Francis A. Boyle
Law Building
504 E. Pennsylvania Ave.
Champaign, IL 61820 USA
217-333-7954 (phone)
217-244-1478 (fax)
fboyle at law.uiuc.edu
(personal comments only)
 
 

________________________________

From: William Hughes [mailto:liamhug...@comcast.net] 
Sent: Saturday, February 16, 2008 1:34 PM
To: William Hughes
Subject: Civil Resistance In the Age of Bush and Cheney 


Published, Feb. 16, 2008, Baltimore's Indy Media Center, at:
<http://baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display/16855/index.php> 

                 Civil Resistance In the Age of Bush and Cheney

by William Hughes

"Be the change that you want to see in the world." - Mohandas Gandhi

The late Philip Berrigan, Dissenter Emeritus, wrote in 1997: "The
empire's wars are killing us." (1) One of the big props for that empire
is the clique in our society, known as the "Military-Industrial
Complex." This is the same powerful special interest that President
Dwight D. Eisenshower warned the nation about in his "Farewell Address."
(2) Peace activist Berrigan felt, as a result of the arms race, that the
world was moving towards a nuclear holocaust. In any event, Professor
Francis A. Boyle's new book, "Protesting Power: War, Resistance, and
Law," reveals how some courageous individuals have successfully
challenged the many outrageous, and ongoing, crimes of our national
regimes, via their arrest in a Civil Resistance-type action, and,
subsequently, as a defendant in a court of law before a jury of their
peers.

One of the initial things that Professor Boyle does in his excellent
tome is to distinguish between the terms "civil resistance" and "civil
disobedience." Often they are confused in the minds of the public.
Professor Boyle said that in "civil resistance" cases, you have
individuals, acting "peaceably," who are attempting to "prevent the
ongoing commission of international crimes...They are acting for the
express purpose of upholding the rule of law, the U.S. Constitution,
international, and human rights." An example of civil resistance would
be protesters risking arrest by trespassing in order to the prevent the
production and use of "First Strike" nuclear weapons, which Professor
Boyle claims are "illegal" under International Law.

Classic civil disobedience cases, on the other hand, involved activists,
who deliberately choose, by their conduct, to violate domestic laws for
the "express purpose of challenging and changing those laws." As an
example, Professor Boyle cited the activists, particularly from the
African-American community, during the 1950s and 1960s, who went to jail
for various offenses, like in the historic sit-ins, in order to
spotlight racially discriminatory laws and to bring about equal Civil
Rights for all Americans. 

In his demanding role as an educator, attorney, consultant and respected
expert witness on International Law, Professor Boyle has been in the
trenches taking on the "State Crimes" of various U.S. administrations
for close to thirty years. Civil Resistance has been the primary tool
utilized by the activists in their legal-based, court room battles. As a
result, the civil resisters, he insists, have become the "Sheriffs and
the U.S. government officials committing the crimes, the outlaws."

Professor Boyle underscores how successive U.S. administrations have
manipulated the public in order to justify their lawless ways. The
Bush-Cheney Gang is one of his prime examples. He said that it is hell
bent on stealing the "hydrocarbon empire from the Muslim states and
people living in Central Asia and the Persian Gulf." Essentially, it
sells its foreign policy wrongdoings, like the war in Iraq, by posing a
"Hobessian" choice to the people. It suggests that there are only two
alternatives: Either threaten or use U.S. military force in a particular
situation, or allow "the enemies to prevail." Professor Boyle insisted
that they ignore a third way, which embraces diplomacy, peaceful
resolutions of disputes, the application of the rules of law and the
traditions of fair play. Professor Boyle labeled the conflict in Iraq as
"criminal," and the foreign policy of the Bush-Cheney Gang, which was
fueled, in part, by the rabid Neocon ideologues, "as out of control."

How does civil resistance work within the framework of the American
judicial system? Well, Professor Boyle cited the "People v. Jarka" case,
among other landmark litigation, to illustrate some of his key points.
In 1984, activists protested in front of the Great Lake's Naval Station
base, which is located in Illinois, on Lake Michigan. The focus of the
demonstration centered on the issues of U.S.'s violence-producing
"intervention in Central America" and also on our country's buildup of
"offensive nuclear weapons." Ronald Reagan was the president at the
time. The defendants were arrested, when they sat in front of the naval
base, locked arms, and refused to be moved. They were charged by
authorities with the crimes of "mob action and resisting arrest." 

