Deserter redirect here For other uses see AWOL disambiguation and Deserter disambiguation Desertion is the abandonment of a military duty or post without permission a pass liberty or leave and is done with the intention of not returning This contrasts with unauthorized absence UA or absence without leave AWOL ˈ eɪ w ɒ l which are temporary forms of absence The Defector by Octav Băncilă 1906 Deserteur Dezertir by Ilya Repin 1917 Armenian soldiers in 1919 with deserters as prisoners Contents 1 Desertion versus absence without leave 2 By country 2 1 Australia 2 2 Austria 2 3 Colombia 2 4 France 2 5 Germany 2 6 Ireland 2 7 New Zealand 2 8 Soviet Union 2 8 1 World War II 2 8 2 Soviet Afghan War 2 8 2 1 Inter ethnic explanation for desertion 2 8 2 2 Soviet disillusionment upon entering the war 2 8 2 3 Problems in Soviet army structure and living standards 2 8 2 4 Soviet deserters to the mujahideen 2 9 United Kingdom 2 9 1 Napoleonic Wars 2 9 2 First World War 2 9 3 Second World War 2 9 4 Iraq War 2 10 United States 2 10 1 Legal definition 2 10 2 War of 1812 2 10 3 Mexican American War 2 10 4 American Civil War 2 10 5 First World War 2 10 6 Second World War 2 10 7 Vietnam War 2 10 8 Iraq War 2 10 9 Penalties 3 Legal status of desertion in cases of war crime 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Works cited 8 Further reading 9 External linksDesertion versus absence without leave EditIn the United States Army 1 United States Air Force British Armed Forces Australian Defence Force New Zealand Defence Force Singapore Armed Forces and Canadian Armed Forces military personnel will become AWOL if absent from their post without a valid pass liberty or leave The United States Marine Corps United States Navy and United States Coast Guard generally refer to this as unauthorized absence Personnel are dropped from their unit rolls after thirty days and then listed as deserters however as a matter of U S military law desertion is not measured by time away from the unit but rather by leaving or remaining absent from their unit organization or place of duty where there has been a determined intent to not return if that intent is determined to be to avoid hazardous duty or shirk contractual obligation if they enlist or accept an appointment in the same or another branch of service without disclosing the fact that they have not been properly separated from current service 2 People who are away for more than thirty days but return voluntarily or indicate a credible intent to return may still be considered AWOL Those who are away for fewer than thirty days but can credibly be shown to have no intent to return for example by joining the armed forces of another country may nevertheless be tried for desertion On rare occasions they may be tried for treason if enough evidence is found There are similar concepts to desertion Missing movement occurs when a member of the armed forces fails to arrive at the appointed time to deploy or move out with their assigned unit ship or aircraft In the United States Armed Forces this is a violation of the Article 87 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice UCMJ The offense is similar to absence without leave but may draw more severe punishment 3 Failure to repair consists of missing a formation or failing to appear at an assigned place and time when so ordered It is a lesser offense within article 86 of the UCMJ 4 See DUSTWUNAn additional duty status code absent unknown or AUN was established by the U S military in 2020 to prompt unit actions and police investigations during the first 48 hours that a Soldier is missing 5 By country EditAustralia Edit A 1918 cartoon by Cecil Hartt making light of the high incidence of soldiers going absent without leave in the Australian Imperial ForceDuring the First World War the Australian Government refused to allow members of the First Australian Imperial Force AIF to be executed for desertion despite pressure from the British Government and military to do so The AIF had the highest rate of soldiers going absent without leave of any of the national contingents in the British Expeditionary Force and the proportion of soldiers who deserted was also higher than that of other forces on the Western Front in France 6 7 Austria Edit In 2011 Vienna decided to honour Austrian Wehrmacht deserters 8 9 On 24 October 2014 a Memorial for the Victims of Nazi Military Justice was inaugurated on Vienna s Ballhausplatz by Austria s President Heinz Fischer The monument was created by German artist Olaf Nicolai and is located opposite the President s office and the Austrian Chancellery The inscription on top of the three step sculpture features a poem by Scottish poet Ian Hamilton Finlay 1924 2006 with just two words all alone Colombia Edit In Colombia the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia Spanish FARC insurgency were highly affected by desertion during the armed conflict with the Military Forces of Colombia The Colombian Ministry of Defense reported 19 504 deserters from the FARC between August 2002 and their collective demobilization in 2017 10 despite potentially severe punishment including execution for attempted desertion in the FARC 11 Organizational decline