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http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070226/brechersmith

Will the Watada Mistrial Spark an End to the War?
by JEREMY BRECHER & BRENDAN SMITH
The Nation
[posted online on February 9, 2007]

A military judge in Fort Lewis, Washington, has declared a mistrial in the
court-martial of Lieut. Ehren Watada, the first commissioned officer
prosecuted for refusing to go to Iraq. A new trial is believed to be
unlikely before summer, if at all. The mistrial represents a significant
victory for Watada, for the rights of military resisters and for the
movement of civil resistance to US war crimes in Iraq.

On the surface, the ruling by Lieut. Col. John Head appears to result from
a procedural technicality, but in fact it is a defeat for the Army's
central goal in prosecuting the 28-year-old officer. The judge had gone to
extraordinary lengths to try to keep Watada from achieving his objective
of "putting the war on trial," ruling that Watada's motivations for
refusing to deploy with his unit were "irrelevant" and that no witnesses
could testify on the illegality of the war.

But in its zeal to exclude the real meaning of the case, the court tied
itself up in procedural knots. Prosecutors wanted the judge to find that
Watada had agreed to pretrial stipulations that he had violated his duty
when he refused to show up for movement to Iraq. But Watada made clear
that he believed his duty, under his oath and military law, was to refuse
to participate in an illegal war. As the underlying question of the war's
illegality emerged like a family secret in the courtroom, the judge agreed
to the prosecutor's motion to declare a mistrial. But Time.com reported
that Watada's attorney, Eric Seitz, says he will file an immediate motion
to dismiss the case on grounds of double jeopardy if the Army tries to
resurrect it.

Watada maintained that his refusal to participate in an illegal war in
Iraq was justified, indeed required, under the Army's own Uniform Code of
Military Justice. Under Judge Head's rulings, however, there simply would
be no way for a soldier to resist an illegal order. Indeed, an American
military person could be ordered to commit mass murder or genocide and
then be denied the right even to make a case for the lawfulness of his
actions. The judge's rulings fly in the face of the Supreme Court's Hamdan
v. Rumsfeld decision, which stood for the principle that all US officials
are bound by national and international law not to commit war crimes.

The Army maintained that the duty to refuse an illegal order, established
at the Nuremberg Trials and enshrined in the Universal Code of Military
Justice, applies only to orders to commit particular criminal acts like
executing a prisoner. But in Watada, Resister, a January 27 video by
independent filmmaker Curtis Choy, Watada says that responsibility
"doesn't just include individual war crimes. It includes the greatest
crime against the peace, which is, as they determined after Nuremberg,
wars of aggression, wars that are not out of necessity but out of choice
for profit or power or whatever it may be."

Watada's dissent was intended to spark a movement of civil resistance on
the part of the American people. As he told the Veterans for Peace annual
convention in Seattle recently, the peace movement needs a change of
strategy.

"To stop an illegal and unjust war, the soldiers can choose to stop
fighting it.... If soldiers realized 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," he said.

But the young officer's appeal is not only to people in the military. He
told the Veterans, "Should citizens choose to remain silent through
self-imposed ignorance or choice, it makes them as culpable as the
soldiers in these crimes." In the Watada, Resister video, he added, "No
longer can any American citizen or organization simply sit on the fence
and say, Well, we don't take a position on the war, because the war in
itself is unconstitutional in many forms, and we as Americans have to step
up and say either we agree with what's going on or we disagree with what's
going on.... If you disagree...then you are going to have to ask yourself
what are you willing to sacrifice of yourself in order to correct the
injustice and wrongs of this government in regard to the Iraq War."

"We all take part in it--if you pay your taxes, you're taking part in this
war. We all have a responsibility, as they determined after Nuremberg,
whether you're the lowest soldier or the highest ranking general, or just
a regular civilian, we all have responsibility...to resist and refuse
enabling and condoning this criminal behavior," he said.


Sparking Resistance

Indeed, Watada's stand is helping spark resistance in many walks of
American life. More than 1,000 active-duty soldiers have now signed the
Appeal for Redress, asking for an end to the Iraq War. Appeal founder
Jonathan Hutto made the connection between Watada's case and the soldiers'
action. "The Appeal for Redress stands in solidarity with all those who
resist the current occupation of Iraq, the mass murder of the Iraqi
people, the harm and destruction done to American service members and
their families, and the ill use of American tax dollars.... We hope that
Lt. Watada is successful in his defense of his actions. We further hope
that his actions inspire other service members to look deeply into the
cause of this conflict and to follow their moral conscience."

The Washington Post reported that at a student rally held during the
January 27 antiwar demonstration in Washington, DC, "Many students
mentioned the case of Ehren Watada...as an important step in building a
cohesive antiwar movement. Watada's father spoke from the main stage at
the protest as student speakers at a side rally organized by the Campus
Antiwar Network hailed the young man as a hero and said the war will not
end until other soldiers make the same decision."

Watada has also inspired a growing movement of civil disobedience against
the war. Ying Lee, a former member of the Berkeley City Council, wrote in
the Berkeley Daily, "Watada is a young man with extraordinary clarity
about his moral responsibility and I am grateful for his principled and
clearly articulated thoughts about his obligation to defend the
Constitution, the UN charter, and the Nuremberg Principles.... My
gratitude to him is expressed in committing civil disobedience by blocking
the doors of the San Francisco Federal Building."

A majority of the American people now tell pollsters they believe the Iraq
War is wrong. More than a dozen Congressional committees are now
investigating aspects of the Iraq War and the "war on terror," including
war crimes ranging from top officials' lies about weapons of mass
destruction to illegal rendition and torture of captives. House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi has said the Iraq War is the greatest moral issue facing the
United States. And the midterm elections are almost universally
interpreted as a call to end the war in Iraq. Yet the war only escalates.
Could Lieutenant Watada's strategy of civil resistance provide the key to
bringing it to an end?


America's Constitutional Crisis

Watada's stand is based on fundamental constitutional principles and
responsibilities. It goes to the heart of America's current political,
moral and constitutional crisis. As he told Democracy Now!, "In our
democracy, according to our Constitution, one person, one man, cannot hold
absolute power, hold himself above the law, including in actions in
declaring war or waging war on another country. And it is my belief that
in deceiving the American people, through what a majority of us now know
to be true, the leaders of our country were violating their oath to this
country and violating constitutional law."

Watada's reasoning provides a pivot for redirecting America's
understanding of what has happened to us and what we must do about it. He
challenges us to confront a chain of implications that starts with the
truth about the criminality of the Iraq War, moves through the principles
of the Constitution and US and international law, and ends with our
personal responsibility.

Watada also provides a living example of what it means to step up to
personal responsibilities. "There was a long time when I went through
depression because I told myself I didn't have a choice," he said in
Watada, Resister. "That I joined the military and I had only one duty and
that was to obey what I was told, regardless of how I felt inside. It
really hurt me for a long time because I imprisoned myself by telling
myself I didn't have a choice. It didn't matter that I might be sent to
prison. I was already in prison, my freedom was already gone."

"When I told myself that I do have a choice, I have a choice to do what is
morally right, what is in my conscience, and what I can live with for the
rest of my life--even though that comes with consequences, I do have that
choice. When I realized that, and when I chose what was right for me, I
became free again. And I think everybody has to remember that and to
realize that is what is important in life."
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