Brian Doherty | February 27, 2007
CBS News reports on a petition sent to Congress, which they say was signed by over 1,000 military personnel, calling for withdrawal from Iraq. Says one of the soldiers:
We're not telling young men and women that it's not worth it, to serve their country. We've served our country. The men and women who have signed the appeal have served their country. So...we're not saying it's not worth it. We're saying that, if you have reservations about it to communicate it.....By volunteering we've done more than about 99 percent of the population. And anybody who joined after 9/11 when the country was at a state of war, it's my opinion that nobody has the right to question that soldier's patriotism, nobody.
The full text of the message:
As a patriotic American proud to serve the nation in uniform, I respectfully urge my political leaders in Congress to support the prompt withdrawal of all American military forces and bases from Iraq . Staying in Iraq will not work and is not worth the price. It is time for U.S. troops to come home.
[Via Rational Revew News Digest.]
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While I sympathize with the soldiers, they are out of line here. Policy is to be decided by our elected leaders and their appointees.
That's some sort of witty, though difficult to understand, joke, right?? Soldiers don't have the right to lobby the government for the outcome they desire by nature of their service?
That's some sort of witty, though difficult to understand,
joke, right?? Soldiers don't have the right to lobby the government
for the outcome they desire by nature of their service?
I'm not sure if they have that right or not - I do know that there
are certain restrictions on a soldiers' freedom of speech while on
active duty.
Um.
there's something a little disconcerting going on here. One thing
that came to mind is, "shouldn't you be concentrating on your job
on the ground", but honestly, that phrasing doesn't work.
And I also thought of "not to reason why...", but that sounds too
harsh and negative, too.
Are there any ethical issues at play (military ethics) that sheds
some light on the ethics of this resolution?
I'm not asking about policies, YOU declared these soldiers out of line, I'm asking if YOU think a soldier shouldn't be allowed to send a letter to his representative expressing his opinion on policy.
Dan T- You're sort of right and sort of wrong. It's true that
under the UCMJ, military personnel are prohibited from taking
public political stances while invoking their service. In a
practical sense, this means that a solider could get nailed for
showing up to an anti-war rally in uniform. But the enforcement of
that rule is spotty, and the rule itself is less than clear.
You're wrong in implying that military personnel give up their
rights as citizens. They still vote, they can still write letters
to their Congressmen, and can still speak on political issues
(provided they don't claim to represent the military and don't
defame the civilian chain of command.)
In short, the issue is not as simple as you make it out to be.
This from the link included in the post:
"Members of the military have a legal right to communicate with
their member of Congress. To learn more about the rights and
restrictions that apply to service members click here.
Attorneys and counselors experienced in military law are available
to help service members who need assistance in countering any
attempts to suppress this communication with members of
Congress."
According to this, this is perfectly legal for the soldiers to
do.
Taking a petition seriously is like taking an internet poll seriously. This is a self-selected sample with a strong incentive to support the policy that will get them back home quickest, regardless of whether its good military or foreign policy.
I love it when people say that no one can question their patriotism, when no one is. So, if I think these people are wrong, I'm questioning their patriotism? No, I just think they are wrong. I don't care if they say whatever. They are 1,000 out of how many that have served? I saw just a smidgen of this show, and some of these people were back in the states. I guess they believe they are speaking for their brothers and sisters is arms. Who knows? What is known is that polls reflect that even in 2006, military people overwhelmingly voted for Republicans. So aren't military people idiots? Why is 60 minutes all of the sudden listening to these red state morons? I wonder?
I'm not surprised that troops bitch about stuff. Happens all the
time.
And 1,000 signatures sounds like alot, until one considers there
are over 500,000 persons in the military and they represent less
than two-tenths of one percent.
I am surprised that these people continue to volunteer for
a war that they believe to be unwinnable. By continuing to
volunteer, they in effect are supporting the war effort.
Still trying to understand the logic behind it....
I think US soldiers have a right to petition their elected representatives. I certainly respect their right to do so, and I respect their opinion as well. I doubt that any repercussions will result from this; probably no effect on Congress either.
