War crimes, or Marxist humiliation ceremony?
Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most decorated living soldier, was arrested at Sydney Airport and charged with five counts of war-crime murder over the killing of unarmed Afghan civilians while deployed in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012.
Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most decorated living soldier, was arrested at Sydney Airport and charged with five counts of war-crime murder over the killing of unarmed Afghan civilians while deployed in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012 https://t.co/Hmxo47kS9N pic.twitter.com/xbFmENELPU
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 7, 2026
Other than to create a public spectacle for the media, why was Ben Roberts Smith arrested at the airport after getting off a domestic flight?
He won a Victoria Cross, the equivalent of a Medal of Honor, for killing Taliban. Now, two decades later, he’s arrested for killing Taliban. …
Something is really bothering me about the Ben Roberts-Smith case. …
On one hand, this prosecution stinks of liberal bias.
Out of thousands of potential war crimes cases the social justice warrior police chief could have pursued, she picked THE most decorated soldier on the entire continent. That isn’t justice. That’s a public humiliation ritual.
On the other hand, I do believe actual war criminals should stand trial regardless of rank or honors. And I know what’s coming: “John, Roberts-Smith already lost the 2023 defamation case. Justice Besanko found he committed the murders.”
Yes. On the balance of probabilities. 51 percent. That’s the civil standard. Criminal conviction requires 99 percent.
The same fragile evidence that barely cleared a coin flip is now supposed to send a man to prison for life. …
The Roberts-Smith allegations are 20 years old. And here’s what the Brereton Inquiry, for all its 510 witnesses and four years of work, could never get:
- No crime scene access. The Taliban didn’t let investigators into Uruzgan.
- No Afghan witnesses interviewed.
- No secured scene.
- No blood-spatter analysis.
- No DNA
- No autopsies.
- No recovered bodies.
- No weapons tied to victims.
The investigators themselves admitted they “lacked access to Afghan crime scenes and were missing the physical evidence that would normally anchor a murder prosecution.”
So what’s left? Memory. Twenty-year-old memory from men in the fog of war.
The science is unambiguous. Countless research studies confirms memory is reconstructive: later suggestion, media exposure, and repeated questioning distort it. This is the textbook misinformation effect.
Confidence and accuracy decouple within months, let alone decades. Studies on soldiers who suffer PTSD show the gaps get even larger.
I admittedly don’t know 🇦🇺 law but US courts admit decades-old testimony but warn juries it is inherently fragile, not scientific proof. Australia is treating it as load-bearing concrete.
The media says “20 former soldiers testified against him.” Fine. Was all their testimony actually against him? How clear was it? Did 20 people watch him murder a civilian in broad daylight? And even if they did, you still have to prove the dead man wasn’t Taliban. In Uruzgan. In 2009. Without a body. …
And here’s the question nobody in Canberra wants asked: Why is the trigger-puller in the dock while the officers who wrote the rules of engagement, approved the missions, and signed the after-action reports keep their pensions?
The Victoria Cross winner hangs. The chain of command walks. Past “War crime” cases with more hard evidence remain “unsolved”.
That isn’t accountability. That’s a scapegoat ritual.
You do not get a Victoria Cross just for killing. You get it for extraordinary gallantry, valour, self-sacrifice & devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy.
And here is what Australia just told every soldier watching: the reward for a VC is fame which will make you a target for future show trials built on 20-year-old memories, prosecuted by a police chief with no combat but more ribbons on her uniform than you.
If murder can be proven without hard evidence decades later, that isn’t justice even if he is guilty. Proof of guilt matters.
That’s a Marxist humiliation ceremony leading to national strategic disarmament by lawfare.
Much hinges on the “definition” of civilian, and who gets to do the defining.
I’m old enough to remember how Morant and Handcock became folk heroes in Australia.
This time though, it isn’t the British who are going after Diggers, it is their own government.
Also of note, the incident involving Morant et al took place in 1901. The trial took place just a few months later in 1902. During the trial, Boer forces attacked Pietersburg where the trial took place. Morant and the others were released, issued arms, and helped defend the town against the attack. There were denied a plea of condonation and were returned to confinement. The trail was finished in Feb. 1902, with Morant and Handcock were executed 18 hours later.
What is this generation doing?
It is 2026. The accused, who happens to be the most decorated Australian living veteran, was arrested for accusations dating back 16 and more years ago.
This isn’t justice in any way shape or form. This is something else altogether.
If he were to be charged, it should have been a decade and a half ago, at the latest.
They’ve already bankrupted him last year with legal fees in a defamation trial where he has been asked to pay $30 million dollars (Australian) in legal fees.
Any decent Australian can only regard the arrest of a Victoria Cross recipient as a sad day for Australia on so many levels.
Yet somehow it brings a smirk to the faces of the worst of humanity — the most pathetic, contemptible, grossly snivelling leftists in our society. …
The bottom line is they’ve been brainwashed to hate Australia and hate our military — yet the very freedoms and prosperity they enjoy wouldn’t exist if it weren’t those things.
The DEI police chief who arrested Australia’s most decorated soldier for ‘war crimes’ has twice as many medals as Australia’s most decorated soldier.
Think about that for a moment. https://t.co/b3mamE7pSA pic.twitter.com/DCQsw5gwPv
— John Ʌ Konrad V (@johnkonrad) April 7, 2026
Stephen Neil:
Ben Roberts Smith represents the Ancien Regime. As a straight white Christian Anglo Australian war hero, he epitomises the oppressor class and is by definition a counter revolutionary and an ‘enemy of the people’ etc.
Peter Van Onselen in The Daily Mail:
The arrest of Ben Roberts-Smith has already become much more than a criminal proceeding.
It’s a political, cultural and institutional test, and the speed with which public figures rushed into their preferred camps highlights this. …
Much of the country has already split behind two rival instincts that are now hardening almost beyond persuasion. Even Elon Musk weighed in on social media overnight. …
[Pauline Hanson] casts Roberts-Smith not as a defendant facing grave charges, but as a symbol of a broader betrayal — a decorated soldier cast aside by timid elites and agenda driven journalists. Even abandoned by the state itself and its institutions, once they took from him what they wanted. …
Greens senator David Shoebridge posted a screenshot of an article about the arrests, simply writing ‘Good’ alongside it.
$300 million was spent on the investigation of Roberts-Smith.
Color me skeptical. I’ve no doubt that Ben Roberts-Smith was sometimes uncouth and certainly not woke, and a rough man when required. But he was a very effective soldier — just the sort of man the woke lefties hate.
Look at the photos above. Who would you want on your team — him or her?
hat-tip Stephen Neil, David Archibald

















