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Aaron Glantz
TACOMA, Washington, Feb 5 (IPS) - Supporters of the first
commissioned U.S. officer to refuse to serve in Iraq plan
to pack the courtroom at Fort Lewis, Washington where First
Lieutenant Ehren Watada will face a court martial Monday.
"If more officers like Lt. Watada come forward and said
they wouldn't order their troops into a war that's morally
wrong that means fewer enlisted people like myself will come
back injured or killed," former Marine Corp medic Chanan
Suarez-Diaz told a packed house of activists Sunday evening
in the basement auditorium of the First Congregational Church
in nearby Tacoma.
Suarez-Diaz's back was injured by a rocket-propelled grenade
in Ramadi in 2005.
Like many members of the crowd, Suarez-Diaz is a member of
the group Iraq Veterans Against the War, which organisers
say has quadrupled in size in the last year. Suarez-Diaz told
IPS anger about the war is growing in the rank and file of
the military, making Lieutenant Watada's trial very important.
"Soldiers aren't machines that don't think and don't
have a consciousness," he said, adding that his unit
is scheduled to redeploy as part of President George W. Bush's
plan to send at least 21,500 additional troops to Iraq.
"I've spoken to a lot of my buddies who went to Iraq
with me and a lot of them have changed their minds,"
he added. "Before they were more Republican or conservative
but now they're seeing what this war is about," he added.
Lt. Watada faces four years in prison if he is convicted
of all the charges against him. That's because he's not charged
only with refusing to go to Iraq, but also for "conduct
unbecoming of an officer" for speaking in public forums
against the war.
Among them was a speech to the Veterans for Peace annual
convention in Seattle last year.
"Today, I speak with you about a radical idea,"
Watada told the gathering. "That to stop an illegal and
unjust war, soldiers can choose to stop fighting it... If
soldiers realised this war is contrary to what the constitution
extols -- if they stood up and threw their weapons down --
no president could ever initiate a war of choice again. When
we say, '...Against all enemies foreign and domestic,' what
if elected leaders became the enemy? Whose orders do we follow?
The answer is the conscience that lies in each soldier, each
American, and each human being. Our duty to the constitution
is an obligation, not a choice."
Initially, the U.S. military had angered the journalism profession
by subpoenaing two reporters and three peace activists to
testify as witnesses for the prosecution. Prosecutors had
argued that their testimony was necessary to prove, legally,
that Lt. Watada had been speaking out against the war.
Under a deal reached last week between the Army and Watada's
lawyers, however, the journalists and activists will not longer
be needed at the court martial, with Watada agreeing to stipulate
to his public comments.
As a result, the court martial is likely to be short, especially
since the military judge overseeing the trial ruled last month
that Watada's claim -- that the war is immoral and illegal
-- will not be a permissible defence at trial. Watada had
hoped to argue under the so-called Nuremberg Principals which
arose from trials of Nazi war criminals after World War II.
The fourth of the Nuremberg Principles says that superior
orders are not a defence to the commission of an illegal act,
meaning soldiers who commit a war crime after "just following
orders" are just as culpable as their superiors.
Nonetheless, families of other soldiers refusing to fight
in Iraq are watching the trial closely.
Helga Aguayo flew in from Los Angeles to Seattle with her
two daughters and mother-in-law to attend Watada's court martial.
Her husband, Augustin, is an army medic currently incarcerated
at a U.S. military prison in Germany for going AWOL after
his application for conscientious objector status was denied.
He faces seven years in prison.
"We are here because it's important to show support
for people who resist wars," she told the gathering at
Tacoma's first Congregational Church.
"We know what Watada's family is going through,"
she added. "My husband has been fighting for more than
three years to be declared a conscientious objector. He is
so opposed to war that when his commander sent him out on
patrol he did so without putting any bullets in his gun."
A military court martial in Germany is scheduled to be held
Mar. 6. A ruling in the Watada case is expected by the end
of the week. (END/2007)
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