This from the form / petition that soldiers are asked to
complete...
Nature of grievance:
1. The failure to provide troops adequate protection and
preparation for combat
2. The human cost in thousands of deaths and severe injuries among
American service members and the suffering of the Iraqi
people
3. The economic cost to American taxpayers and diversion of
resources from other priorities (inadequate response to Katrina,
etc.)
You're wrong in implying that military personnel give up
their rights as citizens.
I call BULLSHIT on that. As a veteran, I can tell you that once you
sign your name on the line, you loose all rights as citizens. The
military may ALLOW you to vote etc. But that's only because the
cost/benefit analysis came out that way. If the pentagon decided
that it would be to their advantage to not allow servicemen to
write their congressman, they'd put that policy in place.
There is a difference between arguing for a political outcome
and disobeying orders. I am sure every person that signed the
petition would walk into the gates of hell if they were ordered,
but bitched about the retards in command the whole time. Joining
the military does not remove your right to independent thought. I
think those soldiers are exceptionally brave for inviting the
shitstorm they are stepping into.
Good on, guys!
Take any military engagement of at least six months duration -
even one we are winning handily and one that people at home are
supportive of, and send around a survey about how many people think
it is time to go home. You think you couldn't come up with 1,000
signatures?
There is nothing wrong with submitting this sort of thing to
congress. There is something wrong with everyone else playing a
fraudulent "even the troops abandon the mission" card.
JasonL,
Not a chance you could come up with a 1,000 signatures unless there
were 100,000 others who agree. Signing that petition is a court
marshallable offense. It's almost certain that the highest ranking
names will be prosecuted.
Warren,
I am a vet too, so our vetness cancels. Signing that petition is
most certainly NOT a court marshallable offense.
Why do the troops hate America?
Why don't the troops support the troops?
(If these jokes are getting old, imagine spending five years on the
receiving end of them, except the speakers aren't joking.)
I am surprised that these people continue to volunteer for a
war that they believe to be unwinnable. By continuing to volunteer,
they in effect are supporting the war effort.
What's your definition of "continuing to volunteer"? (Click on my
name for link.)
Joe,
"(If these jokes are getting old, imagine spending five years on
the receiving end of them, except the speakers aren't
joking.)"
I must be slow on the uptake tonight, but I don't understand your
point.
joe:
Your crown of thorns is askew. I doubt very seriously you've taken
any more absurd criticism than I have.
Jason L is correct; this does not demonstrate that Da Troops
monolithically oppose the war.
What it does is demolish the last 2 remaining talking points the
Congressional Republicans have at their disposal - that the troops
monlithically support the war, and that Congressional action to end
the war is a betrayal of them.
Jason L,
I can vouch for the fact that you have taken some absurd criticism.
And I'll leave it at that.
Peace.
Joe,
I did not know until just now that all those, "Why do XXX hate
America?" jokes were directed your way. It must get old.
Read gooder, wayne. It's not the jokes that were directed at me,
but serious accusations of hating my country and the people who
serve in its military.
Yes, it gets old. Fast.
Joe,
I am obviously not in the same philosophical camp as you, and I
will admit that I sometimes get annoyed with you. I recognize that
as my own problem and not yours though.
For what it is worth, I do not think you hate the US or its
military.
What's your definition of "continuing to volunteer"? (Click
on my name for link.)
Yes, but even you have to admit that "stop loss" isn't forever,
only up to 90 days after the deployment is complete. Alot of people
have gotten out after their enlistments have expired, despite the
best efforts of the BushCheneyBurton War Machine.
Otherwise, we'd have a Soviet-style "100% re-enlistment rate" in
the military.
Plus, the article does quote one of them as wanting to
make a career out of the military. Just not in Iraq.
We may disagree on whether or not the Iraq war was a good idea. But
I doubt anyone here would agree that allowing the troops to decide
when and where they fight is a good idea.
"Joe just needs a hug."
Joe needs to see wayne home safely with family this Christmas.