contributed to FARC s high desertion rate which peaked in the year 2008 10 A later stalemate between the FARC and government forces gave rise to the Colombian peace process France Edit Convoy of Deserters Paris in the book Cassell s History of the War between France and Germany 1870 1871 From 1914 to 1918 between 600 and 650 French soldiers were executed for desertion In 2013 a report for the French Ministry of Veteran Affairs recommended that they be pardoned 12 Conversely France considered as highly praiseworthy the act of citizens of Alsace Lorraine who during WWI deserted from the German army After the war it was decided to award all such deserters the Escapees Medal French Medaille des Evades Germany Edit During the First World War only 18 Germans who deserted were executed 13 However the Germans executed 15 000 men who deserted from the Wehrmacht during the Second World War In June 1988 the Initiative for the Creation of a Memorial to Deserters who deserted the Wehrmacht came to life in Ulm 14 15 Ireland Edit See also Irish neutrality during World War II and The Emergency Ireland Eire Ireland was neutral during the Second World War the Irish Army expanded to 40 000 men but they had little to do once it became clear in 1942 that invasion either by Nazi Germany or by the British Empire was unlikely Soldiers were put to work cutting trees and cutting peat morale was low and pay was bad 16 Of the 60 000 men who passed through the army in 1940 45 about 7 000 men deserted about half of them deciding to fight on the Allied side most joining the British Army 17 18 19 Once the war was over EPO 362 order meant deserters were allowed to return to Ireland they were not imprisoned but lost rights to an army pension and could not work for the state or claim unemployment benefits for 7 years They were also seen as traitors by some Irish people in their homes 20 Decades after the morality of their actions was debated on the one hand they had illegally abandoned their country s armed forces at a time when it was threatened with invasion indeed it was argued that their acts were treasonous at a time when Britain may have been planning to seize control of Ireland s ports see Plan W on the other hand they chose to leave a safe if tedious posting in order to risk their lives fighting against fascism and many were motivated by genuine idealism 21 22 In 2012 the Minister for Justice and Equality Alan Shatter issued a pardon and amnesty to all World War II era deserters from the Irish Defence Forces 23 24 25 New Zealand Edit See also List of New Zealand soldiers executed during World War I During the First World War 28 New Zealand soldiers were sentenced to death for desertion of these five were executed 26 These soldiers were posthumously pardoned in 2000 through the Pardon for Soldiers of the Great War Act 26 Those who deserted before reaching the front were imprisoned in what were claimed to be harsh conditions 27 Soviet Union Edit World War II Edit Order No 270 dated 16 August 1941 was issued by Joseph Stalin The order required superiors to shoot deserters on the spot 28 dead link Their family members were subjected to arrest 29 Order No 227 dated 28 July 1942 directed that each Army must create blocking detachments barrier troops which would shoot cowards and fleeing panicked troops at the rear 29 Over the course of the war the Soviets executed 158 000 troops for desertion 30 better source needed Soviet Afghan War Edit This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Many Soviet soldier deserters of the Soviet Afghan War explain their reasons for desertion as political and in response to internal disorganization and disillusionment regarding their position in the war 31 Analyses of desertion rates argue that motivations were far less ideological than individual accounts claim Desertion rates increased prior to announcements of upcoming operations and were highest during the summer and winter Seasonal desertions were probably a response to the harsh weather conditions of the winter and immense field work required in the summer A significant jump in desertion in 1989 when the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan may suggest a higher concern regarding returning home rather than an overall opposition towards the war itself 32 Inter ethnic explanation for desertion Edit In the beginning of the Soviet invasion the majority of Soviet forces were soldiers of Central Asian republics 32 The Soviets believed that shared ideologies between Muslim Central Asians and Afghan soldiers would build trust and morale within the army However Central Asians longstanding historical frustrations with Moscow degraded soldiers willingness to fight for the Red Army As Afghan desertion grew and Soviet opposition was strengthened within Afghanistan the Soviet plan overtly backfired 33 The personal histories of Central Asian ethnic groups especially between Pashtuns Uzbeks and Tajiks caused tension within the Soviet military Non Russian ethnic groups easily related the situation in Afghanistan to Communist takeover of their own states forced induction into the USSR 34 Ethnic Russians suspected Central Asians of opposition and fighting within the army was