Ben Roberts-Smith: Top Australian soldier loses war crimes defamation case

MenInG

PakPassion Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Runs
217,565
Australia's most-decorated living soldier Ben Roberts-Smith has lost a historic defamation case against three newspapers that accused him of war crimes in Afghanistan.

The outlets were sued over articles alleging he killed unarmed prisoners.

The civil trial was the first time a court has assessed accusations of war crimes by Australian forces.

A judge said four of the six murder allegations - all denied by the soldier - were substantially true.

These included:

A handcuffed farmer the soldier had kicked off a cliff - a fall which knocked out the man's teeth, before he was subsequently shot dead
A captured Taliban fighter who was shot at least 10 times in the back, before his prosthetic leg was taken as a trophy and later used by troops as a drinking vessel
Two murders which were ordered or agreed to by Mr Roberts-Smith to initiate or "blood" rookie soldiers.
Justice Anthony Besanko found the newspaper had not proven two other murder allegations; nor reports Mr Roberts-Smith had assaulted a woman with whom he was having an affair; nor a threat against a junior colleague.

But additional allegations that he had unlawfully assaulted captives and bullied peers were found to be true.

Mr Roberts-Smith, who left the defence force in 2013, has not been charged over any of the claims in a criminal court, where there is a higher burden of proof. The 44-year-old was not present for Thursday's judgement.

After the decision, a Taliban spokesman said the case was proof of "uncountable crimes" by foreign forces in Afghanistan, but added he did trust any court globally to follow them up.

Australian troops were deployed to Afghanistan between 2001 and 2021. Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles declined to comment on the case, saying it was a civil matter.

An elite Special Air Service (SAS) soldier, Mr Roberts-Smith is Australia's most famous living war veteran.

He received the country's highest military award - the Victoria Cross - in 2011 for having single-handedly overpowered Taliban machine-gunners who had been attacking his platoon.

But his public image was shattered in 2018 when The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and The Canberra Times started publishing articles about his misconduct between 2009 and 2012.

The soldier argued five of the killings reported by the newspapers had occurred legally during combat, and the sixth did not happen at all.

His defamation case - dubbed by some "the trial of the century" - lasted 110 days and was rumoured to have cost up to A$25m ($16.3m, £13.2m).

More than 40 witnesses - including Afghan villagers, a government minister and a string of current and former SAS soldiers - gave extraordinary evidence about every facet of Mr Roberts-Smith's life.

How a top soldier's defamation case rocked Australia
But the case also exposed some of the secretive inner workings of Australia's elite special forces.

The trial heard from soldiers who said potential misconduct was rarely reported due to a "code of silence" within the regiment, and others defended their actions as necessary.

Many giving evidence were there unwillingly, having been subpoenaed, and three refused to speak about some allegations fearing self-incrimination.

Much of the evidence against Mr Roberts-Smith relied on eyewitness accounts and recollections of discussions among soldiers. Justice Besanko had to weigh the reliability of witnesses against each other, with the media outlets contending theirs had no reason to lie.

Speaking outside the Federal Court in Sydney, the news outlets called the judgement a "vindication" for their reporting.

"It's a day of justice for the brave men of the SAS who stood up and told the truth about who Ben Roberts-Smith is: a war criminal, a bully and a liar," said investigative reporter Nick McKenzie, who wrote the stories alongside Chris Masters and David Wroe.

"[And] today is a day of some small justice for the Afghan victims of Ben Roberts-Smith."

Nick McKenzie speaks to media outside court
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
Journalist Nick McKenzie says their reporting had relied on the "moral courage" of other SAS soldiers
The Afghanistan Human Rights and Democracy Organisation also praised the role of investigative journalism in "uncovering the truth and raising public awareness" about what had taken place in the country.

Media magnate Kerry Stokes - who employs Mr Roberts-Smith at rival outlet Seven West Media - said the judgement did "not accord with the man I know".

"I know this will be particularly hard for Ben, who has always maintained his innocence," said Mr Stokes, who had loaned the soldier money to fund his legal case. Mr Roberts-Smith had offered to hand in his Victoria Cross as collateral, local media reported.

The case comes three years after a landmark report found credible evidence that Australian forces had unlawfully killed 39 civilians and prisoners in Afghanistan from 2007 to 2013.

Accusations of war crimes have also been levelled at soldiers from the UK and US in recent years.

Local media say dozens of Australian soldiers are being investigated for their roles in alleged war crimes. But so far charges have only been laid against one, Oliver Schulz.

War historian Peter Stanley told the BBC ahead of the judgement that Mr Roberts-Smith's case was "a litmus test" for allegations of Australian wrongdoing in Afghanistan.

"The Ben Roberts-Smith episode is just a precursor to the major series of war crimes investigations, allegations, prosecutions, and possibly convictions that we'll see over the next few years."