Captain Holly,
Taking the opinions of military personnel into account is not
"letting them decide when and where they fight."
I've noticed you don't make such accusations against active duty
soldiers, like wayne, who express the opposite opinion, or the
civilians who agree with them.
VM-The basic ethical issue stems from the fact that you are
questioning the mission even as you are engaged in it. But that's
not really an issue when you consider the difference between macro
and micro scale questioning. In other words, even if you think Iraq
is a goat rope, you focus on doing today's mission and getting
home. The big picture has little to do with day-to-day
operations.
Warren: I'm also a veteran (Active duty Marines) and a reservist.
And I can tell you that you're off base. While you sign a lot away
when you enlist, you do not sign all of your rights away. I'm too
lazy to find the cite, but refer to a Supreme Court case in which
an airman wanted to wear a yarmulke, while his chain of command
objected. While the airman lost, the decision worked from the
premise that the airman did have rights which were, in this
particular case, trumped by military necessity. Note also that he
was able to bring the case and have it heard. Also remember that
the UCMJ enshrines certain rights, which are not overidden by the
desires of command. Why? Because military law recognizes that
certain rights (due process is a big one) do not go away at the
moment of enlistment.
Just to clarify. I am not active duty. I am a civilian working for the US Army in Iraq. I was active duty, but only for three years and that was a long time ago. I do plan to be home safe this coming Christmas though.
#6
I think you just proved my point. It's true that the military does
recognize some rights, but only because they choose to. When it
becomes a "military necessity" do deny a soldier "due process",
they don't waste time talking about it.
I don't think we're all that far apart on this. My primary point is
that "freedom of speech", "freedom of press" and other rights you
might find in the Constitution can (and often are) be stripped from
you. You may retain other rights but it's only because the military
finds it practical to grant them to you.
Taking the opinions of military personnel into account is
not "letting them decide when and where they fight."
I didn't say it was. And read the original post again, please; you
know, the part where it says they believe that Iraq is futile and
we should get out now. If that's not the troops telling Congress
what they want to do, I don't know what is.
If you take the petition to its logical conclusion -- that a
certain percentage of the troops think we should get out of Iraq,
therefore we should leave -- then that opens all sorts of
unpleasant possibilities for future wars. Do you think that's a
good idea, joe?
To put it more bluntly, do we want military policy made by
civilians, or by the troops?
I've noticed you don't make such accusations against active
duty soldiers, like wayne, who express the opposite opinion, or the
civilians who agree with them.
WTF? joe, you're really on one today, aren't you? I didn't
accuse anyone of anything, I was commenting on what the
petition signers themselves said. Once again, they wrote:
As a patriotic American proud to serve the nation in
uniform, I respectfully urge my political leaders in Congress to
support the prompt withdrawal of all American military forces and
bases from Iraq . Staying in Iraq will not work and is not worth
the price. It is time for U.S. troops to come home
Now read it again, joe, and answer this question: Are they trying
to get the US out of Iraq, or not? And keep in mind these aren't
the commanders who are paid to make these types of decisions, this
is the rank-and-file saying "we don't want to go to Iraq".
They can express their opinions all they want. They can even vote
for politicians that will support their views. The question I'm
asking is, should we make policy based on what the grunts think
(which is what this whole petition is all about, BTW).
Warren-I don't think we are very far apart. I'm simply saying that there are some rights the military can't take away even if they want to. I think case law and the UCMJ back me up on this. However, it's also certainly true that a soldier's rights are severely circumscribed. In this particular case, I suspect that a court martial is possible, even if it doesn't stick. It's not a clear-cut issue.
It is likely that organizer Jonathan Hutto enlisted specifically
to lodge this sort of protest. He went from working for Amnesty
International and the ACLU to enlisting in the wartime military,
and then quickly turned his attention to his Appeal for
Redress.
This takes a fair amount of guts, and is a shrewd tactic, but is
also an appallingly dishonest way of trying to look like an average
GI who has had a epiphany.
Captain Holly - No, that is NOT what the petition is all about!
The petition is about expressing opinions! This petition is not
policy!
