Veterans Call to Conscience

Check out the web site for updates on signatures http://calltoconscience.net/ 
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mail: VCC 4742 42nd Ave SW #142 Seattle, WA 
98116-4553 

Call to Conscience from Veterans to Active Duty Troops and Reservists 
Started December 6, 2002

We are veterans of the United States armed forces. We stand with the majority 
of humanity, including millions in our own country, in opposition to the United 
States’ all out war on Iraq. We span many wars and eras, have many political 
views and we all agree that this war is wrong. Many of us believed serving in 
the military was our duty, and our job was to defend this country. Our 
experiences in the military caused us to question much of what we were taught. 
Now we see our REAL duty is to encourage you as members of the U.S. armed 
forces to find out what you are being sent to fight and die for and what the 
consequences of your actions will be for humanity. We call upon you, the active 
duty and reservists, to follow your conscience and do the right thing. 

In the last Gulf War, as troops, we were ordered to murder from a safe 
distance. We destroyed much of Iraq from the air, killing hundreds of 
thousands, including civilians. We remember the road to Basra—the Highway of 
Death—where we were ordered to kill fleeing Iraqis. We bulldozed trenches, 
burying people alive. The use of depleted uranium weapons left the battlefields 
radioactive. Massive use of pesticides, experimental drugs, burning chemical 
weapons depots and oil fires combined to create a toxic cocktail affecting both 
the Iraqi people and Gulf War veterans today. One in four Gulf War veterans is 
disabled. 

During the Vietnam War we were ordered to destroy Vietnam from the air and on 
the ground. At My Lai we massacred over 500 women, children and old men. This 
was not an aberration, it’s how we fought the war. We used Agent Orange on the 
enemy and then experienced first hand its effects. We know what Post Traumatic 
Stress Disorder looks, feels and tastes like because the ghosts of over two 
million men, women and children still haunt our dreams. More of us took our own 
lives after returning home than died in battle. 

If you choose to participate in the invasion of Iraq you will be part of an 
occupying army. Do you know what it is like to look into the eyes of a people 
that hate you to your core? You should think about what your “mission” really 
is. You are being sent to invade and occupy a people who, like you and me, are 
only trying to live their lives and raise their kids. They pose no threat to 
the United States even though they have a brutal dictator as their leader. Who 
is the U.S. to tell the Iraqi people how to run their country when many in the 
U.S. don’t even believe their own President was legally elected? 

Saddam is being vilified for gassing his own people and trying to develop 
weapons of mass destruction. However, when Saddam committed his worst crimes 
the U.S. was supporting him. This support included providing the means to 
produce chemical and biological weapons. Contrast this with the horrendous 
results of the U.S. led economic sanctions. More than a million Iraqis, mainly 
children and infants, have died because of these sanctions. After having 
destroyed the entire infrastructure of their country including hospitals, 
electricity generators, and water treatment plants, the U.S. then, with the 
sanctions, stopped the import of goods, medicines, parts, and chemicals 
necessary to restore even the most basic necessities of life. 

There is no honor in murder. This war is murder by another name. When, in an 
unjust war, an errant bomb dropped kills a mother and her child it is 
not “collateral damage,” it is murder. When, in an unjust war, a child dies of 
dysentery because a bomb damaged a sewage treatment plant, it is 
not “destroying enemy infrastructure,” it is murder. When, in an unjust war, a 
father dies of a heart attack because a bomb disrupted the phone lines so he 
could not call an ambulance, it is not “neutralizing command and control 
facilities,” it is murder. When, in an unjust war, a thousand poor farmer 
conscripts die in a trench defending a town they have lived in their whole 
lives, it is not victory, it is murder. 

There will be veterans leading protests against this war on Iraq and your 
participation in it. During the Vietnam War thousands in Vietnam and in the 
U.S. refused to follow orders. Many resisted and rebelled. Many became 
conscientious objectors and others went to prison rather than bear arms against 
the so-called enemy. During the last Gulf War many GIs resisted in various ways 
and for many different reasons. Many of us came out of these wars and joined 
with the anti-war movement. 

If the people of the world are ever to be free, there must come a time when 
being a citizen of the world takes precedence over being the soldier of a 
nation. Now is that time. When orders come to ship out, your response will 
profoundly impact the lives of millions of people in the Middle East and here 
at home. Your response will help set the course of our future. You will have 
choices all along the way. Your commanders want you to obey. We urge you to 
think. We urge you to make your choices based on your conscience. If you choose 
to resist, we will support you and stand with you because we have come to 
understand that our REAL duty is to the people of the world and to our common 
future. 

VETERAN SIGNERS

name, branch, years 
Anton Black, Navy, 1977-84 
Dave Blalock, Army 1968-71 
Blase Bonpane, Marine Corps Reserve, 1948-50 
Fr. Bob Bossie, SCJ, Air Force, 1955-59 
Fredy Champagne, Army, 1965-66 
Rick Campos, Air Force, 1969-71 
James M. Craven, Army, 1963-66 
Carl Dix, Army, 1968-72 
Barry Donnan, British Army, 1987-93 
Kenneth Dugan, Navy Corpsman, 1984-88 
Jake Elkins, Marine Corps, 1965-69 
Todd Greenwood, Marine Corps, 1993-2001 
Andres Hernandez, Naval Reserves, 1979-85 
Robert Krzewinski, Navy, 1973-77 
Marty Kunz, Navy, 1970-76 
Ruth McKenney 
Rob Moitoza, Navy, 1965-71 
Stan Nishimura, Army, 1964-67 
David Rees Morgan, British Royal Air Force, 1948-50 
Wilson M. Powell, Air Force, 1950-54 
Jeff Paterson, Marine Corps, 1986-90 
Randy Rowland, Army, 1967-70 
Darnell S. Summers, Army, 1966-70 
Harold Taggart, Air Force, 1959-64 
Joe Urgo, Air Force, 1967-68 
David Wiggins MD, Army, Gulf War 
Mike Wong, Army, 1969-75 
Howard Zinn, Air Force, 1943-45 

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Contact Us @Veterans Call to Conscience (or VCC) 
4742—42nd Ave SW #142, Seattle, WA, 98116-4553 
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