Marjorie
Cohn is a Distinguished Law Professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law
in San Diego where she's taught since 1991 and is the current President
of the National Lawyers Guild. She's also been a criminal defense
attorney at the trial and appellate levels, is an author, and writes
many articles for professional journals, other publications, and
numerous popular web sites.
Her
record of achievements, distinctions, and awards are many and varied -
for her teaching, writing, and her work as a lawyer and activist for
peace, social and economic justice, and respect for the rule of law.
Cohn's previous books include "Cameras in the Courtroom: Television and
the Pursuit of Justice" and "Cowboy Republic: Six Ways the Bush Gang
Has Defied the Law."
Her
newest book just out, co-authored with Kathleen Gilberd (a recognized
expert on military administrative law), is titled "Rules of
Disengagement: The Politics and Honor of Military Dissent." It explores
why US military personnel disobey orders and refuse to participate in
two illegal wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It also explains that US and
international law obligate them to do so.
Cohn and Gilberd write:
"Rules
of engagement limit forms of combat, levels of force, and legitimate
enemy targets, defining what is legal in warfare and what is not.
(They're also) defined by an established body of international (and US)
law" that leave no ambiguity.
Nonetheless,
in past and current US wars, virtually no "Rules" whatever are
followed. Soldiers are trained to fire at "anything that moves," place
no value on enemy lives, and often treat civilians no differently from
combatants. It results in massive civilian casualties, dismissively
called "collateral damage." It also gets growing numbers in the ranks
to resist - to challenge so-called "Rules" they believe are illegal and
immoral.
"Rules
of Disengagement" "discuss(es) the laws and regulations governing
military dissent and resistance - the legal rules of disengagement (and
offers) practical guidelines (that include) political protest to
requesting discharge from the service."
Today,
growing Iraq and Afghanistan casualty counts are enormous as well as
the disturbing toll on the GIs involved - including long and repeated
deployments, often leaving permanent debilitating effects, physical
and/or psychological.
US
soldiers have a right and duty to dissent and resist, and today it's
easier than ever through all the modern ways of communicating,
including blogging, sharing stories, photos, videos, and "developing
new ways to speak out to fellow soldiers and civilians online and in
the media."
"Rules
of Disengagement" goes into courtrooms where military personnel "have
spoken out, arguing that (today's) wars are illegal (and immoral) under
international (and US) law." It's a "practical guide" providing
"specific discussion(s) of applicable regulations and laws" for readers
"to form their own conclusions and consider their own options." Above
all, it's a way for honorable young men and women to dissent, resist,
and disengage from two illegal, immoral wars, in hopes many others will
follow their example.
Resisting Illegal Wars
Every
US war since WW II has been illegal. Article 51 of the UN Charter only
permits the "right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed
attack occurs against a Member....until the Security Council has taken
measures to maintain international peace and security."
In
addition, Article I, Section 8, Clause 11 (the war powers clause)
authorizes only both houses of Congress, not the president, to declare
war. Nonetheless, that process was followed only five times in our
history and last used on December 8, 1941 after Japan attacked Pearl
Harbor.
Yet
many judges won't apply "the law to the wars, and then to service
members' refusal to take part" in them. They say it's "not their role,
not a matter under their jurisdiction, or not 'relevant.' " In case
studies the authors use, court-martial judges, juries, and the public
increasingly accept these arguments but also recognize that "men and
women of conscience have put their futures on the line for their
opinions and actions against illegal wars (and) orders."
It
hasn't shown up in court-martial decisions except in more lenient
sentences, indicating growing respect for those brave enough to resist
on matters of conscience and their opinions regarding the law. Pablo
Paredes for one.
The
Navy petty officer third class and weapons-control technician refused
duty on the USS Bonhomme Richard as it deployed to the Persian Gulf on
December 6, 2004 to take part in Operation Iraqi Freedom. He was
charged with unauthorized absence and willfully missing his ship's
deployment. On May 10, 2005, Paredes avoided jail and a dishonorable or
bad conduct discharge when the court-martial judge dismissed the former
charge, convicted him on the latter one, sentenced him to two months
restriction, three months of hard labor without confinement, and
reduction in rank from E-4 to E-1.
Lt.
