Peter Dutton apologises to elite soldiers accused of war crimes as SAS heads ...

Peter Dutton apologises to elite soldiers accused of war crimes as SAS heads ...
Peter Dutton apologises to elite soldiers accused of war crimes as SAS heads ...

Defence Minister Peter Dutton has apologised to a group of SAS soldiers who were threatened with the sack following the Brereton inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan

'If people have been wrongly accused and they've now been cleared of that, then I do apologise for what they've been through, what their families have been through,' Mr Dutton told 2GB's Ray Hadley. 

'If people have got criminal charges to answer then that’s a matter for the courts but for the rest we move on from that chapter now and I want us to concentrate on the amazing work of the ADF in our country's name.' 

Thirteen soldiers from the Special Air Service Regiment were sent show cause notices late last year asking why they should not have their employment terminated. 

The notices were based solely on supposedly 'credible information' of war crimes contained within the multi-million dollar Brereton report. 

Special forces soldiers who faced the sack following the Brereton inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan have been told they can stay in their jobs. Special Operations Task Group soldiers are pictured mission in northern Kandahar province in 2013

Special forces soldiers who faced the sack following the Brereton inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan have been told they can stay in their jobs. Special Operations Task Group soldiers are pictured mission in northern Kandahar province in 2013

Defence Minister Peter Dutton has apologised to a group of SAS soldiers who were threatened with the sack following the Brereton inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan

Defence Minister Peter Dutton has apologised to a group of SAS soldiers who were threatened with the sack following the Brereton inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan

All the soldiers were long-serving SAS members - some of them decorated for bravery - and the unproven allegations against them included taking part in unlawful killings.

Daily Mail Australia exclusively revealed last week those soldiers still in the regiment threatened with termination had been told no further action would be taken against them. 

Mr Dutton has already reversed a decision made in the wake of the Brereton inquiry to revoke a citation awarded to about 3,000 special forces soldiers who served in Afghanistan.  

'Defence has gone through a process,' Mr Dutton told Hadley. 'And I said when I came into this portfolio that I wanted to have the back of our soldiers and to make sure that they hear that message very clearly.'

'The focus that I want at the moment is on the work of the SAS - they're in Afghanistan.

One of the SAS soldiers whose termination was withdrawn is understood to have been deployed this week to help evacuate Australians from Kabul as it falls to the Taliban. Pictured is an Australian rescue flight out of Kabul last week

One of the SAS soldiers whose termination was withdrawn is understood to have been deployed this week to help evacuate Australians from Kabul as it falls to the Taliban. Pictured is an Australian rescue flight out of Kabul last week

'There will be anxious wives and spouses, girlfriends and mums and dads and kids who just want their dad to return as quickly as possible. 

'The work they're doing there is quite remarkable and the work of the SAS over many decades has been absolutely remarkable.' 

At least one of those SAS members whose termination was withdrawn has already been deployed to help evacuate Australians from Kabul as it falls to the Taliban. 

A source close to some of the SAS members who were informed they no longer had to justify their continued employment said the show cause notices had been another 'knee-jerk' response by Defence. 

'The reality is our defence force can't possibly consider these people to be war criminals because otherwise you wouldn't arm them with a weapon and send them back in,' the SAS source said. 

The decision comes as questions are being raised about the military hierarchy's handling of Australia's withdrawal of Afghanistan and a royal commission into shockingly high rates of veteran suicides has been announced. 

The show cause notices threatened imminent 'administrative action' and were issued in November after the release earlier that month of the Brereton report. 

'Usually, once you've been issued with a notice to show cause it doesn't really matter what you say in response, you just get terminated,' the SAS source said. 

At least 13 soldiers from the SAS were sent show cause notices late last year asking why they should not be sanctioned or have their employment terminated. An Australian soldier from the Special Operations Task Group is pictured during the Shah Wali Kot offensive in May 2013

At least 13 soldiers from the SAS were sent show cause notices late last year asking why they should not be sanctioned or have their employment terminated. An Australian soldier from the Special Operations Task Group is pictured during the Shah Wali Kot offensive in May 2013

NSW Supreme Court judge Paul Brereton conducted a four-year inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan for the Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force. 

No one has been charged with any war crimes, prosecutions are unlikely for years and much of the evidence given before Justice Brereton would not be admissible in court. 

Retired major Heston Russell, who served in Afghanistan with the 2nd Commando Regiment, has warned former colleagues were struggling with ongoing uncertainty in the wake of the Brereton report.

'Some of the families have been involved with this inquiry since it started four years ago and still haven't had any resolution,' he told Network Seven in February. 

More than 500 Afghanistan war veterans have taken their lives and 25 reportedly committed suicide in only two months after the release of the Brereton report. 

Justice Brereton found 'credible information' that 25 Australian special forces personnel had been responsible for 39 unlawful killings in Afghanistan, along with cover-ups and other misconduct. 

Those killings including cases where new SAS patrol members were allegedly told to shoot a prisoner to achieve their first kill in an 'appalling practice' known as 'blooding'.

The ABC Four Corners program aired footage in 2020 of this Afghan man being shot dead by an Australian SAS member in the village of Deh Jawz-e Hasanza. Daily Mail understands the Afghan was a Taliban target on the Coalition Forces Joint Priority Effects List

The ABC Four Corners program aired footage in 2020 of this Afghan man being shot dead by an Australian SAS member in the village of Deh Jawz-e Hasanza. Daily Mail understands the Afghan was a Taliban target on the Coalition Forces Joint Priority Effects List

The 465-page, heavily-redacted Brereton report blamed the alleged killings of unarmed Afghans by Australians in part on a 'warrior' culture among special forces soldiers

The 465-page, heavily-redacted Brereton report blamed the alleged killings of unarmed Afghans by Australians in part on a 'warrior' culture among special forces soldiers

There was also evidence of 'body count competitions' and troops

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