prevalent 33 Upon entering Afghanistan many Central Asians were exposed to the Koran for the first time uninfluenced by Soviet propagandist versions clarification needed and felt a stronger connection towards the opposition than their own comrades 34 The highest rates of desertion were found among border troops ranging from 60 to 80 during the first year of the Soviet invasion 35 In these areas strong ethnic clashes and cultural factors influenced desertion As Afghan soldiers continued to desert the Soviet army a united Islamic Alliance for the Liberation of Afghanistan began to form Moderates and fundamentalists banded together to oppose Soviet intervention The Islamic ideology solidified a strong base of opposition by January 1980 overriding ethnic tribal geographic and economic differences among Afghans willing to fight the Soviet invasion which attracted Central Asian deserters 33 By March 1980 the Soviet army made an executive decision to replace Central Asian troops with the European sectors of the USSR to avoid further religious and ethnic complications drastically reducing Soviet forces 35 Soviet disillusionment upon entering the war Edit Soviet soldiers entered the war under the impression that their roles were primarily related to the organization of Afghan forces and society Soviet media portrayed the Soviet intervention as a necessary means of protecting the Communist uprising from outside opposition 34 Propaganda declared that Soviets were providing aid to villagers and improving Afghanistan by planting trees improving public buildings and generally acting as good neighbors 34 Upon entering Afghanistan Soviet soldiers became immediately aware of the falsity of the reported situation In major cities Afghan youth that originally supported the leftist movement soon turned to Soviet oppositional forces for patriotic and religious reasons 34 The opposition built resistance in cities calling Soviet soldiers infidels that were forcing an imperialist Communist invasive government on Afghanistan s people 34 As Afghan troops continued to abandon the Soviet army to support the mujahideen they became anti Russian and antigovernment 36 Opposition forces emphasized the Soviets atheism demanding support for the Muslim faith from civilians 34 The hostility shown towards soldiers who entered the war believing their assistance was requested grew defensive The opposition circulated pamphlets within Soviet camps stationed in cities calling for Afghan freedom from the aggressive Communist influence and a right to establish their own government 34 The native Afghan army fell from 90 000 to 30 000 by mid 1980 forcing Soviets into more extreme combative positions The mujahideen s widespread presence among Afghan civilians in rural regions made it difficult for Soviet soldiers to distinguish between the civilians they believed they were fighting for and the official opposition Soldiers who had entered the war with idealistic viewpoints of their roles were quickly disillusioned 33 Problems in Soviet army structure and living standards Edit The structure of the Soviet army in comparison to the mujahideen set the Soviets at a serious fighting disadvantage While the mujahideen structure was based on kinship and social cohesion the Soviet army was bureaucratic Because of this mujahideen could significantly weaken the Soviet army by the elimination of a field commander or officer Resistance forces were locally based more ready to address and mobilize the Afghan population for support The Soviet army was centrally organized its regime structure emphasized rank and position paying less attention to the well being and effectiveness of its army 32 The initial Soviet plan relied on Afghan troops support in the mountainous regions of Afghanistan The majority of the Afghan army support crumbled easily as forces lacked strong ideological support for Communism from the beginning 37 The Afghan army comprising 100 000 men before 1978 was reduced to 15 000 within the first year of the Soviet invasion 34 Of the Afghan troops that remained many were considered untrustworthy to Soviet troops 34 Afghans that deserted often took artillery with them supplying the mujahideen Soviet troops to fill Afghan soldiers place were pushed into mountainous tribal regions of the East Soviet tanks and modern warfare was ineffective in the rural mountainous regions of Afghanistan Mujahideen tactics of ambush prevented Soviets from developing successful counterattacks 34 In 1980 the Soviet army began to rely on smaller and more cohesive units a response to mirror mujahideen tactics A decrease in unit size while solving organizational issues promoted field leaders to head more violent and aggressive missions promoting Soviet desertion Often small forces would engage in rapes looting and general violence beyond what higher ranks ordered increasing negative sanctions in undesirable locations 35 Within the Soviet army serious drug and alcohol problems significantly reduced the effectiveness of soldiers 35 Resources became further depleted as soldiers pushed into the mountains drugs were rampantly abused and available often supplied by Afghans Supplies of heating fuel wood and food ran low