Lt.
Ehren Watada Does His Duty
By David Howard
26 September, 2006
Countercurrents.org
US
Army First Lieutenant Ehren Watada is facing an eight-year term in military
prison for just doing his duty: serving our country and protecting the
Constitution.
The charges against Lieutenant
Watada are conduct unbecoming an officer, missing movement, and contempt
toward President Bush. But they boil down to the “crimes”
of thinking, speaking and following his conscience.
In June 2006, Ehren Watada
refused to deploy to Iraq on the grounds that the Iraq War is illegal.
The Army filed charges, held a hearing, and recommended a court martial.
This impending trial will
be a test of our president’s authority to wage preemptive war.
Lieutenant Watada argues, on our behalf, that President Bush has abused
his authority; President Bush argues that Watada is contemptuous for
saying so.
The architects of the Iraq
War want to punish Ehren Watada for “unbecoming conduct,”
but Lt. Watada has only done what any soldier is supposed to do upon
receiving an order: exercise moral judgment, determine if the order
is lawful, and only then obey it.
As we learned at the Nuremburg
trials after the genocide of World War II, an officer is not merely
permitted to disobey an illegal order; she or he has a solemn duty to
do so, and must not take legality for granted.
How then is a soldier supposed
to make the “moral choice” required by the Nuremburg Principles?
What 28-year-old Ehren Watada did was educate himself about the conflict
and turn to recognized experts in ethics and international law. His
subsequent decision not to participate in the Iraq War was pro-Constitution,
pro-international law, pro-human rights, and anti-abuse of authority.
Watada stated, “My
participation would make me party to war crimes. The Iraq War is not
legal according to domestic and international law.”
Many distinguished world
leaders and international law experts agree that the war is illegal.
They include Secretary General of the UN, Kofi Annan, who in 2004 declared
that the US invasion was "not in conformity with the UN Charter,
and from our point of view, illegal."
Three experts testified for Ehren Watada at his Article 32 preliminary
hearing: University of Illinois Law Professor Francis Boyle, former
United Nations Undersecretary Denis Halliday, and retired Army Colonel
Ann Wright. They all supported Watada’s claim that the Iraq War
is illegal.
Marjorie Cohn, President-elect
of the National Lawyer’s Guild and a professor at the Thomas Jefferson
School of Law, made a similar case at the sentencing hearing in 2004
for Pablo Paredes, a sailor and conscientious objector who refused to
board his Iraq-bound ship.
Professor Cohn noted that
the Uniform Code of Military Justice establishes that lawful orders
must not be contrary to the Constitution and the laws of the United
States. Furthermore, the Army Field Manual establishes an explicit duty
to disobey unlawful orders: "Following superior orders" is
not a defense to the commission of war crimes, unless the accused "did
not know and could not reasonably have been expected to know that the
act ordered was unlawful."
Cohn argued that the United
States has not only endorsed the Nuremburg Principles, but also has
ratified both the UN Charter and the Geneva Conventions, making them
legally binding according to Article 6 of the Constitution: “All
Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United
States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land.”
As Ehren Watada puts it,
“As the order to take part in an illegal act is ultimately unlawful
as well, I must, as an officer of honor and integrity, refuse that order."
As citizens of honor and
integrity, we must support Ehren Watada.
David Howard is
a member of the Board of Directors of Citizens for Peaceful Resolutions.
Email: DavidHoward@aol.com