Army colonel steers clear of conviction against soldier



CFB Gagetown base commander Col. Michael Pearson, foreground, was joined by Chief Warrant Officer Stephen Bartlett of 3 Areas Support Group for a visit to P.E.I. Thursday. Guardian photo

CFB Gagetown base commander Col. Michael Pearson, foreground, was joined by Chief Warrant Officer Stephen Bartlett of 3 Areas Support Group for a visit to P.E.I. Thursday.

Published on August 13th, 2010
Published on August 13th, 2010
Jim Day RSS Feed
Topics :
P.E.I. Thursday.Topics , N.B. , Afghanistan.Asked

Clearly, Col. Michael Pearson wasn’t keen to discuss the case of Capt. Robert Semrau, the Canadian soldier awaiting sentencing in a disgraceful conduct conviction for shooting a severely wounded insurgent in Afghanistan.

Pearson, the base commander of CFB Gagetown, was interviewed by The Guardian during his visit to P.E.I. Thursday.

Topics he was both eager and prepared to detail included an upcoming fundraising dinner in support of military families and injured soldiers in N.B. and P.E.I., his meeting with Premier Robert Ghiz in which the pair spoke about “issues of mutual interest and concern’’ and improvements that are being made to the aging building that is home to the P.E.I. Regiment.

Pearson tried to steer clear of sizing up Semrau, who unarguably took the law into his own hands by violating humanitarian law when he chose to fire two bullets into an Afghan soldier to spare the man from dying a slow, agonizing death.

Many have argued the action taken by Semrau was courageous and humanitarian, rather than a departure from the exemplary character and lauded military service he enjoyed leading up to the life-changing (and possible career-ending) incident in Afghanistan.

Asked if Semrau is a good soldier, Pearson replied: “I have nothing to say about that.’’

Why no comment?

“That’s because a sentence hasn’t been rendered and it’s hard for me to say. I didn’t review the evidence. I don’t know what to say.’’

Yet, the colonel, who moments earlier in the interview before he was urged to comment on Semrau, described a good soldier as being defined by three basic characteristics: loyalty, bravery and dedication.

A good soldier today, said Pearson, is no different than a good soldier of the past.

So, again, is Semrau a good soldier?

The evidence — or, more accurately, a military jury’s finding — concluded otherwise, noted Pearson.

While Semrau was acquitted of murder in the alleged mercy killing, he was found guilty of a lesser, but still serious offence for shooting a wounded, unarmed insurgent on Oct. 19, 2008, in Helmand province.

“A conviction for a disgraceful conduct is a conviction and that sort of sounds to me (like) not a good soldier,’’ said Pearson.

“I trust that the court martial made a proper decision.’’

Pearson says he is not looking to read anything into the length of Semrau’s sentence, set to be rendered in September, regardless of whether it appears harsh or light.

“It can’t make any difference,’’ he said.

“The law is bigger than the military and so the military are servants of the

law.’’

     

jday@theguardian.pe.ca

Comments

  • Username
    AL
    - August 14th, 2010 at 20:25:26

    I have no idea why the writer is so obviously peeved that the Colonel does not feel comfortable answering questions either officially or unofficially about a subject he has almost nothing to do with, beyond having the same profession as Semrau. If the editor of the Guardian was ambushed to answer questions about the court case of some journalist in Ontario, I'm sure he would be similarily reluctant to make either a personal or professional comment. But in most cases the writer would not go out of his way to make it out in print to be some suspicious evasion which personally annoyed him. Mystifying, actually.

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  • Username
    Pete from Summerside
    - August 13th, 2010 at 19:17:05

    Wow...way to go Guardian. Another success at created news rather then reporting it. Shame on you. Shame on Jim Day. Either send him back to Journalism school or release his contract so he can make his fortune with the National Enquiry. You guys are turning into CBC Compass.

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  • Username
    Dave
    - August 13th, 2010 at 16:25:13

    Everytime I read something in this"newspaper" , I think I am reading a supermarket tabloid. Unreal.

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  • Username
    E
    - August 13th, 2010 at 11:32:41

    This is an absolutely terrible piece of journalism, and does a great disservice to the Guardian and to the Island. Col Pearson has nothing to do with the Semrau case, and his visit to PEI has nothing to do with military justice or the ongoing mission in Afghanistan. Instead of interviewing him about any of the subjects of his visit, the writer chose to make a thinly veiled attack Col Pearson and the Canadian Forces. I think the editorial staff of the Guardian shares the blame in this stupidity, for allowing a poor piece like this onto the front page.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Lory
    - August 13th, 2010 at 10:37:30

    Yes, quite outstanding journalism and front page story at that. How embarrassing for the Island. Why not stick to something relevant to PEI and educate Islanders on the military here.

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  • Username
    n
    - August 13th, 2010 at 10:13:25

    He makes a visit to PEI and all you can do is hound him about a criminal case that he has nothing to do with? Wow, there is some outstanding journalism. Why not ask about our troops who are serving overseas, what CTC Gagetown is set up for, What goes on in Gagetown, why he was visiting PEI or any other questions that may be interesting to the public?

    Submit a Comment

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