Cdr. Robert Klant denied expert testimony on the war's illegality, but
let Cohn testify as an expert witness, at the sentencing hearing. At
its conclusion, Klant astonished attending spectators by saying:
"I
believe the government has successfully demonstrated a reasonable
belief for every service member to decide that the wars in Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan and Iraq were illegal to fight in." Paredes benefitted from
that view. Others have as well, but not often or easily.
Modern Conscientious Objectors (COs)
They're
persons who refuse to perform military service, and request
noncombatant status or discharge on grounds of religious, moral,
ethical, or philosophical beliefs with regard to wars and killing.
Objecting on the basis of conscience is 'a long and honorable"
tradition going back to the beginning of the republic. It was used
frequently during the Vietnam war.
Objectors
help others by expanding the right to resist and dissent. Under DOD
regulations, "the military must grant CO status to any service member
who (consciously opposes all) war(s) in any form, whose opposition is
founded on religious training and beliefs, and whose position is
sincere and deeply held." This position "must have developed or become
central to the CO's beliefs after entry into the military," and
applicants must provide "clear and convincing evidence that he or she
is a CO."
US
Army Reserve Staff Sergeant Camilo Mejia was the first Iraq War veteran
to refuse further involvement on matters of conscience after serving in
it earlier from April - October 2003. Following leave, he failed to
rejoin his National Guard unit and filed for discharge as a CO on
grounds that the invasion and occupation were illegal and immoral. The
Army then charged him with desertion to send a strong message to others
who resist.
His
May 2004 court-martial was a kangaroo-court show trial, widely
broadcast to all military personnel worldwide on internal Pentagon
television, radio and newspaper outlets. At trial, the military judge
disallowed prepared defense testimony under Army Field Manual 27-10,
the Constitution, and established international law.
Mejia
was found guilty of desertion with intent to avoid hazardous duty. He
was sentenced to a year in prison, reduction in rank to E-1, one year's
forfeiture of pay, and a bad conduct discharge after which Amnesty
International declared him a prisoner of conscience, its highest honor.
After
the verdict, international law expert Francis Boyle was allowed to
testify during the sentencing phase - but under strict limitations
imposed by the judge. He cited relevant domestic, international, and
military law, reviewed crimes of war and against humanity under them,
and explained the culpability of commanders and government officials to
the highest levels for abusing and torturing prisoners.
Mejia
served nine months in prison and in August 2007 was elected chairman of
the board of Iraq Veterans Against the War. Hundreds of others have
filed for CO status while many more go AWOL or refuse deployment to
combat zones. The military never makes it easy, yet the illegitimacy of
two illegal wars and the immense hardships on young GIs and their
families makes growing numbers resist and dissent. Still many others
aren't aware that they qualify for CO status.
Current
CO stereotypes stem from the Vietnam era when they were viewed as
subversives and cowards. Other myths are that wars must be ongoing for
those in the military to apply, the process is lengthy, discharges, if
granted, won't be honorable, and federal benefits will be lost as well
as eligibility for government jobs. "Needless to say, these myths are
not true," but exist to discourage applicants and impede the process.
Various
civilian organizations provide good information on CO rights,
regulations on them, and procedures on how to apply. Also, the "CO
process is one of the most legally protected of discharge proceedings -
COs have greater rights than those who seek discharge for family
hardship or similar reasons." Yet command hostility exists and rights
are often denied. "Success rates vary among the services." Some COs are
discharged for other reasons. Many applications are rejected. Some go
AWOL as a result, and others do or don't succeed through court
intervention. Imperial America doesn't make it easy, so applicants have
to persist all the harder.
Winter Soldier
Iraq
and Afghan veterans willing to come forward provide the most compelling
evidence of "war crimes beyond imagination." Yet those familiar with
Vietnam, WW II, and other US wars have heard it before. John Dower's
powerful WW II book, "War Without Mercy," documented how both sides in
the Pacific war depersonalized the opposition, abandoned the rules of
war, and fought with equal savagery.
Later examples include:
--
Winter Soldier 1971 - the Vietnam My Lai massacre killing around 500
civilians was a mere skirmish compared to death squad campaigns like
Operation Phoenix that contributed to an estimated 80,000 deaths from
around 1968 - 1971. Numerous other stories documented mass murder,
torture, rape and other atrocities - the same kinds committed earlier
and today;
--
Winter Soldier 2008 - "traumatized" veterans today tell similar horrors
stories to ones from past wars, including Vietnam, Korea, and WW II;
Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) offer testimonies as ammunition
for their three unifying principles:
(1) immediately ending the Iraq and Afghan wars and occupations and withdrawing all troops;
(2) paying reparations to Iraqis; and
(3) providing proper medical care for all US war veterans.
