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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-08-06 11:47 PM
Original message
That Other Defiant Soldier
Ehren Watada isn't the first to refuse deployment to Iraq. Kevin Benderman is already in the brig.
By Rick Anderson

There's little doubt that Fort Lewis Army officer Ehren Watada, if he continues to refuse deployment to Iraq, is headed for an Army brig. At a Wednesday, June 7, press conference, Watada, a first lieutenant with the Stryker Brigade, said he believes the war is morally wrong but has chosen not to seek conscientious-objector status. He joined the Army a few months after the U.S. invaded Iraq, but now he contends the war is illegal, based on the Bush government's "deception . . . manipulation misconduct," which emerged later. That makes the order to send him to fight the war illegal, too, he argues. It's a contention, however, he'll unlikely be able to prove to a military court.

Watada, 28, first will have to demonstrate that the war, sanctioned by Congress and the United Nations, violates federal or military law. Should he somehow surmount that legal mountain, he must separately prove his deployment this month is itself illegal. He likely knows his fate—this is more protest than legal challenge—and he's drawn the admiration of the antiwar movement, along with the wrath of some military families. He also might be quietly cheered on by some fellow soldiers but despised by others who, on the ground in Iraq, see it not as a war of good or bad or lawfulness but of survival, one where their main mission is to watch each other's back. Watada believes, however, "I best serve my soldiers by speaking out."

The similar case of Sgt. Kevin Benderman may be a good indicator of Watada's future. Though it's not widely known, Benderman, of the 4th Infantry Division out of Fort Hood, Texas, is already in the Fort Lewis brig for refusing to deploy to Iraq. A 10-year Army veteran, Benderman actually did a tour there, from the time of the March invasion through September in 2003. After shipping home, he changed his views, remembering such incidents as, he claimed, a commander ordering his unit to shoot Iraqi children if they tossed pebbles again at U.S. soldiers. Facing redeployment to Iraq in 2004, he filed for conscientious-objector status. Unlike Watada, who is taking a legal stand, Benderman sought exception on moral grounds. But Army command refused even to accept his filing, Benderman contends. He was convicted last year of "missing movement"—refusing deployment—and was given 15 months in prison, loss of pay, reduction in rank, and, when he's released perhaps late this year, a dishonorable discharge. He is appealing.

Benderman, 41, frequently writes letters from the brig that are published on the Web (www.bendermantimeline.com). He originally referred to himself as a conscientious objector and later added "prisoner of conscience." In one of his first messages, he wrote, "I have laid down my weapons of war to pick them up never again. It is my sincere hope that more people will do the same so that our children and grandchildren will never have to experience what so many of us already have—the single most barbaric of human endeavors, otherwise known as war." More recently, he expanded on his moral views: "We cannot expect government to do what is necessary to eliminate war because it generates large amounts of revenue for government. Governments and businesses are able to make record profits from war while the average citizen fighting in any given war cannot get proper treatment for their wounds or the mental and emotional anguish suffered as a result of their participation in war. How is this honorable?" ...

http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0624/objector.php

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RagingInMiami Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-08-06 11:56 PM
Response to Original message
1. Camilo Mejia of Miami was the very first defiant soldier of this war
He already served his time in jail and is now an active member of Iraq Veterans Against the War.

This Chicago Tribune article was written two years ago.

http://nefac.net/?q=node/1063
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bananas Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 12:28 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Pablo Paredes was another one
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/05/13/1437208&mode=thread&tid=25

<snip>

AMY GOODMAN: Pablo Paredes, reading the statement he read in the military court. The judge had a very unusual statement in response during your sentencing, Pablo Paredes. Could you share with us what he said?

PABLO PAREDES: I don't have exactly in front of me what he said, and it wasn't during sentencing. I believe the statement you are talking about, and I won't put it in quotes because I don't have it exactly as it was stated, but after the government or the prosecution -- it’s called the government in military court, but it's the prosecution -- after they questioned Marjorie Cohn on the stand for a while, and it turned to almost an open debate, they weren't very successful. Marjorie Cohn was able to express quite clearly why she felt that the wars in Yugoslavia, in Afghanistan and Iraq were, in fact, illegal, and the judge said something to the extent: I believe the government has just proved that any service member would have reasonable cause to believe that the wars of Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, and Iraq were illegal. So, I mean, it was a pretty impressive thing to hear from a military judge.

AMY GOODMAN: The judge said this?

PABLO PAREDES: Yeah, something to that effect.

<snip>
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RagingInMiami Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 12:35 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. I hadn't heard about him
Good for him. Thanks for posting.
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 01:03 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. This courage and integrity is important.
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