June 25, 2006
As a 29-year Army and Army Reserves veteran, I am horrified to see
the politicization of the US military under the Bush administration.
The "ethics and professionalism" of the US military has been targeted
for destruction by the civilian appointees of this administration. They
want "yes" men and women who do not question the legality of the
policies of the administration. Tragically, from the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs on down, Rumsfeld and crew have been successful in
stifling professional discussion within the military, with the
exception of former Army Chief of Staff Shinseki and now six retired
generals. Under the Bush administration, there is no accountability or
responsibility for criminal actions; privates and sergeants are
court-martialed, while senior civilian and military leaders responsible
for the criminal policies are free.
Despite
the "yes, sir" attitude of senior military officers toward the Bush
administration's illegal policies, there is resistance within the US
military to the war on Iraq. Military personnel know they have the
right and duty to refuse illegal orders, including the order to deploy
to an illegal war. They know the United States executed German and
Japanese military officers and civilians for their participation in
wars of aggression in World War II. They know that the Nuremberg
principles adopted by the international community after World War II
require civilians and military personnel to stop their government from
committing illegal acts. Those in the military who dissent and resist
what they know are illegal actions of the Bush administration are
persons of the highest courage and conscience.
Resistance
to the war on Iraq within the US military community is growing. Over
eight thousand American soldiers are absent without leave (AWOL), most
living underground in the United States. Many now refer to AWOL as
"Against War of Lies" instead of Absent Without Leave. Individual
non-public resistance in the military generally results in an
administrative discharge without publicity. Thousands have turned
themselves in to military authorities and have been administratively
discharged from the military. US military bases discharge dozens of war
resisters each week.
Public
resistance by military personnel to the war on Iraq results in
court-martial to make an example of the resister. Some military
personnel have applied for conscience objector (CO) status. Most have
been denied CO status and ten have been court-martialed and imprisoned
for publicly refusing to obey orders to deploy to Iraq to commit
criminal acts there, including murder by bombing innocent civilians,
shooting innocent civilians, and torture. Those who refuse to deploy to
Iraq and kill for the Bush administration generally receive more
punishment than those who commit criminal acts of murder and torture.
Four
women who had served in the military were honored last week at the
annual War Resisters meeting in New York City. Three had applied for CO
status and had been refused by the military. One is now imprisoned at
Fort Lewis, Washington, for refusing weapons training and deployment.
One completed her assignment in Iraq and returned to become a
co-founder of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW).
Hundreds
of US military have chosen to resist the war by living in Canada, most
under the radar of the now-conservative Canadian government.
Twenty-four US military have publicly moved to Canada and are seeking
political refugee status. They are supported by an incredible network
of Canadians citizens and American war resisters from the Vietnam era
who are now Canadian citizens, who assist the next generation of US
military who resist illegal wars of aggression.
This
weekend Iraq Veterans Against the War, Veterans for Peace and Gold Star
Families for Peace, including Cindy Sheehan and myself, participated in
Buffalo, New York, fundraisers for US war resisters living in Canada.
We met seven of the twenty-four brave men and their families who have
said that the Bush administration's war on Iraq is a war crime and that
their participation in the war would mean that they too are war
criminals. While they are volunteers for the defense of our country,
they are not "yes" men to the administration; they are "yes" men to the
Constitution of the United States. They are persons of conscience who
see the war for what it really is and are resisting the pressures to
dutifully comply to military orders to conduct illegal actions.
Their
decisions to live in Canada underscore the right of military personnel
to challenge an illegal order and to live with the consequences of that
challenge. They have chosen live in Canada with their families rather
than being imprisoned for saying no to killing for the Bush
administration's goals. Should the security of the United States truly
be threatened, they would defend it.
They
live free of guilt of killing innocent Iraqis. But the decision to live
in Canada comes with its own penalties. These brave soldiers and
marines leave the support network of friends and buddies in the
military. These persons of courage endure family divisions when family
members do not agree with their decision to leave the military and go
to Canada. These honorable men undertake the daily struggles of
suddenly caring for their families in a new country. These honorable
soldiers are unable to return to the United States until an amnesty is
offered by a future president. But the consequences of this act of
conscience mean these soldiers and marines will not have the lifelong
guilt of murdering innocent civilians, nor the nightmares of seeing
their friends blown up in a war whose purpose they believe is illegal
and a war crime.
This
week Army First Lieutenant Ehren Watada will become the first officer
to refuse to deploy with his unit to Iraq. He will be the first officer
of this war who refuses to participate in military actions guaranteed
to destroy his future emotional, if not physical, life - and impact his
family for decades to come. This week also marks the first time in this
war that a church is offering sanctuary to war resisters. The
membership of First United Methodist Church of Tacoma, Washington, just
outside of Fort Lewis, where Lieutenant Watada is stationed, has said
that they will resist the Bush administration's illegal war by
sheltering any who refuse to participate in the war.
Another
aspect of resistance within the military community comes from retired
generals who are now publicly questioning the military operational
plans that have put US troops in jeopardy in Iraq and the impact of the
war on Iraq on the military and its ability to respond to genuine
threats to US national security.
For
the twenty-nine years I was in the military, either on active duty or
in the Reserves, my worst nightmare was that an administration would
get the United States into a military conflict that I knew was illegal.
Today, if I were recalled from the US Army's Retired Ready Reserves, I
would have to say, "I will not serve the Bush administration's war on
Iraq. I will not agree to be recalled. You will have to court-martial
me as I will not participate in this illegal war of aggression, this
war crime."
Acts
of resistance, big and small, recognized nationally or never heard of
by most, by military and civilians are all important elements of ending
the illegal war, the war crime, committed by the Bush administration.
People of conscience all over the country are refusing to be silent and
are taking courageous steps to end the illegal war on Iraq.
What will you do to stop this illegal war?
Ann Wright
Ann
Wright is a retired Colonel with 29 years in the US Army and Army
Reserves and as a US diplomat for 16 years, and resisted the war on
Iraq by resigning in March 2003 from her position as Deputy Chief of
Mission, or Deputy Ambassador from the US Embassy in Mongolia.
Ann
served in the diplomatic corps in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia,
Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia and
helped reopen the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, in December, 2001.
As a US military officer, she participated in post-conflict
reconstruction in Grenada, Panama and Somalia. She received the State
Department's Award for Heroism as the acting US Ambassador during the
evacuation of the international community during the brutal rebel
takeover of Freetown, Sierra Leone, in 1997.
With
her service in both the US military and the US State Department in
areas of conflict all over the world, she felt the US invasion and
occupation of an oil-rich Moslem country that had done nothing to the
United States and was no threat to US national security would make the
world more dangerous and place the United States in greater jeopardy.
She believed the act of invading Iraq would be an act of aggression, a
war crime.
Two
others from the US diplomat corps also believed the Bush
administration's war on Iraq was illegal and resisted by resigning from
the US government. As civilian US government employees, there was no
penalty to their resistance to the war except giving up their careers.
Links:
GI Hotline
War Resisters Support Campaign-Canada
Peace Has No Borders
War Resisters League
Iraq Veterans Against the War
Veterans for Peace
Gold Star Families for Peace
Military Families Speak Out
The Real War Heroes
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