at bases Soviet soldiers often resorted to trading weapons and ammunition in exchange for drugs or food 33 As morale decreased and infections of hepatitis and typhus spread soldiers became further disheartened Soviet deserters to the mujahideen Edit Interviews with Soviet soldier deserters confirm that much of Soviet desertion was in response to widespread Afghan opposition rather than personal aggravation towards the Soviet army Armed with modern artillery against ill equipped villagers Soviet soldiers developed a sense of guilt for the widespread killing of innocent civilians and their unfair artillery advantage Soviet deserters found support and acceptance within Afghan villages After entering the mujahideen many deserters came to recognize the falsity of Soviet propaganda from the beginning Unable to legitimize the unnecessary killing and mistreatment of the Afghan people many deserters could not face returning home and justifying their own actions and the unnecessary deaths of comrades Upon deserting to the mujahideen soldiers immersed themselves into Afghan culture Hoping to rectify their position as the enemy deserters learned the Afghan language and converted to Islam 31 United Kingdom Edit Historically one who was paid to enlist and then deserted could be arrested under a type of writ known as arrestando ipsum qui pecuniam recepit or For arresting one who received money 38 Napoleonic Wars Edit During the Napoleonic Wars desertion was a massive drain on British army resources despite the threat of court martial and the possibility of the capital punishment for the crime Many deserters were harboured by citizens who were sympathetic to them 39 First World War Edit 306 British and Commonwealth soldiers were executed for desertion during World War I records the Shot at Dawn Memorial Of these 25 were Canadian 22 Irishmen and five New Zealanders 13 During the period between August 1914 and March 1920 more than 20 000 servicemen were convicted by courts martial of offences which carried the death sentence Only 3 000 of those men were ordered to be put to death and of those just over 10 were executed 40 Second World War Edit Throughout the Second World War almost 100 000 British and Commonwealth troops deserted from the armed forces 41 Capital punishment for desertion was abolished in 1930 so most were imprisoned citation needed Iraq War Edit On 28 May 2006 the UK military reported over 1 000 absent without leave since the beginning of the Iraq War with 566 missing from 2005 and that part of 2006 The Ministry of Defence said that levels of absence were fairly constant and only one person has been found guilty of deserting the Army since 1989 42 United States Edit Legal definition Edit A United States wartime poster deprecating absence According to the United States Uniform Code of Military Justice desertion is defined as a Any member of the armed forces who 1 without authority goes or remains absent from his unit organization or place of duty with intent to remain away therefrom permanently 2 quits his unit organization or place of duty with intent to avoid hazardous duty or to shirk important service or 3 without being regularly separated from one of the armed forces enlists or accepts an appointment in the same or another one of the armed forces without fully disclosing the fact that he has not been regularly separated or enters any foreign armed service except when authorized by the United States is guilty of desertion b Any commissioned officer of the armed forces who after tender of his resignation and before notice of its acceptance quits his post or proper duties without leave and with intent to remain away therefrom permanently is guilty of desertion c Any person found guilty of desertion or attempt to desert shall be punished if the offense is committed in time of war by death or such other punishment as a court martial may direct but if the desertion or attempt to desert occurs at any other time by such punishment other than death as a court martial may direct 43 War of 1812 Edit The desertion rate for American soldiers in the War of 1812 was 12 7 according to available service records Desertion was especially common in 1814 when enlistment bonuses were increased from 16 to 124 inducing many men to desert one unit and enlist in another to get two bonuses 44 Mexican American War Edit During the Mexican American War the desertion rate in the U S Army was 8 3 9 200 out of 111 000 compared to 12 7 during the War of 1812 and usual peacetime rates of about 14 8 per year 45 Many men deserted in order to join another U S unit and get a second enlistment bonus Others deserted because of the miserable conditions in camp or in 1849 1850 were using the army to get free transportation to California where they deserted to join the California Gold Rush 46 Several hundred deserters went over to the Mexican side nearly all were recent immigrants from Europe with weak ties to the United States The most famous group was the Saint Patrick s Battalion about half of whom were Catholics from Ireland anti Catholic prejudice reportedly being another reason for desertion The Mexicans issued broadsides and leaflets enticing U S soldiers with promises of