Short
of these, all imaginable atrocities will continue, including mass
killings, torture, rape, destruction, and much more. Wars are ugly
business, and laws or no laws, the worst of abuses happen routinely by
a military command teaching rank and file soldiers to commit them with
impunity. And they're besides the harm done to GIs, many of whom are
never the same from the experience - if they survive. Vietnam destroyed
an entire generation of American youths, and today's wars are doing it
again.
The rules of engagement are stipulated in various laws of war - the Constitution, Hague and Geneva Conventions; UN Charter; Nuremberg
Charter, Judgment and Principles; Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide; Universal Declaration of Human
Rights; Supreme and lower Court decisions; US Army Field Manual 27-10;
and the Law of Land Warfare (1956). They state that nations must abide
by the laws of war. No exceptions are ever allowed, and failure comply
constitutes a crime of war and/or against humanity.
At
the Nuremberg Tribunal, chief US prosecutor Robert Jackson cited wars
of aggression as the "supreme international crime against peace
differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself
the accumulated evil of the whole." Yet this standard indicts America
on all its wars since WW II.
And
young GIs are affected. Winter Soldiers 2008 say "they were subject to
amorphous and contradictory rules of engagement - often free-fire zones
where they could shoot at anything that moved (including
noncombatants). These rules, or lack thereof, led to the commission of
atrocities and war crimes," not occasionally but often.
Aside
from the 2001 Afghanistan bombings and March 2003 "shock and awe"
attack, the worst of them took place in April and November 2004. In
retaliation for the killing and mutilation of four Blackwater
mercenaries, the first and second Fallujah Battles waged some of the
fiercest urban combat since the 1968 Battle of Hue in Vietnam. Several
thousand or more were killed, mostly civilians. Major war crimes were
committed. Illegal weapons were used. Vast destruction was inflicted.
The city was held under siege. Free-fire zone rules applied. A
"shoot-to-kill" curfew was imposed, and according to Adam Kokesh: "we
changed our rules of engagement more often than we changed our
underwear."
Winter
Soldiers 2008 speak out publicly over what they saw and did in their
tours, including in testimonies to Congress. "So far (none of them)
have been prosecuted for their testimony, though some active duty
witnesses were harassed by superiors."
Dissent and Disengagement
Resistance
includes refusing illegal orders, objecting on the basis of conscience,
requesting a discharge, demonstrating, picketing, dissenting as the
Constitution allows, attending rallies, petitioning Congress, going
underground, taking refuge abroad, speaking out publicly, and through
the media. It's acting according to one's principles and morality and
not backing down when the going gets tough.
Lt.
Ehren Watada's case is instructive. In June 2006, he refused to deploy
to Iraq and publicly said why - that "as an officer of honor and
integrity, (he could not participate in a war that was) manifestly
illegal....morally wrong (and) a horrible breach of American law." He
became the first US military officer to face court-martial for his
action and was charged with:
-- one specification under UCMJ article 87 - missing movement;
-- two specifications under article 99 - contempt toward officials (for making public comments about George Bush); and
-- three specifications under article 133 for conduct unbecoming an officer.
If
convicted on all charges, he faced possible dishonorable discharge,
forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and seven years in prison. A
military equivalent of a grand jury convened on August 17, 2006 to
review the charges and rule on their justification. Watada called three
expert witnesses in his defense:
--
former UN Iraq Humanitarian Coordinator (1997 - 1998) Denis Halliday
who resigned under protest because he was "instructed to implement a
policy that satisfies the definition of genocide (and already) killed
well over one million individuals, children and adults;"
--
US Army Colonel Ann Wright who resigned her commission as a State
Department foreign service officer in March 2003 to protest a "war of
aggression (in) violat(ion) of international law;" and
--
Professor Francis Boyle, international law and human rights expert,
activist, and author of numerous books, papers, and articles on these
topics.
On
August 22, the Army reported on the proceeding and recommended all
charges be referred to a general court-martial. It began in February
2007 under very constricted rules - denying a First Amendment defense,
disallowing one's questioning the legality of the war, and refusing to
allow expert testimony, including from Cohn.
