Resist
U.S. War Crimes
Jeremy Brecher
CommonDreams.org
January 25, 2005
Most Americans hold these truths to be self-evident: Torture is wrong;
attacking another country that hasn't attacked you is wrong; occupying
another country with your army and imposing your will on its people
is wrong. These policies are not only immoral. They are illegal.
Most Americans believe that even the highest government officials are
bound by law. They reject Attorney General-designate Alberto Gonzales'
view that the law is whatever the President says it is - that if the
President says something isn't torture, then it's O.K. to order it.
Most Americans don't agree that their president can unilaterally annul
treaties like the Geneva conventions. They don't accept, as Gonzales
put it in a 2002 legal memo, that if the President simply declares there's
a "new paradigm" he can thereby "render obsolete Geneva's
strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners."
Aggression, military occupation, and torture were the war crimes, crimes
against peace, and crimes against humanity for which the Axis leaders
were prosecuted at the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials after World War II.
The U.S. has supported similar charges against Slobodan Milosevic and
Saddam Hussein.
But what about the U.S. attack on Iraq, which Kofi Annan has bluntly
called "illegal"? What about the leveling of Fallujah and
the targeting of hospitals and urban neighborhoods? What about torture
at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo? If a single standard is applied, these
too are crimes of war. And as the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal stated,
"Anyone with knowledge of illegal activity and an opportunity to
do something is a potential criminal under international law unless
the person takes affirmative measures to prevent the commission of the
crimes." How many Americans can honestly claim to know nothing
about this "illegal activity"? It's reported in detail in
the daily newspapers and shown in full color on the nightly news, from
the phony reports of Iraq's "yellowcake" uranium to the shooting
of ambulances to the horrors of Abu Ghraib.
In 1967, faced with evidence of the napalming of villages and massacring
of civilians in Vietnam, a distinguished group of Americans signed a
"Call to Resist Illegitimate Authority." They declared the
Vietnam War illegal under U.S. and international law and pledged to
support young people who were resisting the draft.
When the Johnson administration charged world famous pediatrician Dr.
Benjamin Spock, Yale Chaplain William Sloan Coffin, and others with
conspiracy to "aid, counsel, and abet" resistance to the draft,
it identified the "Call" as their first overt act.
There's no draft yet, but there's plenty of resistance. The Pentagon
acknowledges 5,500 desertions since the Iraq war began. Army Reserve
and National Guard recruitment is plummeting. Many in the military are
deciding not to reenlist.
"60 Minutes" recently interviewed U.S. resisters in Canada
and reported that "conscience, not cowardice, made them American
deserters." One of them, Specialist Jeremy Hinzman of Rapid City,
South Dakota joined the 82nd Airborne as a paratrooper in 2001 and served
in Afghanistan.
But when he was ordered to Iraq, he went to Canada instead. He explained
to "60 Minutes," "I was told in basic training that,
if I'm given an illegal or immoral order, it is my duty to disobey it.
And I feel that invading and occupying Iraq is an illegal and immoral
thing to do."
Senior officials like Alberto Gonzales set the policies that led to
Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib. Nearly 140 low-level military service members
have been disciplined or face courts-martial for abusing detainees.
Instead of being punished, Gonzales is being rewarded with the job of
U.S. Attorney General.
It's time for all Americans to face our responsibility to halt Bush
administration war crimes. It's time to give our support to those who
are refusing to participate in those crimes. It's time for a new "Call
to Resist Illegitimate Authority."
I for one will say right now that I support those who refuse illegal
orders to participate in this illegal war. I know there are many who
will join me.
To Alberto Gonzales, I would like to say that I encourage all Americans,
military and civilian, to disobey orders based on your memos justifying
torture. I say it's their legal right, indeed their legal and moral
duty, to disobey such illegal orders.
Gonzales may disagree. In the era of the misleadingly named PATRIOT
Act, he may follow the example of the Johnson administration and bring
charges against those who encourage resistance to military authority.
If he does, he will test whether a jury of American citizens will agree
that the law is whatever the President says it is -- even if that includes
torture and an illegal war.
Jeremy Brecher, a historian and author, is editing a book on the
resistance to U.S. war crimes. A Foreign Policy In Focus analyst, he
lives in Connecticut. For proposals related to a new "Call to Resist
Illegitimate Authority" visit:
http://internationallaw.pro-se-institute.org
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