125. Betrayed: Brigadier Dan Fortune, DSC and Bar, Exposes Military Hypocrisy Podcast Por  arte de portada

125. Betrayed: Brigadier Dan Fortune, DSC and Bar, Exposes Military Hypocrisy

125. Betrayed: Brigadier Dan Fortune, DSC and Bar, Exposes Military Hypocrisy

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In this episode of The Voices of War, Maz speaks with Brigadier (Ret.) Dan Fortune, DSC and Bar, a retired SASR commander and one of Australia’s most decorated special operations officers, reflecting on leadership, accountability, and the human cost of Australia’s war in Afghanistan.

Dan served extensively within SASR Sabre Squadrons as both an enlisted operator and later a commissioned officer. His career includes multiple combat deployments to Afghanistan, senior targeting and command roles, counter-terrorism operations, combat freefall missions, and leadership appointments within Australian and NATO Special Operations Task Groups. He also served alongside US Tier One special forces and commanded the ADF Tactical Assault Group during the Sydney Olympics.

Building on themes raised in the award-winning documentary Bravery and Betrayal and Episode 1 on this topic with Vando and Brett, this conversation explores the effects of relentless operational tempo, repeated rotations, and prolonged exposure to violence on moral judgement and decision-making. Dan discusses how cultural mismatch and partner force dynamics shaped operational realities on the ground, including green-on-blue incidents and force protection failures.

The episode examines the conduct and consequences of the IGADF and Brereton processes, including findings later characterised by the Royal Commission as ‘weaponised injustice’. Dan reflects on how bureaucratic risk aversion, strategic distance, and institutional self-protection displaced accountability downward, leaving tactical operators to absorb blame, reputational damage, and long-term moral injury.

Rather than focusing on individual wrongdoing, this episode interrogates systems: how wars are managed from afar, how leadership decisions cascade, and how justice, recognition, and responsibility are applied after conflict. It offers a sober, first-hand perspective on command, culture, and the enduring costs of a war of choice.

Key Moments:

  • DSC and Bar SASR commander reveals moral compass shift in combat
  • Civilian casualties & how tolerance hardened over deployments
  • Fat Lady's Arms hypocrisy: PMs drank, troops demonized
  • IGADF as weaponized injustice - Royal Commission critique
  • Green-on-blue murders & partner force cultural clashes
  • O6 and below values vs One Star and above interests: Leadership cowardice exposed
  • Healing through truth: Veteran recognition & future lessons

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