money land grants and officers commissions Mexican guerrillas shadowed the U S Army and captured men who took unauthorized leave or fell out of the ranks The guerrillas coerced these men to join the Mexican ranks threatening to kill them if they failed to comply The generous promises proved illusory for most deserters who risked execution if captured by U S forces About fifty of the San Patricios were tried and hanged following their capture at Churubusco in August 1847 47 High desertion rates were a major problem for the Mexican army depleting forces on the eve of battle Most of the soldiers were peasants who had a loyalty to their village and family but not to the generals who conscripted them Often hungry and ill never well paid under equipped and only partially trained the soldiers were held in contempt by their officers and had little reason to fight the Americans Looking for their opportunity many slipped away from camp to find their way back to their home village 48 American Civil War Edit Main article Confederate States Army Desertion During the American Civil War both the Union and Confederacy had a desertion problem From its 2 5 million or so men the Union Army saw about 200 000 desertions Over 100 000 deserted the Confederate army which was less than a million men and possibly as little as a third the size of the Union Army 49 50 New York suffered 44 913 desertions by the war s end and Pennsylvania recorded 24 050 with Ohio reporting desertions at 18 354 49 About 1 out of 3 deserters returned to their regiments either voluntarily or after being arrested and being sent back Many of the desertions were by professional bounty men men who would enlist to collect the often large cash bonuses and then desert at the earliest opportunity to repeat another enlistment elsewhere If caught they would face execution otherwise it could prove a very lucrative criminal enterprise 51 52 The total number of Confederate deserters was officially 103 400 50 Desertion was a major factor for the Confederacy in the last two years of the war According to Mark A Weitz Confederate soldiers fought to defend their families not a nation 53 He argues that a hegemonic planter class brought Georgia into the war with little support from non slaveholders p 12 and the ambivalence of non slaveholders toward secession he maintains was the key to understanding desertion The privations of the home front and camp life combined with the terror of battle undermined the weak attachment of southern soldiers to the Confederacy For Georgian troops Sherman s march through their home counties triggered the most desertions The execution of a U S deserter in the Federal Camp Alexandria Adoption of a localist identity caused soldiers to desert as well When soldiers implemented a local identity they neglected to think of themselves as Southerners fighting a Southern cause When they replaced their Southern identity with their previous local identity they lost their motive to fight and therefore deserted the army 54 A growing threat to the solidarity of the Confederacy was dissatisfaction in the Appalachian mountain districts caused by lingering unionism and a distrust of the slave power Many of their soldiers deserted returned home and formed a military force that fought off regular army units trying to punish them 55 56 North Carolina lost 23 of its soldiers 24 122 to desertion The state provided more soldiers per capita than any other Confederate state and had more deserters as well 57 First World War Edit Desertion still occurred among American armed forces after the U S joined the First World War on 6 April 1917 Between 6 April 1917 and 31 December 1918 the American Expeditionary Forces AEF charged 5 584 servicemen and convicted 2 657 for desertion 24 AEF troops were eventually sentenced to death but all managed to avoid execution after President Woodrow Wilson commuted their death sentences to prison terms 58 Deserters were often publicly humiliated 13 One U S Navy deserter Henry Holscher later joined a UK regiment and won the Military Medal 59 Second World War Edit Over 20 000 American soldiers were tried and sentenced for desertion Forty nine were sentenced to death though forty eight of these death sentences were subsequently commuted Only one U S soldier Private Eddie Slovik was executed for desertion in World War II 60 Vietnam War Edit See also Vietnam War resisters in Canada According to the Department of Defense 503 926 United States servicemen deserted during the Vietnam War between 1 July 1966 to 31 December 1973 61 Some of these migrated to Canada Among those who deserted to Canada were Andy Barrie host of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Radio s Metro Morning and Jack Todd sports columnist for the Montreal Gazette 62 Other countries also gave asylum to deserted U S soldiers For example Sweden allows asylum for foreign soldiers deserting from war if the war does not align with the current goals of Swedish foreign policy Iraq War Edit According to the Pentagon more than 5 500 military personnel deserted in 2003 2004 following the Iraq invasion and occupation 63 The number had reached about 8 000 by the first quarter of 2006 64 Almost all of these