There are cases that demand justice. And then there are cases that raise a far more uncomfortable question:
Is this justice—or is this something else entirely?
The arrest of Ben Roberts-Smith falls squarely into that second category.
Start With First Principles
Let’s be absolutely clear. If a soldier commits murder—civilian or otherwise—they should face the full force of the law. No exceptions. No excuses.
No one is above the law.
But equally—no one should be below it either.
And that’s where this case starts to unravel.
Seventeen Years Later?
The allegations relate to events in Afghanistan in 2009. That’s not recent history. That’s 17 years ago.
So the obvious question is:
Why now?
Why not five years ago?
Why not ten?
Justice delayed is often justice denied.
But sometimes… it’s something else.
The Reality on the Ground
Let’s consider the practical reality.
Afghanistan today is controlled by the very forces Australian troops were fighting back in 2009—Taliban.
So:
How reliable are witnesses?
How accessible are they?
Under what conditions are they providing evidence?
This isn’t a clean, controlled legal environment. It’s a hostile, compromised one. And yet we’re expected to believe that a watertight case has suddenly emerged?
From War Hero to Defendant
Here’s another uncomfortable fact.
Roberts-Smith wasn’t some obscure figure flying under the radar. He was one of Australia’s most decorated soldiers—awarded the Victoria Cross for Australia for bravery.
At the time, he was celebrated. Promoted. Held up as an example.
So again—another question:
Where was the concern then?
Were the actions unknown?
Or were they known—and overlooked?
Because if senior command had visibility, then responsibility doesn’t sit with one man alone.
The Chain of Command
Wars are not fought by individuals in isolation.
They are fought:
Under orders
Within structures
Inside rules of engagement set by governments and senior command
So where is the scrutiny of:
Senior officers?
Strategic leadership?
Political oversight?
Or is this about finding one man to carry the burden for an entire conflict?
The Public Spectacle
And then there’s the arrest itself.
Public. Highly visible. Filmed. With media conveniently present.
This wasn’t just an arrest. It was a performance.
Which raises another question:
Why stage it like this?
Because if the goal is justice, you don’t need a camera crew.
But if the goal is something else—
a message, a narrative, a signal—
then suddenly it makes perfect sense.
Trial by Media
Let’s not pretend this started today.
For years, Roberts-Smith has been the subject of:
Intense media scrutiny
Repeated allegations
A slow, steady erosion of reputation
By the time this reaches a courtroom, the real question is:
What jury walks in without a preconceived view?
Can there be a fair trial after a decade of public condemnation?
Or has the verdict already been shaped—long before any evidence is tested?
The Impact Beyond One Man
This doesn’t stop with Roberts-Smith.
Every soldier watching this unfold is asking:
Will this be me one day?
Will decisions made in combat be judged decades later in a courtroom?
Will I be backed—or abandoned?
Recruitment, morale, trust in leadership—all of it is affected.
Because if the message is:
“We’ll celebrate you in war… and prosecute you years later”
then don’t be surprised when fewer people step forward.
Why Now?
And we come back to the central question.
After years of noise, investigation, and media pressure…
Why now?
Because timing matters.
And when timing doesn’t make sense—
people start looking for motives.
Final Thought
Justice must be done.
But it must also be seen to be done fairly, impartially, and without agenda.
Right now, too many questions remain:
About timing
About process
About consistency
About intent
This case may well uncover the truth.
But until it does, one thing is clear:
This isn’t just a legal moment.
It’s a test.
Of the system.
Of fairness.
And of whether Australia still knows how to treat those it once called heroes.



