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by Courage to Resist
“When I was really depressed, my boyfriend convinced me to go into therapy…You can’t be in therapy in the military…I admitted that I was so upset about my role in uniform that I was seeing a counselor and in the past I’d hurt myself…[the investigating officer] wanted to take disciplinary action against me because my ‘crime’ of being depressed by war.”
This Courage to Resist podcast was recorded and edited by Matthew Breems. Production assistance, Stephanie Atkinson. Executive Producer, Jeff Paterson.
Breaking Cadence: One Woman’s War Against the War, 2nd Edition available from Amazon
We need to raise at least $15,000 to produce this two-year-long series of 50+ interviews so that this history is not lost!
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Today on the podcast, Rosa del Duca. In her award-winning memoir, Breaking Cadence: One Woman’s War Against the War, Rosa recounts her experience in the Army National Guard during the second Iraq conflict. Coming to believe that the US presence in the conflict was illegal and unjust, Rosa filed to become a conscientious objector when she was placed on active duty for deployment. Del Duca also hosts a podcast focused on conscientious objection called Breaking Cadence: Insights From a Modern Day Conscientious Objector.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
My mom’s second marriage went south. He declared bankruptcy in the middle of it because he had racked up a credit card debt and so my mom had had to declare bankruptcy because she didn’t have the money, she’s just a teacher. She had warned me, she was checking in, like, “Hey, do you want to go to college? Because if you do, just know I can’t help you pay for anything, not even books.” That was a huge worry of mine. “How the heck am I going to pay for college?” I had all these warped ideas of money and debt. We grew up pretty poor and my mom was on and off welfare. I thought, “Wow, I’m not super into the military,” and don’t have anyone in my family who is military, except for I think my grandpa was a civil engineer and helped build bridges during World War II. But it wasn’t something I was exposed to growing up really at all.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I wanted to be in some kind of public affairs job in the military. I knew they existed and my recruiter said, “Oh yeah, you can transfer into one of those at any time. You just need to join as a fueler first, because this is what we have a slot for right now.” I drilled with my unit. I graduated high school, I got into the University of Montana in Missoula, was excited to go. A couple weeks into my freshman year, 9/11 happened. At that point, I was just so naive. I thought, “Oh my God, the New York National Guard has a huge mess to clean up.” That’s how absolutely naive I was, even though I was studying journalism. That’s the beginning of the story.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
It was really the run up to the Iraq War that really disturbed me, because I was paying attention and I didn’t understand this fever pitch rush to war over there and how it was connected. I saw pretty clearly what was going on, is this rigorous campaign of misinformation and misleading the public and repeating false facts enough that the public perception was that they were facts. The way that the Bush administration was linking Iraq and Saddam Hussein to weapons of mass destruction that didn’t exist and the weapons inspectors couldn’t find them, and then they were kicked out before they could investigate further, and trying to tie the 9/11 attacks to them, saying that they were partially funded by Saddam Hussein, which also was based on false intelligence and just a lie. Having signed a six-year contract with the military, I thought there was absolutely nothing I could do. I just needed to hunker down and fulfill my contract and then get out.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
It was dicey for everyone, but I was in this brand new little construction unit out at Camp Roberts and the unit only had maybe 10 members. It seemed like the pressure was off me because they said we can’t get called up until our unit is full, and it was really hard at that time to add new people because everyone was getting called up. Then I got called up. My sergeant called me and said that I had been put on a mobilization list and I was supposed to deploy with a unit out of Louisiana to Operation Iraqi Freedom. It was an 18-month deployment.
Yeah, so what happened is so many National Guard units were called up that units across the country were cherry picking whatever MOSs they still needed to get to full capacity to deploy. That’s why, yeah, I was battle rostered with this unit out of Louisiana, total strangers clearly, because I don’t live in Louisiana.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now!, they offered campus stations I think a year for free. I was exposed to journalism from this larger picture of what was going on. The more I heard, the more I was just horrified by it and I didn’t want anything to do with it. But then again, there’s this contract that I had signed. What the heck was I going to do, go AWOL? I could go AWOL and run away to Canada, but then what, I’m just going to live in Canada for the rest of my life as a turncoat traitor person?