BBC
 
Calls for Australia’s most decorated soldier to be stripped of Victoria Cross

Australia’s most decorated living war veteran has quit his corporate job amid calls for him to be stripped of his coveted Victoria Cross after a civil court found he unlawfully killed four Afghans.

Ben Roberts-Smith, who retired from Australia’s elite Special Air Service Regiment a decade ago, quit his job on Friday as state manager of Seven West Media after losing a landmark defamation suit on Thursday against newspapers that had accused him of war crimes.

The 44-year-old had taken leave since 2021 to focus on his federal court case, which has been financed by the company’s billionaire executive chair Kerry Stokes.

“Ben has been on leave whilst the case was running and today has offered his resignation which we have accepted,” chief executive James Warburton said in an email to staff.

“We thank Ben for his commitment to Seven and wish him all the best,” he added.

Mr Roberts-Smith has been fighting to salvage his reputation through a defamation suit in the federal court since Australian newspaper articles in 2018 accused him of an array of war crimes including culpability in six unlawful killings.

...
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/worl...tp&cvid=2a3cb87cade04dc8bba72f6df21c077c&ei=8
 
So this is a huge thing.

Will courts in the USA and UK also start investigating war atrocities?
 
Meh, no one cares.

Only terrorist sympathisers will use this and try to equate these army soldiers as terrorists.

What taliban and al qaeda did was much worse. Not only didnthey kill innocent through child bombers but they were no champions of human rights when they took foreigners as prisoners. But because basic human decency isnt applied on them and is only applied on west, so i know who will get critisized more
 
A judgement in a landmark defamation trial says Australia's most decorated living soldier lied to cover up his misdeeds and threatened witnesses.

It also found Ben Roberts-Smith "complicit in and responsible for" the murder of three Afghans.

Last week, he lost a defamation suit against three Australian newspapers over war crimes allegations.

It's raised the spectre of a possible wider reckoning over claims of war crimes by Australian forces.

On Thursday, Federal Court Judge Anthony Besanko threw out the former special forces corporal's case against The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Canberra Times.

Roberts-Smith claimed the papers ruined his life by their reports that he had broken the moral and legal rules of war.

The judge delayed releasing the reasons for his judgement until Monday, to allow Australian authorities time to ensure it did not inadvertently divulge national security secrets.

But Judge Besanko found the claims that Roberts-Smith had murdered unarmed prisoners and civilians while serving in Afghanistan were "substantially true".

Saying that the 44-year-old was "not an honest and reliable witness", he added: "I have difficulty accepting the applicant's evidence on any disputed issue".

He further found that the Victoria Cross recipient invoked a special forces code of silence to intimidate witnesses, and also smeared and threatened others.

In a bid to silence a fellow Afghanistan veteran, Roberts-Smith went to the extent of sending a legal threat to Gina Rinehart, Australia's richest woman, warning that the ex-soldier - Ms Rinehart's relative - would be sued for speaking ill of him.

He even hired a private detective to investigate another former soldier who was questioning his past, producing a report that profiled not only the veteran, but his wife and parents as well.

In a tape recording, Roberts-Smith was also heard lambasting soldiers who break the code of silence. "A few people [in the special forces] had done what we don't do and that's talk out of school."

Roberts-Smith has not commented since the ruling, but he is expected to appeal to the full bench of the federal court.

The 110-day defamation trial cost up to an estimated A$25m ($16.3m, £13.2m).

Roberts-Smith had been considered a national hero for having single-handedly overpowered Taliban machine-gunners who were attacking his Special Air Service (SAS) platoon, earning him Australia's highest military honour.

He was appointed to high-profile executive positions and received a string of accolades, even being crowned Father of the Year in 2013.

But while he has not been charged with any offences, the father of two is currently the subject of an Australia Federal Police inquiry into alleged war crimes committed in Afghanistan.

In 2020, a landmark investigation known as the Brereton Report found "credible evidence" that elite Australian soldiers unlawfully killed 39 people in Afghanistan.

It recommended that 19 current or former soldiers should be investigated over alleged killings of prisoners and civilians from 2009-13.
 
Meh, no one cares.

Only terrorist sympathisers will use this and try to equate these army soldiers as terrorists.

What taliban and al qaeda did was much worse. Not only didnthey kill innocent through child bombers but they were no champions of human rights when they took foreigners as prisoners. But because basic human decency isnt applied on them and is only applied on west, so i know who will get critisized more

He murdered people under the disguise of being a soldier.

Good on the Aus justice system for convicting this low life murderer, parading as some sort of hero.

The invasion of Afghanistan was immoral.

It doesnt matter what others did, the Taliban didnt fly to Sydney and hold guns to the heads of Aussies.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
He murdered people under the disguise of being a soldier.

