World Wars: The Untold Stories of Jamaican Soldiers
Jamaican Soldiers Dying Abroad, & Raising the Limit of Military Enlistment


Afghanistan and Iraq Wars
Jamaicans have been dying in overseas wars for a very long time. In every major modern war, Jamaican born soldiers have perished in such places as Europe, Iraq and Afghanistan, thousands of miles from their birthplace. They did not die in service of their country, but for other nations pursuing their own agenda.
Many of these conflicts were satellite wars by the big powers such as Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq. All these are independent countries today. They are post invasion, with a trail of bodies and doubts.
While the Ukraine conflict precipitated by the Russian invasion rages, it may be useful to remind the many of the few.
The first Canadian soldier killed in Iraq was in fact a Jamaican from Saint Ann, known as the garden parish of Jamaica. Bernard Gooden left Jamaica in 1997 before serving in the Canadian Forces reserves. He was killed in April 2003 during a firefight with Iraqi soldiers.
Gooden was followed in June 2007 by Kimel Watt who served in the U.S. Army in Korea and Germany before he was killed by an IED in Iraq.
Kimel was only twenty-one and he was given American citizenship posthumously. Kimel was among one hundred and sixty-one foreign born members of the U.S. Army who were naturalised as American citizens on the following Fourth of July. The group included another dead soldier from Morocco.
British Army
Hanover born Dale McCallum, a long serving member of the British Army, was killed in the tumultuous Lashkar Gah district of Helmand, Afghanistan in the summer of 2010. McCallum had previously served in Kosovo and Iraq. The previous summer, three of five British soldiers killed in a single incident, in the same area, were only eighteen.
Orphan Marlon Myrie, who migrated to South Florida and was raised by his sister, ended up being killed, also in Helmand, the following summer of 2011.
Several media outlets including the Jamaican Gleaner mistakenly reported that American soldier Andrew Seabrooks who was killed in Afghanistan in 2008 was from Jamaica. He was from the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens, New York.
At least one Jamaican, originally from Lucea in Hanover is known to have fought in Vietnam with the elite U.S. Army Redcatchers brigade. He was lucky to have survived.
Often caught up in the frenzy and excitement of opportunity to go abroad in the service of colonial governments when confronted with a future life in some small country hamlet, young Jamaicans volunteered and served in both World Wars.
Many died or were maimed in some of the worst battles ever to befall the modern world. Twelve hundred of the twelve thousand who joined the British West India Regiment ended up dying from wounds, frostbite and illness in Belgium and Africa.
Herbert Morris
Then, there was the no small matter of battlefield executions that included seventeen-year-old Herbert Morris, a Jamaican from Riversdale in the parish of St. Catherine, who was executed on 20th September 1917 behind a church in Poperinge, Belgium.
Private Morris was shot at dawn for desertion with other teenagers for what is now called Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
As the drumbeats of war beat louder in Eastern Europe it is a useful motto for foreigners, the young and inexperienced to leave expertise to the experts. America, Britain and their allies are awash with wise veterans of foreign wars. These veterans see little regard for their talents after returning home.