soldiers deserted within the United States There has been only one reported case of a desertion in Iraq The Army Navy and Air Force reported 7 978 desertions in 2001 compared with 3 456 in 2005 The Marine Corps showed 1 603 Marines in desertion status in 2001 That had declined to 148 by 2005 64 Penalties Edit Before the Civil War deserters from the Army were flogged after 1861 tattoos or branding were also used The maximum U S penalty for desertion in wartime remains death although this punishment was last applied to Eddie Slovik in 1945 No U S serviceman has received more than 24 months imprisonment for desertion or missing movement after September 11 2001 65 A U S service member who is AWOL UA may be punished with non judicial punishment NJP or by court martial under Article 86 of the UCMJ for repeat or more severe offenses 1 66 Many AWOL UA service members are also given a discharge in lieu of court martial 65 67 68 69 70 71 The 2012 edition of the United States Manual for Courts Martial states that Any person found guilty of desertion or attempt to desert shall be punished if the offense is committed in time of war by death or such other punishment as a court martial may direct but if the desertion or attempt to desert occurs at any other time by such punishment other than death as a court martial may direct 2 Legal status of desertion in cases of war crime EditUnder international law ultimate duty or responsibility is not necessarily always to a government nor to a superior as seen in the fourth of the Nuremberg Principles which states The fact that a person acted pursuant to order of his Government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him Although a soldier under direct orders in battle is normally not subject to prosecution for war crimes there is legal language supporting a soldier s refusal to commit such crimes in military contexts outside of immediate peril In 1998 UNCHR resolution 1998 77 a recognized that persons already performing military service may develop conscientious objections while performing military service 72 73 74 75 This opens the possibility of desertion as a response to cases in which the soldier is required to perform crimes against humanity as part of his mandatory military duty citation needed The principle was tested unsuccessfully in the case of U S Army deserter Jeremy Hinzman which resulted in a Canadian federal immigration board rejecting refugee status to a deserter invoking Nuremberg Article IV 76 See also EditBarratry admiralty law Canada and Iraq War resisters Conscientious objector Decimation Roman army Defection Draft evasion Eddie Slovik a U S Army soldier executed for desertion Green Cadres List of Iraq War resisters Mutiny No call no show in civilian employment Nuremberg Principle IV Resistance Inside the Army Running the gauntlet War resisterNotes Edit Conscientious objection to military service United Nations Commission on Human Rights resolution 1998 77 1998 United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human RightsReferences Edit a b Joint Service Committee on Military Justice 2012 Article 86 Absence without leave PDF Manual for Courts Martial United States 2012 ed Fort Belvoir Virginia United States Army Publishing Directorate pp IV 13 IV 16 a b Joint Service Committee on Military Justice 2012 Article 85 Desertion PDF Manual for Courts Martial United States 2012 ed Fort Belvoir Virginia United States Army Publishing Directorate pp IV 10 IV 13 Joint Service Committee on Military Justice 2012 Article 87 Missing Movement PDF Manual for Courts Martial United States 2012 ed Fort Belvoir Virginia United States Army Publishing Directorate pp IV 16 IV 17 Anderson Wayne 1989 Unauthorized Absences PDF In Winter Matthew E ed The Army Lawyer Department of the Army Pamphlet 27 50 198 The Army Lawyer Charlottesville Virginia The Judge Advocate General s Legal Center amp School JAGS U S Army p 3 ISSN 0364 1287 Retrieved 10 June 2014 Senior leaders announce results of Fort Hood review www army mil Stanley Peter 2017 Between Acceptance and Refusal Soldiers Attitudes Towards War Australia International Encyclopedia of the First World War Lambley 2012 especially pp 6 60 Vienna to honor deserters from Hitler s army Associated Press The Guardian 20 April 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2013 Vienna to honour Austria s Nazi army deserters BBCNews Europe 23 April 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2013 a b Nussio Enzo Ugarriza Juan E 2021 Why Rebels Stop Fighting Organizational Decline and Desertion in Colombia s Insurgency International Security 45 4 167 203 doi 10 1162 isec a 00406 ISSN 0162 2889 Aguilera Mario 2014 Las guerrillas marxistas y la pena de muerte a combatientes Anuario Colombiano de Historia Social y de la Cultura 41 1 201 236 doi 10 15446 achsc v41n1 44855 ISSN 0120 2456 France may pardon executed World War I cowards France 24 1 October 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c Shot at Dawn The Heritage of the Great War Retrieved 22 July 2014 Mark R Hatlie 19 November 2005 Memorial to Deserters in Ulm Sites of Memory Retrieved 8 February 2010 Welch Steven R 2012 Commemorating Heroes of a Special Kind Deserter Monuments