The defendants, in "Jarka," elected a trial by jury. The trial judge,
the Hon. Alphonse F. Witt, permitted testimony on their behalf from
eight expert witnesses on International Law. They testified how the
actions of the Reagan administration, in Central America, were in
violation of well settled legal principles established by the UN
Charter, the Geneva Convention, the Hague Convention and other
precedents. They also specified how a nuclear weapon would kill
potentially hundreds of thousands of people and cause horrific harm to
"combatants and noncombatants alike," and that their use would violate
the principles of "necessity and proportionality" under International
Law. In Illinois, a defendant has a right, under certain circumstances,
to raise the Common Law defense of "Necessity." In other words, the
defendants were permitted to argue to the jury that their supposed
criminal conduct, [the blocking the road into the base], was justified'
in order to "avoid a public or private injury 'greater' than the injury
that might reasonably result from his or her own conduct." The judge
actually instructed the jury that "the threat or use of nuclear weapons
violated international law." Needless to say, all the defendants were
acquitted.

The "Jarka" case also spotlights one of the hallmarks of a  civil
resistance action. The defendants in it sincerely believed that they
"hadn't violated" any criminal laws. Professor Boyle put it this way:
"From their perspective, [it's the] U.S. government officials [who are]
on trial...Civil resisters disobeyed nothing--to the contrary, they
obeyed international law and the U.S. Constitution."

In "Jarka," Professor Boyle served as counsel to the lawyers handling
the precedent-setting case, and also in a companion matter of "Chicago
v. Streeter." He praised the work of all of the trial lawyers involved
in the two cases, and also the "vigorous efforts of the 'Lawyers
Committee on Nuclear Policy' (LCNP)." 

Professor Boyle also discussed cases involving the crime of Trespass.
It's a "specific intent" offense and is one of the charges usually
leveled at someone for participating in a civil resistance action. In
order to convict, however, the government must prove that the defendant
acted with an "unlawful purpose." Often, in order to make their point
about government evildoing, a "resister" will go on the property of a
federal facility, like the National Security Agency or the Pentagon,
without permission. In those kinds of situations, Professor Boyle said
the defense lawyer should consider making this argument to the jury:
"The defendant did not do so for an 'unlawful' purpose, but was instead
acting for the express purpose of upholding the requirements of
international law...in order to prevent the commission of international
crimes by U.S. officials there and elsewhere."

Professor Boyle highlighted some of the antiwar groups in the country
who have utilized "Civil Resistance" over the years. He mentions the
legendary Plowshares, Gulf War Resisters, the Anti-Apartheid Movement,
Greenpeace, Sacred Earth, the Sanctuary Movement and the Pledge of
Resistance, among others. (3) He wrote that by the year 2004, "Nuclear
Resister" had estimated that there were more than, "9,400
antiwar-related arrests in the U.S. alone." All of this caused the
former U.S. Attorney General, Ramsey Clark, to comment: "Our jails are
filling up with saints." 

Also in his book, Professor Boyle writes, in detail, about the possible
strategies to adopt in a Civil Resistance case; a trial, in Wisconsin,
involving opposition to the "Trident II,"a nuclear missile submarine;
the constitutionality of the Persian Gulf War; and the legality of
President Bill Clinton's "invasion of Haiti." It's his treatment,
however, of the opposition to the illegal and immoral Iraq War, by gutsy
members of the U.S. military, like Staff Sergeant Camilo Mejia (US Army
Reserves), and First Lieutenant Ehren K. Watada (US Army), that I
believe readers will find most riveting.

Finally, Professor Boyle has been a true champion of the U.S.
Constitution and of the rule of law. He has continued to demonstrate his
commitment to his principles by demanding the impeachment of President
George W. Bush, Jr. for committing "high crimes and misdemeanors." (4).
In a way, his highly informative book, "Protesting Power: War,
Resistance, and Law," is simply an extension of his love of justice and
his deep concern for our Republic, which continues to drift dangerously
towards the creation of a police state. I say: Read Professor Boyle's
well written and fully documented book. It is filled with valuable
lessons for all activists. (5) This is especially so for those whose
conscience, living in the Age of Bush and Cheney, may dictate that
"civil resistance" is a moral and legal choice for them to exercise.

Notes:

1.  http://www.jonahhouse.org/PB/Phil_PoPplowshare.htm 
2.
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/dwightdeisenhowerfarewell.html
3.  http://www.iraqpledge.org/
4.  http://www.counterpunch.org/boyle01172003.html
5.  For another relevant book on resisting the Iraq War, see,
http://baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display/16292/index.php 

(c)2008, William Hughes, All Rights Reserved.

William Hughes is a video and print journalist. His videos can be found
at: http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=liamh2.
Email Contact: liamhughes at comcast.net.  

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