However,
legal issues couldn't be excluded as they directly related to charges
brought, so the prosecution introduced them at trial. In addition,
Watada firmly stated before testifying that he refused to deploy
because of the war's illegality.
Unable
to stop him from saying this, judge John Head declared a mistrial. He'd
lost control of the proceeding, knew Watada was on solid ground, and
had to prevent his evidence from being introduced to avoid the
embarrassing possibility of an acquittal on one or all charges. If it
happened, the war's illegality would be exposed and its continuation
jeopardized.
Under
the Fifth Amendment's "double jeopardy" clause, Watada can't be retried
on the same charges. It states no person shall be "subject for the same
offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." Watada's triumph
by mistrial was a powerful tribute to his convictions and spirit. It's
also an inspiration to civil resisters and all members of the military
to follow in his footsteps.
On
October 22, 2008, US District Court Judge Benjamin Settle agreed with
Watada's double jeopardy claim and dismissed three of the five counts
against him. In mid-May, beyond the timeline of Cohn and Gilberd's
book, the Department of Justice dropped plans to retry him on two
remaining counts, but his legal problems continue as the Army is still
weighing further action. Fort Lewis spokesman Joe Piek said the base's
leadership is considering "a full range of judicial and administrative
options that are available, and those range from court-martial on those
two remaining specifications, to nonjudicial punishment, to
administrative separation from the Army."
If
they can't win one way, they may keep harassing Watada and make him pay
by attrition. Millions of war resisting Americans may have other ideas,
and organizations like Project Safe Haven, Courage to Resist, Veterans
for Peace, and Iraq Veterans Against the War are united with others in
demanding an end to Watada's persecution as well as two illegal wars
and occupations.
They
also support "high-visilbility demonstrations, protests and street
theater," along with the right to resist and dissent. The law supports
them "to speak out on a broad range of issues" using all means of
technology to do it. Military regulations also "can be powerful weapons
for service members who choose to dissent."
DOD
Directive 1325.6 Guidelines for Handling Dissent and Protest Activities
among Members of the Armed Forces describes basic rights for "dissident
and protest activities" with guidelines pertaining to:
-- possession and distribution of printed materials;
-- off-base locations allowed;
-- publishing underground newspapers and materials;
-- off-base demonstrations and protests; and
-- rules for military personnel participation.
Resisters
have the law and regulations on their side if they conform to their
provisions therein - "consistent with good order and discipline and the
national security." But going up against the Pentagon and Department of
Justice is never easy, and even winning exacts a great toll.
But
fundamentally, "GIs do in fact have the right to express their
opposition to the wars verbally and in writing, share that position
with the media, state it on the Internet, distribute it to other GIs in
newspapers or leaflets, say it from the microphone at national antiwar
rallies, and show it by marching in off-base antiwar demonstrations and
picket lines" - as long as they're off-duty, off-base, and out of
uniform.
Imperfect
as it is and getting worse, it's still America, and growing numbers of
GIs, their families and friends are resisting two illegal wars and
occupations, demanding they end, and the nation returned peace. Those
goals are worth everyone's time to fight for, and it's high time more
among us did it..
Challenging Racism
For
many decades, young recruits are taught to kill by portraying enemies
as subhuman. So the Japanese were called "Japs" and portrayed in
cartoons as apes or savage gorillas; North Koreans, North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong were called "gooks;" and Arabs are called "rag-heads,"
"camel jockeys" and "sand niggers." As a result, extreme racism is a
pervasive problem in the military. But it's a proved effective way to
motivate soldiers to fight and kill by viewing Westerners as superior
to nonwhite enemies globally.
Many
Winter Soldiers (2008) "discussed the pervasiveness of racist
behavior," admitted using racial epithets, and "engag(ing) in brutality
that dehumanized Iraqis and Afghanis." However Vietnam-era history
"shows that organizing and protests by African American, Latino, and
other minority GIs (with support from other service members)" offer the
best chance of achieving real change. But success depends on ending the
Pentagon's proven way to teach young recruits to kill, so getting the
top brass to abandon it won't be easy.
Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault in the Military
Teaching
recruits "sexism and sexual imagery" works the same way as
indoctrinating racism. Soldiers are taught to equate "strength and
discipline in combat (to) sexual prowess," military violence to the
sexual kind, and "disobedience, nonconformity, or weakness as feminine."