in Germany Journal of Contemporary History 47 2 370 401 doi 10 1177 0022009411431721 ISSN 0022 0094 JSTOR 23249191 S2CID 159889365 Time to pardon soldiers who left to fight Hitler The Irish Times IRISH ARMY DESERTERS FROM CO KILDARE IN WWII www kildare ie says The Irish Story Top Ten of 2021 The Irish Story Podcast Irish Army Deserters in the Second World War with Cian Harte The Irish Story Quinn Joseph 26 November 2020 The desertions crisis in the Irish defence forces during the Second World War 1939 1945 War in History 28 4 825 847 doi 10 1177 0968344520932960 S2CID 229393194 Canny Liam 1998 Pariah Dogs Deserters from the Irish Defence Forces Who Joined the British Armed Forces during The Emergency Studia Hibernica 30 231 249 JSTOR 20495095 via JSTOR Deserters should pay the price for leaving down their country Irish Examiner 5 July 2011 Kennedy Dr Michael Column Time to ask questions about Irish army deserters during World War II TheJournal ie WWII Irish deserters finally get pardons BBC News 6 May 2013 Latest News www nli ie Apology and amnesty for World War II soldiers 7 May 2013 via www rte ie a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b First New Zealand Soldier Executed New Zealand History Online Retrieved 22 July 2014 Camp or Starvation NZ Truth 1918 09 28 paperspast natlib govt nz National Library of New Zealand Retrieved 29 October 2016 Text of Order No 270 Archived 17 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b Roberts Geoffrey Stalin s Wars From World War to Cold War 1939 1953 New Haven CT London Yale University Press 2006 page 132 Patriots ignore greatest brutality The Sydney Morning Herald August 13 2007 a b Artyom Borovik The Hidden War New York Atlantic Monthly Press 1990 pp 175 8 a b c Abdulkader H Sinno Organizations at War in Afghanistan and Beyond Ithaca Cornell UP 2008 157 8 a b c d e Gregory Feifer The Great Gamble New York Russ Intellectual Properties 2009 pp 97 106 a b c d e f g h i j k Henry S Bradsher Afghanistan and the Soviet Union New and Expanded Durnham Duke University Press 1983 pp 206 14 a b c d Abdulkader H Sinno Organizations at War in Afghanistan and Beyond Ithaca Cornell UP 2008 186 7 Hasan M Kakar Afghanistan The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response 1979 1982 Berkeley University of California 1997 136 Hasan M Kakar Afghanistan The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response 1979 1982 Berkeley University of California 1997 175 History of Science Cyclopaedia or An universal dictionary of arts and sciences Arboreus artery digicoll library wisc edu Retrieved 3 July 2017 Linch Kevin 11 August 2016 Desertion from the British Army during the Napoleonic Wars Journal of Social History 49 4 808 828 doi 10 1093 jsh shw007 S2CID 147493542 via Project MUSE UK Tribute to WWI cowards BBC News 21 June 2001 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Garner Dwight 9 June 2013 Into the Lives of Three Deserters Who Did Not Have a Good War The New York Times At least 1 000 UK soldiers desert BBC News 28 May 2006 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Sub Chapter 10 Punitive Articles Section 885 Article 85 Stagg J C A 1986 Enlisted Men in the United States Army 1812 1815 A Preliminary Survey The William and Mary Quarterly 43 4 615 645 doi 10 2307 1923685 JSTOR 1923685 Coffman Edward M 1988 The Old Army A Portrait of the American Army in Peacetime 1784 1898 p 193 Foos 2002 p 25 Paul Foos A Short Offhand Killing Affair Soldiers and Social Conflict during the Mexican American War University of North Carolina Press 2002 p 25 103 7 Douglas Meed The Mexican War 1846 1848 Routledge 2003 p 67 a b Desertion In The Civil War Armies Civilwarhome com Archived from the original on 23 April 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b Confederate Desertion Etymonline com Retrieved 18 December 2012 Shannon Smith Bennett Draft Resistance and Rioting in Maggi M Morehouse and Zoe Trodd eds Civil War America A Social and Cultural History with Primary Sources 2013 ch 1 Peter Levine Draft evasion in the North during the Civil War 1863 1865 Journal of American History 1981 816 834 online Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Mark A Weitz A higher duty desertion among Georgia troops during the Civil War U of Nebraska Press 2005 Bearman Peter S 1991 Desertion as Localism Army Unit Solidarity and Group Norms in the U S Civil War Social Forces 70 2 321 342 doi 10 2307 2580242 JSTOR 2580242 Dotson Rand 2000 The Grave and Scandalous Evil Infected to Your People The Erosion of Confederate Loyalty in Floyd County Virginia The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 108 4 393 434 JSTOR 4249872 Otten James T 1974 Disloyalty in the Upper Districts of South Carolina during the Civil War The South Carolina Historical Magazine 75 2 95 110 JSTOR 27567243 King Owen Scott 2011 Conditional Confederates Absenteeism among Western North Carolina Soldiers 1861 1865 Civil War History 57 4 349 379 doi 10 1353 cwh 2011 0068 Robert Fantina 2 April 2006 Desertion and the American Soldier 1776 2006 Algora Publishing pp 111 112 ISBN 0 8758 6452 X U S Navy jack the lad deserter turned WW1 military hero 15 April 2017 Kimmelman Benedict B The Example