Maybe a week after I’d gotten called up and the next week I was due to go to this mobilization processing or whatever, and I get a call from the ROTC recruiter at Cal Poly. He had somehow heard that I got called up and he was calling me because he wanted to recruit me into ROTC. At first, I was confused. I was like, “Well, I can’t join ROTC, I’m called up.” He’s like, “No, no, they’re going to want you. We’re really hurting for officers right now. If you join ROTC, you can delay this deployment because you’ll have to be trained as an officer first. Then if you do get called up down the road in a couple years, you’ll have your degree, you’ll be an officer. You just have to sign a three-year contract extension.”
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
But I didn’t know how the army was defining it. I knew that if I checked that I would get in trouble, there’s probably some proof I had to give. I don’t know. I had no idea.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I had just signed this contract with ROTC that I saw as a gift horse. I was like, “I’ve been given this gift. I don’t have to ship out in a month to fight in this war. I just made this really serious commitment to ROTC. I can’t start a conscientious objector application now. I’m going to look like a total idiot and traitor. It’s time to grow up. Own your responsibilities, do what you said you would do, suck it up.”
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
But yeah, he sent me this huge long packet to go through it and start thinking about my answers to all these really important questions. You have to prove that your beliefs changed after you signed your contract up until now. I thought about who I was going to ask to write letters of support and all of this stuff. When I was assigned an investigating officer, his witch hunt was focused on that. When I was really depressed, my boyfriend convinced me to go into therapy because you could do a quarter of it for free. I had had a mild history of being a cutter, cutting my arms when I was depressed, so I started seeing a therapist. You can’t be in therapy in the military.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I moved to the Bay Area. When I moved, I asked where I should drill now that I had moved and would be in a different unit and no one answered me, so kind of I was AWOL. I wasn’t going to beat down doors asking them where I should drill when I didn’t want to be in uniform at all. I half expected the military police to come knocking on my door at some point. One day I went to the post office and there was a slip in my box that said there was something too big, so I went to the window and they gave me this big packet. It was from Army and I nearly had a heart attack, because I was like, “Oh, this is it. This is where I’m going to be activated or gone after, or who knows what.”
But I opened the packet and it was just all of my records, all these medical records and copies of my paperwork, and on one of the pages said something that I had been discharged into the inactive ready reserve. It had on there type of discharge, “Honorable”, and it had my ETS date as six years to the day after I joined up. I still don’t know what the heck happened. I don’t know what happened to my three-year contract extension, I don’t know why they discharged me when they did. I’m like a military ghost. I don’t have a DD214, which is the paper that everyone gets when they get discharged.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I went back to the Bay Area, and the GI Rights Hotline, they connected me with a lawyer in the area, Steven Collier, who actually represented the first CO of the Iraq War, Stephen Funk. He took my case pro bono. He said, “Well, there’s one big mistake they made when they denied you. They didn’t say why, and that is illegal. We’re going to file a writ of habeas corpus proceeding in federal court if they come after you, because it’s a very old writ and it’s against the unlawful detainment of anyone.” That was my last card to play. I was like, “Well, if they come after me, I’ve got Steven Collier ready to sue the federal government on my behalf. This is just wild!” But they didn’t come after me and then I got that packet in the mail and I was not going to go chasing after them asking questions, like, “Yeah, but why did you let me out? Don’t you remember that I signed a contract extension?” I tried to move on.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I didn’t even want to write about it for a while, but I got into an MFA program for creative writing. My second year in there, there was a “Craft of Nonfiction” class and so I started writing some Army stuff. My professor was like, “You need to work on this every day. This is good.” It turned out that that was something really cathartic and good for me, and in the process of writing the book and rewriting it and workshopping it and revising it and sending it out to potential publishers, I finally was able to work through things in a more healthy way and process it and move past it. It was all, I guess, part of the healing part of it. Now I’m not ashamed to promote what I did and the book. I’m trying to go into schools with my little “Truth in Recruitment” group and just inform teens of some of the realities that recruiters aren’t going to tell you when you join the military.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
The post Podcast: “What? Yes. That term..I’m a conscientious objector!” – Rosa del Duca appeared first on Courage to Resist Archive.