Today,
sexism is so embedded in military culture that female soldiers pay the
price. They're discriminated against in training, assignments,
promotion, much else, and are frequent victims of harassment and sexual
assault - the former through "unwelcome sexual advances, requests for
sexual favors," and other similar behavior; the latter includes "rape
and other forcible or unwanted sexual contact...."
In
a male-dominated military, this behavior is embedded, ritualized, and
symbolic of male power. The highly-publicized September 1991 Tailhook
incident is a prominent example but a rare one that made headlines. It
involved a group of Naval aviators sexually assaulting 26 women at one
of their annual gatherings. They cornered and surrounded them, passed
them down a gauntlet, jeered, taunted, grabbed, fondled, and tried to
strip them.
Similar
incidents are all too common, and for years top brass knew of and
tolerated them. They have documented evidence that half or more of
women in all branches have been victims of sexual harassment or
assault. It shows a profound contempt many military men (including top
brass) have for women in the ranks, at the enlisted and officer levels.
Complaints,
studies, hearings and regulations do little to halt these practices.
Reports surface often about harassment, assaults, rape and other
demeaning behavior in basic training, the service academies, duty
assignments of all kinds, and in combat. The military today is no safer
for women than it ever was. It never will be unless the Pentagon
changes its ideology, how it trains GIs, and if it's willing to impose
stiff penalties to offenders.
The Medical Side of War
The
state of the military's health care system is deplorable. Pressed to
fund and fill the ranks for two illegal and unpopular wars, Congress
and the Pentagon pay scant attention to the injured, sick, and
psychologically damaged. It's further testimony to a nation defiling
its principles - ones observed only rhetorically, hardly ever in
practice, and not at all once the usefulness of combatants is over.
The
Iraq and Afghan wars have produced an epidemic of psychological wounds
that for many end up permanent. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
is frighteningly common, yet care delivered is minimal, inadequate, and
dismissive of a major problem afflicting many tens of thousands of
returning vets.
Others
from the Vietnam era retained their scars, and it's happening again
today. Many couldn't find work then or now, abused their spouses, and
too often ended up homeless or committed suicide (before or after
coming home). An uncaring nation didn't notice nor does it today. The
real crime is that the Pentagon and Congress are well versed on these
problems, yet do little to address them. Only unbridled militarism,
advancing imperialism, filling the ranks, funding numerous weapons
systems and munitions, and enriching war-profiteers matter.
The
result for hundreds of thousands returning from past and current wars
is untreated medical needs, an uncertain future, and the knowledge that
the nation they fought for doesn't care when they're no longer needed.
Vietnam vets know it, and so do ones today from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Without
a draft, the military needs volunteers to fill the ranks. The result is
the stop-loss practice of involuntarily extending enlistment terms and
frequent redeployments, even for those with serious physical or
psychological injuries.
The
Pentagon denied the affects of Agent Orange in Vietnam and the
existence of Gulf War Syndrome from the first Iraq war. In 1990 - 91
and now, its likely cause was the widespread use of depleted uranium
(DU), the proliferation of other toxic substances, and the illegal use
of dangerous vaccines in violation of the Nuremberg Code on medical
experimentation. No rules apply in our war fighting, nor does the
health and welfare of our recruited men and women matter - enlisted to
be used, then discarded when their service ends. It's especially
evident in the "medical side of war" when those most in need are
largely ignored and forgotten.
How
the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) handles disability claims
highlights a problem reaching epidemic levels. In early May 2009, the
Veterans Benefits Administration and Board of Veterans Appeals at VA
had a backlog of 915,000 claims, and their rate is growing so fast it
may now be approaching or past one million and climbing.
Things
are so bad for returning vets that most face an average six month wait
for benefits and up to four years to have their appeals heard when
they're denied - which is often. It's in addition to the shameful
treatment GIs get for their health needs - many serious and requiring
extensive, expensive treatment, often not gotten from an uncaring
nation.
Discharges
Many
GIs become disillusioned when they learn promises made are hollow. Some
seek early discharges that can be gotten honorably but not easily most
often with the nation at war on two fronts and needing all the troops
it can get. Still numerous reasons qualify for an Expiration of Active
Obligated Service (EAOS), including CO status, disability and illness.