of Private Slovik American Heritage September October 1987 pp 97 104 Montgomery Paul L 20 August 1974 Number of Deserters and Draft Evaders Disputed Proponents Call for Full Pardon Public Service or Hearings The New York Times Vietnam War Resisters Then and Now Archived from the original on 9 November 2014 Deserters We Won t Go To Iraq CBS News 6 December 2004 a b Nicholas Bill 6 March 2006 8 000 desert during Iraq war USA Today Retrieved 15 July 2009 a b Branum James M 2012 US Army AWOL Defense A Practice Guide and Formbook PDF Oklahoma City OK Military Law Press ISBN 9781300302841 Retrieved 29 December 2012 Manual for Courts Martial United States PDF 2012 ed US Government Printing Office Retrieved 13 December 2012 Misconduct including drug and alchohol abuse Air Force GI Rights Hotline Military Discharges and Military Counseling girightshotline org Misconduct including drug and alchohol abuse Navy GI Rights Hotline Military Discharges and Military Counseling girightshotline org Marine Corps Separation and Retirement Manual United States Marine Corps 6 June 2007 Military Separations COMDTINST M1000 4 United States Coast Guard United States Department of Homeland Security November 2016 Army Regulation 635 200 Personnel Separations Active Duty Enlisted Administrative Separations Department of the Army 6 June 2006 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 22 April 1998 Conscientious objection to military service Commission on Human Rights resolution 1998 77 see preamble Aware United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Conscientious objection to military service E CN 4 RES 1998 77 See introductory paragraph UN Commission on Human Rights 22 April 1998 Conscientious objection to military service Commission on Human Rights resolution 1998 77 United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights 1998 D Christopher Decker and Lucia Fresa 29 March 2001 The Status of Conscientious Objections Under Article 4 of the European Convention on Human Rights 33 N Y U J INT L L amp POL 379 2000 See pages 412 424 or PDF pages 34 36 PDF New York University School of Law Issues Volume 33 Archived from the original PDF on 22 November 2011 Hinzman Decision Full Text Decision IMMIGRATION AND REFUGEE BOARD OF CANADA Refugee Protection Division 16 March 2005 Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 21 March 2009 Works cited EditManual for Courts Martial United States PDF 2012 ed US Government Printing Office Retrieved 13 December 2012 Peter S Bearman Desertion as Localism Army Unit Solidarity and Group Norms in the U S Civil War Social Forces Vol 70 1991 Foos Paul 2002 A Short Offhand Killing Affair Soldiers and Social Conflict during the Mexican American War Chapel Hill North Carolina The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807827314 Desmond Bruce Lambley March in the Guilty Bastard Zeus Publications Burleigh Qld 2012 ISBN 978 1 921 91953 4 includes an alphabetical listing of more than 17 000 Australian soldiers who were court martialled by the AIF during World War I Ella Lonn Desertion during the Civil War University of Nebraska Press 1928 reprinted 1998 Aaron W Marrs Desertion and Loyalty in the South Carolina Infantry 1861 1865 Civil War History Vol 50 2004 Nussio Enzo Ugarriza Juan E 2021 Why Rebels Stop Fighting Organizational Decline and Desertion in Colombia s Insurgency International Security 45 4 167 203 doi 10 1162 isec a 00406 ISSN 0162 2889 Mark A Weitz A Higher Duty Desertion among Georgia Troops during the Civil War University of Nebraska Press 2000 Mark A Weitz Preparing for the Prodigal Sons The Development of the Union Desertion Policy during the Civil War Civil War History Vol 45 1999 Further reading EditDavid Cortright Soldiers in Revolt GI Resistance During the Vietnam War Chicago Haymarket Books 2005 Charles Glass Deserter The Last Untold Story of the Second World War Harperpress 2013 Maria Fritsche Proving One s Manliness Masculine Self perceptions of Austrian Deserters in the Second World War Gender amp History 24 1 2012 pp 35 55 Fred Halstead GIs Speak Out Against the War The Case of the Ft Jackson 8 New York Pathfinder Press 1970 Kevin Linch Desertion from the British Army during the Napoleonic Wars Journal of Social History Vol 49 No 4 Summer 2016 pp 808 828 Peter Rohrbacher Pater Wilhelm Schmidt im Schweizer Exil Interaktionen mit Wehrmachtsdeserteuren und Nachrichtendiensten 1943 1945 Paideuma Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde no 62 2016 pp 203 221 Jack Todd Desertion In the Time of Vietnam Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2001 Chris Lombardi I Ain t Marching Anymore Dissenters Deserters and Objectors to America s Wars New York The New Press 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Desertion Missing movement Archived 31 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine from About com Memorial to German World War II deserters in Ulm Germany at the Sites of Memory webpage Memorial to all deserters in Stuttgart Germany at the Sites of Memory webpage AWOL Information Archived 6 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Desertion amp oldid 1151444784, 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