Joe Glenton and Afghanistan – Ever a lad so wrong?
I’m late onto the scene with this story, but with it coming up again recently I thought it needed commenting upon.
Lance Corporal Joe Glenton is refusing to return to Afghanistan because he has identified it as an unjust war. He is now going to be facing prsion due to playing a major role in a anti war protest
Here is the text of the letter he has sent to downing street:
I am writing to you as a serving soldier in the British army to express my views and concerns on the current conflict in Afghanistan.
It is my primary concern that the courage and tenacity of my fellow soldiers has become a tool of American foreign policy. I believe this unethical short-changing of such proud men and women has caused immeasurable suffering not only to families of British service personnel who have been killed and injured, but also to the noble people of Afghanistan.
I have seen qualities in the Afghan people which have also been for so long apparent and admired in the British soldier. Qualities of robustness, humour, utter determination and unwillingness to take a step backwards. However it is these qualities, on both sides, which I fear will continue to cause a state of attrition. These will only lead to more heartbreak within both our societies.
I am not a general nor am I a politician and I cannot claim any mastery of strategy. However, I am a soldier who has served in Afghanistan, which has given me some small insight.
I believe that when British military personnel submit themselves to the service of the nation and put their bodies into harm’s way, the government that sends them into battle is obliged to ensure that the cause is just and right, i.e. for the protection of life and liberty.
The war in Afghanistan is not reducing the terrorist risk, far from improving Afghan lives it is bringing death and devastation to their country. Britain has no business there.
I do not believe that our cause in Afghanistan is just or right. I implore you, Sir, to bring our soldiers home.
Yours sincerely,
Joe Glenton
Lance/Corporal, Royal Logistics Corps”
A politically neutral force that can alleviate the tensions between the Afghans and the troops and placate nationalistic tensions from the British public.

“However this young chap seems to be somewhat naive – and wrong on a number of levels. ”
Those who fail to acknowledge the tole of the TAPI pipeline scheduled for 2010 and which will run straight through Helmand, where British & Canadian troops are dying, are naive-or just cynical or in denial about its centrality to NATO’s war aims in Afghanistan.
heck out John Foster, a veteran oil industry petro=economists view in his Pipeline Through a Troubled Land