Others include:
-- family hardship or dependency factors;
-- parenthood for single parents or in cases where husbands and wives are in the military;
-- pregnancy or childbirth;
-- inadequate performance or conduct during the first six months of training;
-- qualification under the "don't ask, don't tell" for gays and lesbians;
-- specific personality disorders;
-- other physical or psychological factors that don't qualify for medical discharges;
-- erroneous enlistments, including contract violations and recruiter fraud;
--
alien status; especially relevant at a time undocumented Latinos
(mainly Mexicans) are recruited with promises (then broken) of a green
card for them and their family as well as free education, medical care,
and post-service employment;
-- being a sole surviving family member;
-- unsatisfactorily performing duties;
--
"separation from the Delayed Entry Program (DEP)" that entraps "youths
still in school or the Delayed Training Program (DTP)" for enlistment
in the reserves; and
-- less than honorable discharges for misconduct, drug abuse, court-martial, and other undesirable factors.
Other
administrative discharges are also available, all honorable, including
"general" ones under honorable conditions. But recruits get little
information during training. Those requesting them are told discharges
are impossible, so to get the facts civilian sources must be consulted.
It takes time, and following proper procedures is essential. But the
payoff is worth the trouble for those willing to do it and counseling
is available to help.
A
GI Rights Network has a toll-free hotline, and there are other
organizations as well. They're in it "for the long haul" to instruct
today's military how to exit honorably from two illegal wars and avoid
the risk of death or disabling injuries.
The Families
America's
wars harm families as well as GIs. They must cope with the same
problems of long, repeated deployments, possible death or permanent
impairment, and the lasting affects of war-related trauma that afflict
even those visibly or otherwise unscathed.
Some
families go public against the Iraq and Afghan wars, recruiter lies and
misconduct that entrap their loved ones, and as civilians they're free
to speak publicly with no restrictions on what they may say.
Gold
star mothers spoke out against the Vietnam War, and today Cindy Sheehan
(whose son Casey was killed in Iraq five days after he arrived) and
other parents who lost sons and daughters founded Gold Star Families
for Peace. They say honor our lost loved ones by ending these illegal
wars and occupations, stop invading other countries, and return the
nation to peace.
Military
Families Speak Out (MFSO) is the largest organization of its kind
against the Iraq war with chapters in 29 states. They support their
loved ones, demonstrate, speak out publicly, and lobby Congress the way
some of their members did earlier against the Vietnam war. "These
courageous families....endure unspeakable suffering....join together to
support one another....work to end the war....(and represent) the power
of collection action."
They're
"a powerful force in the effort to end these wars. They can tell the
truth to counter recruiters' deceptions." They can effectively
represent their loved ones and help others through a common effort to
free us all from the scourge of war.
Conclusion
America's
Iraq and Afghan wars are illegal and immoral. Every service member is
obligated by law to disengage, resist, and refuse any longer to
participate. US and international laws support them, and as Ehren
Watada stated in his defense: "An order to take part in an illegal war
is unlawful in itself. So my obligation is not to follow the order to
go to Iraq."
Increasing
numbers of others are deployed as part of America's permanent war and
occupation agenda - continuing no differently under Obama than George
Bush. To know what's planned for Iraq, Afghanistan and future US
targets, think Korea. US forces arrived in 1950 and never left. Think
Japan as well. They've been there as well since WW II, on the mainland
and choicest real estate of the country's southern-most and poorest
prefecture - Okinawa.
Further,
since the Japanese surrendered in August 1945, America has had no
enemies anywhere - except those invented to advance a global imperial
agenda at the expense of our nation's youths and their families, other
loved ones, and friends at home. Wars guarantee new ones and a
permanent cycle of violence, death and destruction, the only winners
being profiteers who benefit hugely.
As
a result, growing numbers of GIs, veterans, families, and the general
public are opting to "disengage" and resist. Together they represent
power enough to impact "whether or not the United States is able to
carry out these and future wars of aggression."
Most
Americans oppose the Iraq war and its continued toll on GIs and their
families. It's just a matter of time until opposition to Afghanistan is
as great and with luck whatever new conflicts the administration plans.
Those sent to fight them and their families end up losers. Their choice
is clear and unequivocal - absolutely refuse any longer to participate
and with enough sharing that view, they'll end. With overwhelming
homeland needs unmet at a time of grave economic crisis, honor and
necessity must dictate our future course. It's up to mass public
activism to demand it.
Stephen
Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@....
Also
visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global
Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday - Friday at 10AM
US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests
on world and national issues. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
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