A soldier fights for the Constitution

I found a great article and interview today. The focus of the piece is First Lt. Ehren Watada, a soldier in the U.S. Army. He is facing court martial for refusing to deploy to Iraq on the grounds of the war being unconstitutional.

Lt. Watada was based at Fort Lewis, Washington, with the Army’s 3rd (Stryker) Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. He has remained on base, thus avoiding charges of desertion.

He does, however, face one count of “missing troop movement” and four counts of “conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.” If convicted, he faces up to six years in prison.

The entire interview is excellent but my favorite parts are:

WATADA: Certainly. I think that when we take an oath we, as soldiers and officers, swear to protect the constitution — with our lives as necessary — and those constitutional values and laws that make us free and make us a democracy. And when we have one branch of government that intentionally deceives another branch of government in order to authorize war, and intentionally deceives the people in order to gain that public support, that is a grave breach of our constitutional values, our laws, our checks and balances, and separation of power.

and:

WATADA: You know, what I’m doing is for the soldiers. I’m trying to end something that is criminal, something that should not have been started in the first place and something that is making America less safe — and that is the Iraq war. By just going there and being willing to participate, and doing my job, or whatever I’m told to do — which actually exacerbates the situation and makes it worse — I would not be serving the best interest of this country, nor the soldiers that I’m serving with. What I’m trying to do is end something, as I said, that’s illegal, and immoral, so that all the soldiers can come home and this tragedy can come to an end.

It seems like people and critics make this distinction between an order to deploy and any other order, as if the order to deploy is just something that’s beyond any other order. Orders have to be determined on whether they’re legal or not. And if the order to deploy to a war that is unlawful, if that is given, then that order itself is unlawful.

and:

STES: Are you ready to deal with all those consequences with this decision?

WATADA: Sure, and I think that’s the decision that I made almost a year ago, in January, when I submitted my original letter of resignation. I knew that possibly some of the things that I stated in that letter, including my own beliefs, that there were repercussions from that. Yet I felt it was a sacrifice, and it was a necessary sacrifice, to make. And I feel the same today.

I think that there are many supporters out there who feel that I should not be made an example of, that I’m speaking out for what a lot of Americans are increasingly becoming aware of: that the war is illegal and immoral and it must be stopped. And that the military should not make an example or punish me severely for that.

All in all, he seems very well thought out and honorable in his intent. A pre-trial hearing is set for tomorrow and the court martial scheduled for February 5th. This could be interesting.

~ by Miche on January 3, 2007.

8 Responses to “A soldier fights for the Constitution”

  1. One good guy in 150,000 murderers, babe! See
    http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/grim-images-of-massacre-found-on
    -us-laptops/2007/01/07/1168104868095.html
    Ooooh, it’s just a few rotten apples…our valiant men & women are defending our freedom by invading an oil rich country so we can all drive Hummers…yay for freedom…to kill at will.

  2. As Paul Craig Roberts puts it:

    http://www.lewrockwell.com/roberts/roberts191.html

    One of the lessons of the Nuremburg War Crimes Trials of Germans after Germany’s defeat in WW II was that obeying orders is no excuse for war crimes. US prosecutors took the position that the German military should have refused to obey Hitler’s orders.

    Chief US prosecutor Robert Jackson established that military aggression was a war crime.

    US Army Lieutenant Ehren Watada took the Nuremburg lesson to heart. He refused to deploy to Iraq on the solid grounds that the war is illegal, which it is under the Nuremburg standard, and that he cannot order troops under his command to commit illegal actions.

    Watada is correct. If the US general staff had the integrity of Lt. Watada, America and Iraq would have been spared the pointless and bloody conflict. Bush was able to illegally initiate the conflict, because the American military behaved exactly as the German military and followed the orders of a criminal commander-in-chief. Watada must be court-martialed in order to protect Bush and his obedient commanders from war crimes charges.

    By prosecuting Lt. Watada, the US military has demeaned the Nuremburg trials and demoted them to merely the revenge of the victorious. Watada’s prosecution demolishes the illusion that the Nuremburg trials established a civilized principle of international law. All it did was to reaffirm that might is right. Germany’s ideology of domination was a war crime, but America’s ideology of domination is not.

  3. Sigh. We are Onanists…preaching to the choir. Maybe we should double post our thoughts, once here and once at some feral neocon site, to provoke?

  4. “Sigh. We are Onanists…preaching to the choir.”

    Never had a problem with any of those three, personally…

    “Maybe we should double post our thoughts, once here and once at some feral neocon site, to provoke?”

    OK
    Have fun.

    http://nopc.info/forum/

  5. Or, you can come by last free voice…we’re now getting over 300 readers a day.

    http://lastfreevoice.wordpress.com/

    I could use some help there tho, nobody else hardly seems to ever post anymore….

  6. Miche,

    I can’t exactly remember what you said your email address was..

    So here’s the new collin county lp site:
    http://www.fourthgeek.com/cclp/

    Redirect at your own leisure.

  7. Hello.

  8. [...] weeks ago I wrote about the court martial of First Lt. Ehren Watada, the soldier accused of conduct unbecoming. You [...]

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