Modern examples have not yet (circa 2003) revealed citizens being officially executed for doing their duty but include:
To seek out the weapons of mass destruction possessed by an enemy in their own country is a dangerous but crucial task, allowed only by the application of military action against Iraq. If the search was to achieve any meaningful result it had to be conducted despite every obstruction and threat by the Iraqis, which meant the inspection had to be unlimited in its scope. On August 3rd 1999, Butler made it public that his superior had seemed more interested in disarming the weapons investigators than Iraq. The then secretary general of the United Nations had failed to heed his advice but had extended concessions to the Iraqis that significantly hampered the investigations; in effect he accused Mr Koffi Annan of treason; a stance that was supported by David Kaye, the former chief weapons inspector in Iraq. The media never once mentioned this grave charge, choosing instead to merely publicise the reply of the alleged traitor who said:
"I don't think I have to comment. Everybody knows what happened."—SBS National Television News 3/8/99
Which is not a refutation of the accusation but a blatant and childish attempt to denigrate his previous employee. And the media further diluted Mr Butler's claim by airing the opinions of another weapon's inspector, who they labelled Mr Butler's nemesis (SBS National Television News 3/8/99). Mr Scott Ritter claimed that Richard Butler was:
| « Historical Examples » | « The Decline Of Duty » | « The General Impact Of Decline » | « Our Decline » |