5
99 ratings
by Courage to Resist
“When I was really depressed, my boyfriend convinced me to go into therapy…You can’t be in therapy in the military…I admitted that I was so upset about my role in uniform that I was seeing a counselor and in the past I’d hurt myself…[the investigating officer] wanted to take disciplinary action against me because my ‘crime’ of being depressed by war.”
This Courage to Resist podcast was recorded and edited by Matthew Breems. Production assistance, Stephanie Atkinson. Executive Producer, Jeff Paterson.
Breaking Cadence: One Woman’s War Against the War, 2nd Edition available from Amazon
We need to raise at least $15,000 to produce this two-year-long series of 50+ interviews so that this history is not lost!
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Today on the podcast, Rosa del Duca. In her award-winning memoir, Breaking Cadence: One Woman’s War Against the War, Rosa recounts her experience in the Army National Guard during the second Iraq conflict. Coming to believe that the US presence in the conflict was illegal and unjust, Rosa filed to become a conscientious objector when she was placed on active duty for deployment. Del Duca also hosts a podcast focused on conscientious objection called Breaking Cadence: Insights From a Modern Day Conscientious Objector.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
My mom’s second marriage went south. He declared bankruptcy in the middle of it because he had racked up a credit card debt and so my mom had had to declare bankruptcy because she didn’t have the money, she’s just a teacher. She had warned me, she was checking in, like, “Hey, do you want to go to college? Because if you do, just know I can’t help you pay for anything, not even books.” That was a huge worry of mine. “How the heck am I going to pay for college?” I had all these warped ideas of money and debt. We grew up pretty poor and my mom was on and off welfare. I thought, “Wow, I’m not super into the military,” and don’t have anyone in my family who is military, except for I think my grandpa was a civil engineer and helped build bridges during World War II. But it wasn’t something I was exposed to growing up really at all.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I wanted to be in some kind of public affairs job in the military. I knew they existed and my recruiter said, “Oh yeah, you can transfer into one of those at any time. You just need to join as a fueler first, because this is what we have a slot for right now.” I drilled with my unit. I graduated high school, I got into the University of Montana in Missoula, was excited to go. A couple weeks into my freshman year, 9/11 happened. At that point, I was just so naive. I thought, “Oh my God, the New York National Guard has a huge mess to clean up.” That’s how absolutely naive I was, even though I was studying journalism. That’s the beginning of the story.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
It was really the run up to the Iraq War that really disturbed me, because I was paying attention and I didn’t understand this fever pitch rush to war over there and how it was connected. I saw pretty clearly what was going on, is this rigorous campaign of misinformation and misleading the public and repeating false facts enough that the public perception was that they were facts. The way that the Bush administration was linking Iraq and Saddam Hussein to weapons of mass destruction that didn’t exist and the weapons inspectors couldn’t find them, and then they were kicked out before they could investigate further, and trying to tie the 9/11 attacks to them, saying that they were partially funded by Saddam Hussein, which also was based on false intelligence and just a lie. Having signed a six-year contract with the military, I thought there was absolutely nothing I could do. I just needed to hunker down and fulfill my contract and then get out.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
It was dicey for everyone, but I was in this brand new little construction unit out at Camp Roberts and the unit only had maybe 10 members. It seemed like the pressure was off me because they said we can’t get called up until our unit is full, and it was really hard at that time to add new people because everyone was getting called up. Then I got called up. My sergeant called me and said that I had been put on a mobilization list and I was supposed to deploy with a unit out of Louisiana to Operation Iraqi Freedom. It was an 18-month deployment.
Yeah, so what happened is so many National Guard units were called up that units across the country were cherry picking whatever MOSs they still needed to get to full capacity to deploy. That’s why, yeah, I was battle rostered with this unit out of Louisiana, total strangers clearly, because I don’t live in Louisiana.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now!, they offered campus stations I think a year for free. I was exposed to journalism from this larger picture of what was going on. The more I heard, the more I was just horrified by it and I didn’t want anything to do with it. But then again, there’s this contract that I had signed. What the heck was I going to do, go AWOL? I could go AWOL and run away to Canada, but then what, I’m just going to live in Canada for the rest of my life as a turncoat traitor person?