Good on the Aus justice system for convicting this low life murderer, parading as some sort of hero.

The invasion of Afghanistan was immoral.

It doesnt matter what others did, the Taliban didnt fly to Sydney and hold guns to the heads of Aussies.

mulllah omar allowed children to be strapped with bombs and used as weapons to blow.

If we are gonna compare two evils, than i know who is the lesser one
 
mulllah omar allowed children to be strapped with bombs and used as weapons to blow.

If we are gonna compare two evils, than i know who is the lesser one

Americans sat in Nevada wait for kids to run out after a drone attack and then do a second strike to blow up children. Nobody is worse than them.

Its no surprise a Zardari fan thinks an invader who murders Innocent people is 'meh' - boring - nothing to see - oh but he was worse.

Its embarrassing to even reply.
 
Americans sat in Nevada wait for kids to run out after a drone attack and then do a second strike to blow up children. Nobody is worse than them.

Its no surprise a Zardari fan thinks an invader who murders Innocent people is 'meh' - boring - nothing to see - oh but he was worse.

Its embarrassing to even reply.

best thing ever were drone attacks.

If there are terrorist living in your villiage, than move out. Alot of these no go areas of Pakistan were providing protection to terrorist.

Like i have always said, everyone knows who the lesser evil was. You can cry about drone attacks or wahtever you want, but the Taliban and Al qaeda were doing suicide bombing. Thankfully, all most all of them have died with there bodies minced
 
best thing ever were drone attacks.

If there are terrorist living in your villiage, than move out. Alot of these no go areas of Pakistan were providing protection to terrorist.

Like i have always said, everyone knows who the lesser evil was. You can cry about drone attacks or wahtever you want, but the Taliban and Al qaeda were doing suicide bombing. Thankfully, all most all of them have died with there bodies minced

300+ children alone were killed in Pakistan. I guess they are terrorists to you.

This thread is about Ben Roberts , war criminal which you find 'meh'. Again Zardari fan thinking its boring its normal, as he himself is suspected of murdering his wife.
 
300+ children alone were killed in Pakistan. I guess they are terrorists to you.

This thread is about Ben Roberts , war criminal which you find 'meh'. Again Zardari fan thinking its boring its normal, as he himself is suspected of murdering his wife.

10000+ women and children killed by terrorist sucicide attacks
 
10000+ women and children killed by terrorist sucicide attacks

And in your 'meh' world, 4 million killed due to war of terror policies is fine.

And no westerner has done anything wrong.

Its too late, you will not be getting a passport to the west for being an apologist for their war crimes.
 
And in your 'meh' world, 4 million killed due to war of terror policies is fine.

And no westerner has done anything wrong.

Its too late, you will not be getting a passport to the west for being an apologist for their war crimes.

yet you live under their rule while u whine about their alleged killings
 
Didn't know crimes of terrorists justifies the killing of toddlers and kids who had nothing to do with the war (including Pakistan, Afghanistan and USA). The only sufferers are the ones who lost their lives or families there without having anything to do with it.

Anyone who glorifies the war crimes and terrorism needs to be dragged to a mental health facility.

Good on Australian justice system for investigating their owns.
 
yet you live under their rule while u whine about their alleged killings

I dont whine, I condemn and criticise as any respectable human with an ounce of decency would. You wont be living here ever yet still see killers as heros even after bombing and killing hundreds of Pakistani children. .
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Didn't know crimes of terrorists justifies the killing of toddlers and kids who had nothing to do with the war (including Pakistan, Afghanistan and USA). The only sufferers are the ones who lost their lives or families there without having anything to do with it.

Anyone who glorifies the war crimes and terrorism needs to be dragged to a mental health facility.

Good on Australian justice system for investigating their owns.

UK/US/USA Western goverments are puppets of war industry, bankers and more. Yet there are so many decent humans in the west who believe in justice even against their own. Imo they follow more Islamic values than many so called Muslims in Pakistan. No wonder Pakistan and much of the Muslim world is in ruins.
 
UK/US/USA Western goverments are puppets of war industry, bankers and more. Yet there are so many decent humans in the west who believe in justice even against their own. Imo they follow more Islamic values than many so called Muslims in Pakistan. No wonder Pakistan and much of the Muslim world is in ruins.

Let's not generalize all people of Pak based on a few juvenile loud mouths. There are millions of hardworking, honest and pious people here who have been doing their job to the best of their abilities but are hindered by millions of other Pakistanis who are corrupting every field they walk into. One bad person can undo the good work of 100 people. Pak's problem hasn't been the lack of good people but the abundance of bad ones.

We both know the content of character decides who is better than whom and not the nationality. People on internet aren't going to decide who is better but The Almighty.
 
Back
Top