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==After the Army==
==After the Army==
Meow. Delgado is actively involved in the anti-war movement. He has participated in numerous peace activities across the country, and led the 70-member "Florida For Peace" group to [[Washington, D.C.]] on September 24, 2005 to participate in the rally organized by [[United for Peace and Justice]]. He has also given many presentations on the abuses committed at the [[Abu Ghraib prison]], at which Delgado was stationed for six months though he was a mechanic and never entered the facility. His unit was also not allowed in the area where the alleged abuses occurred.
Meow. Delgado is actively involved in the anti-war movement. He has participated in numerous peace activities across the country, and led the 70-member "Florida For Peace" group to [[Washington, D.C.]] on September 24, 2005 to participate in the rally organized by [[United for Peace and Justice]]. He has also given many presentations on the abuses committed at the [[Abu Ghraib prison]], at which Delgado was stationed for six months though he was a mechanic and never entered the facility. His unit was also not allowed in the area where the alleged abuses occurred. Aidan VRO was here.


Delgado sparked considerable controversy when, upon his release from the Army and his return to the United States, he asserted, in an interview with ''[[The New York Times]]'' columnist [[Bob Herbert]], to have witnessed egregious cases of abuse perpetrated against [[Iraq]]i [[civilian]]s by American soldiers. This included claims of drivers of tracked fighting vehicles deliberately running over dogs, and soldiers in Humvees breaking glass bottles over the heads of passing civilians. These claims were quickly disproven based on the physical impossibility of operating military vehicles in the manner described, and military regulations forbidding glass in combat vehicles.<ref name=herbarticle>{{cite news
Delgado sparked considerable controversy when, upon his release from the Army and his return to the United States, he asserted, in an interview with ''[[The New York Times]]'' columnist [[Bob Herbert]], to have witnessed egregious cases of abuse perpetrated against [[Iraq]]i [[civilian]]s by American soldiers. This included claims of drivers of tracked fighting vehicles deliberately running over dogs, and soldiers in Humvees breaking glass bottles over the heads of passing civilians. These claims were quickly disproven based on the physical impossibility of operating military vehicles in the manner described, and military regulations forbidding glass in combat vehicles.<ref name=herbarticle>{{cite news

Revision as of 21:53, 20 September 2011

Aidan Delgado (born November 18, 1981) is a lawyer and former soldier in the 320th Military Police Company of the United States Army, best known for having become a conscientious objector in April 2003 during his deployment to Iraq and for disclosing information about Abu Ghraib.

Army career

Delgado states that he joined the Army Reserve while he was also investigating Buddhism.[1] He claims to have signed his enlistment contract on September 11, 2001. He began a year-long tour in Iraq in April 2003, he was openly questioning whether he could participate in the war in Iraq good conscience, due to his newfound dedication to the principles of pacifism espoused in his faith. He filed for conscientious objector status and continued to serve in Iraq while it was processed.

As the only member of his company who spoke Arabic, Delgado was in frequent contact with Iraqi civilians. Eventually he was transferred to Abu Ghraib where he claimed to have witnessed many abuses. The Army recognized his conscientious objector status and he was honorably discharged in April 2004.

After the Army

Meow. Delgado is actively involved in the anti-war movement. He has participated in numerous peace activities across the country, and led the 70-member "Florida For Peace" group to Washington, D.C. on September 24, 2005 to participate in the rally organized by United for Peace and Justice. He has also given many presentations on the abuses committed at the Abu Ghraib prison, at which Delgado was stationed for six months though he was a mechanic and never entered the facility. His unit was also not allowed in the area where the alleged abuses occurred. Aidan VRO was here.

Delgado sparked considerable controversy when, upon his release from the Army and his return to the United States, he asserted, in an interview with The New York Times columnist Bob Herbert, to have witnessed egregious cases of abuse perpetrated against Iraqi civilians by American soldiers. This included claims of drivers of tracked fighting vehicles deliberately running over dogs, and soldiers in Humvees breaking glass bottles over the heads of passing civilians. These claims were quickly disproven based on the physical impossibility of operating military vehicles in the manner described, and military regulations forbidding glass in combat vehicles.[2] After the Bob Herbert interview, Delgado provided a sworn statement and copies of photographs taken at Abu Ghraib to Army CID and IG investigators which he likely acquired third hand. The lead investigator was Army CID Agent David Lindstedt and lawyer Aaron Delgado from the Daytona law firm Simpson & Delgado was also present as legal council. Several months later, representatives of the military stated that they could neither confirm nor deny Delgado's account. During the investigation Army CID Agent David Lindstedt acknowledged that the incidents described by Delgado occurred, but disputed the context. In their report, Army CID investigators acknowledged that they had not interviewed some of the members of Delgado's unit that he had mentioned in the deposition as witnesses.

Since his involvement with the New York Times article and the publication of his story in national media, he has become one of the most visible and well-known veterans in the anti-war movement. Along with numerous television appearances he appears in the film "The Ground Truth" by Focus Features and the revised edition of "Rush to War." In February 2006, blues guitarist Robert Cray released a video for his song "Twenty," about the Iraq War, in which Delgado portrayed a soldier coming home. Delgado is one of the individuals featured in the documentary "Soldiers of Conscience" by Luna Productions, broadcast on the POV Series on PBS on October 16, 2008.[3]

In 2007, Beacon Press published a memoir of his time at Abu Ghraib and his conscientious objection entitled The Sutras of Abu Ghraib.[4]

Delgado speaks some Arabic, having spent eight years living in Egypt, where his father, an American diplomat, was assigned; he graduated from Cairo American College in 2000. Delgado also lived in Thailand and Senegal. Delgado attained a Bachelor's Degree in Religion at the New College of Florida in 2006.

See also

List of Iraq War Resisters

References

  1. ^ Fleming, Scott (2005). "In Good Conscience". LiP Magazine and AlterNet. Retrieved March 11, 2007.
  2. ^ Herbert, Bob (May 2, 2005). "From 'Gook' to 'Raghead'". New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  3. ^ http://www.pbs.org/pov/soldiersofconscience
  4. ^ *Aidan Delgado (2007). The Sutras of Abu Ghraib. Beacon. ISBN 978-0-8070-7270-7.

Official Website

Select speeches and interviews

Video

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