Maybe a week after I’d gotten called up and the next week I was due to go to this mobilization processing or whatever, and I get a call from the ROTC recruiter at Cal Poly. He had somehow heard that I got called up and he was calling me because he wanted to recruit me into ROTC. At first, I was confused. I was like, “Well, I can’t join ROTC, I’m called up.” He’s like, “No, no, they’re going to want you. We’re really hurting for officers right now. If you join ROTC, you can delay this deployment because you’ll have to be trained as an officer first. Then if you do get called up down the road in a couple years, you’ll have your degree, you’ll be an officer. You just have to sign a three-year contract extension.”
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
But I didn’t know how the army was defining it. I knew that if I checked that I would get in trouble, there’s probably some proof I had to give. I don’t know. I had no idea.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I had just signed this contract with ROTC that I saw as a gift horse. I was like, “I’ve been given this gift. I don’t have to ship out in a month to fight in this war. I just made this really serious commitment to ROTC. I can’t start a conscientious objector application now. I’m going to look like a total idiot and traitor. It’s time to grow up. Own your responsibilities, do what you said you would do, suck it up.”
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
But yeah, he sent me this huge long packet to go through it and start thinking about my answers to all these really important questions. You have to prove that your beliefs changed after you signed your contract up until now. I thought about who I was going to ask to write letters of support and all of this stuff. When I was assigned an investigating officer, his witch hunt was focused on that. When I was really depressed, my boyfriend convinced me to go into therapy because you could do a quarter of it for free. I had had a mild history of being a cutter, cutting my arms when I was depressed, so I started seeing a therapist. You can’t be in therapy in the military.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I moved to the Bay Area. When I moved, I asked where I should drill now that I had moved and would be in a different unit and no one answered me, so kind of I was AWOL. I wasn’t going to beat down doors asking them where I should drill when I didn’t want to be in uniform at all. I half expected the military police to come knocking on my door at some point. One day I went to the post office and there was a slip in my box that said there was something too big, so I went to the window and they gave me this big packet. It was from Army and I nearly had a heart attack, because I was like, “Oh, this is it. This is where I’m going to be activated or gone after, or who knows what.”
But I opened the packet and it was just all of my records, all these medical records and copies of my paperwork, and on one of the pages said something that I had been discharged into the inactive ready reserve. It had on there type of discharge, “Honorable”, and it had my ETS date as six years to the day after I joined up. I still don’t know what the heck happened. I don’t know what happened to my three-year contract extension, I don’t know why they discharged me when they did. I’m like a military ghost. I don’t have a DD214, which is the paper that everyone gets when they get discharged.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I went back to the Bay Area, and the GI Rights Hotline, they connected me with a lawyer in the area, Steven Collier, who actually represented the first CO of the Iraq War, Stephen Funk. He took my case pro bono. He said, “Well, there’s one big mistake they made when they denied you. They didn’t say why, and that is illegal. We’re going to file a writ of habeas corpus proceeding in federal court if they come after you, because it’s a very old writ and it’s against the unlawful detainment of anyone.” That was my last card to play. I was like, “Well, if they come after me, I’ve got Steven Collier ready to sue the federal government on my behalf. This is just wild!” But they didn’t come after me and then I got that packet in the mail and I was not going to go chasing after them asking questions, like, “Yeah, but why did you let me out? Don’t you remember that I signed a contract extension?” I tried to move on.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
I didn’t even want to write about it for a while, but I got into an MFA program for creative writing. My second year in there, there was a “Craft of Nonfiction” class and so I started writing some Army stuff. My professor was like, “You need to work on this every day. This is good.” It turned out that that was something really cathartic and good for me, and in the process of writing the book and rewriting it and workshopping it and revising it and sending it out to potential publishers, I finally was able to work through things in a more healthy way and process it and move past it. It was all, I guess, part of the healing part of it. Now I’m not ashamed to promote what I did and the book. I’m trying to go into schools with my little “Truth in Recruitment” group and just inform teens of some of the realities that recruiters aren’t going to tell you when you join the military.
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
Rosa del Duca:
Matthew Breems:
The post Podcast: “What? Yes. That term..I’m a conscientious objector!” – Rosa del Duca appeared first on Courage to Resist Archive.