JACKSONVILLE, N.C. – A former paratrooper who admitted abandoning his post because he disagreed with the U.S. mission in Iraq was freed from a military prison Saturday, stopping in Raleigh to greet supporters before he headed home to Washington state.
Ricky Clousing, 24, left Fort Bragg without permission in June 2005 after returning from a five-month tour in Iraq, where he worked as an interrogator in a military intelligence battalion.
The Sumner native surrendered to the military at Fort Lewis in August and was returned to North Carolina to face a court martial.
He pleaded guilty in October to going absent without leave and was sentenced to three months’ confinement, reduction in rank from sergeant and forfeiture of two-thirds of his pay during his confinement, which ended with a bad conduct discharge from the Army.
The plea allowed him to avoid a more severe sentence for desertion.
“It feels good, but it feels surreal because I don’t have to deal with the military anymore,” Clousing, who was released 15 days early for good conduct, said Saturday outside the main gate of Camp Lejeune, the Marine base where he was imprisoned. “I’m getting out just before Christmas, so it’s really great.”
Clousing has said he witnessed an American soldier kill an innocent Iraqi man in Mosul, but that unit leaders dismissed his account by saying he was an inexperienced soldier.
“My decision was never personal to my command. I had to honor my own personal convictions,” he said. “I’m excited to finally be finished with the military. I’ve gotten the opportunity to learn a lot about myself and the system I fell under.”
Clousing was heading home to spend the holidays with his mother, but stopped on the way in Raleigh to meet with peace activists for a wreath-laying ceremony at the city’s Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
At a Quaker meeting house in Raleigh afterward, he told about three dozen supporters how his patriotism initially grew after he enlisted in the military in 2002 but was shaken by what he witnessed in Iraq.
Clousing, wearing a white T-shirt that sported the logo “Veterans for Peace,” said he decided against declaring himself a conscientious objector because he doesn’t believe all wars are wrong.
He plans to spend time with his family while he figures out how to pay for college, having lost the $30,000 in tuition he hoped to receive as a result of his military service.
He said he will return to North Carolina in March to participate in an annual peace rally in Fayetteville, outside his former base.
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