I understand and respect the argument that giving this
significantly more weight than any other person's objection to Iraq
is silly, but I have yet to see a single reasonable argument that
these folks should not be doing this. It invokes the soldiers
rights, as Americans, to urge their political leaders to make the
right decision.
our soldiers have been sooo abused on the Iraq adventure.
I remember back in early 2003, during the run up to invasion, I
couldn't go a block in the burbs without seeing an election
campaign style sign saying:
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS!
LIBERATE IRAQ!
it was surreal then
it's surreal now
Captain Holly,
Wow, did that go over your head! Look, it's very simple:
Expressing your opinion to Congress, telling them what you think,
is not setting policy. It's providing them with an opinion. Whether
Congress ignores them or listens to them, it's still Congress
making the decision. No, I have no problem whatsoever with any
group of Americans expressing themselves to Congress.
"The question I'm asking is, should we make policy based on what
the grunts think?"
The answer I'm providing is, sure, just as much as any other group
of Americans who've expressed an opinion. The political leadership
should consider what they have to say. If they conclude that this
group of soldiers is wrong, then so be it. If they conclude that
they are right, then so be it. The fact that a group of people
signing a petition are in the military doesn't mean that following
that petition is a threat to civilian leadership. If 1000
Cambodians signed a petition to raise the speed limit in I-80, and
Congress passed the bill, would that mean we were letting
Cambodians runs the government? Of course not.
BTW, the logical conclusion is not "a certain percentage of the
troops think we should get out of Iraq, therefore we should leave."
The logical conclusion is, this war is a bad idea, therefore we
should leave.
Why is 60 minutes all of the sudden listening to these red
state morons?
The same reason 60 Minutes listens to everyone else who agrees with
their opinions.
The silver lining to the dark cloud that is the war in
Iraq--hell, the whole War on Terror--is to see how many peaceful
anarchists are now in the "pipeline."
My service in Vietnam is what made me the lovable peaceful
anarchist I am today.
Not that any of us anarchists ever expect to "make policy."
It's worth noting that while private correspondence with Congressional representatives is not prohibited while in uniform, publicly signing an open petition questioning or disagreeing with the government is. It is by making their names public as dissenters that they are behaving unethically, not by believing what they do, or by asking their representatives for help.
Okay, here's my question for all you barracks lawyers in this
thread. What section, (chapter and verse please), of the UCMJ says
signing a petition is illegal? No points are given out to those who
quote secondary sources. Here's a helpful starting
point .
Failing that, I'll take a regulation promulgated by any of the
services that says servicemembers of that particular branch cannot
sign petitions.
Relying on your wildly uninformed memories from XX years ago about
what some other idiot told you is not going to cut it. So all you
people who were apparently misinformed by your chain of command
(probably in a misguided attempt to make you STFU) back in the day
should quit spewing arrant nonsense. The idea that just because you
served in the military means you're an expert on the UCMJ is
laughable.
Having said all that, it ain't in the UCMJ. The only possibilities
are service specific regulation. So until somebody whips out the
appropriate reg for one of the services would y'all please shut up
about it being illegal?
I had to deal with this sh*t regularly from assheads who were
convinced the UCMJ or Army regulation said something other than
what it really did. Most of them ended up far worse because of
it.
And calm down, T. You're not the only one whose heard silly
interpretations of the UCMJ. I was one accused of sedition because
I had a bumper sticker that read, "I love my country but fear my
government." The declined to file charges after I told them that I
would insist on a full court martial.
So yes, there are folks out there who misunderstand the UCMJ. But
Article 134, as you should well know, means whatever the hell the
convening authority wants it to mean.
And, while we're on the subject:
From the Manual for Courts-Martial (US Government, 2002),
Chapter 4, Paragraph 72:
Explanation. Certain disloyal statements by military personnel may
not constitute an offense under 18 U.S.C. ยงยง 2385, 2387, and 2388,
but may, under the circumstances, be punishable under this article.
Examples include praising the enemy, attacking the war aims of the
United States, or denouncing our form of government with the intent
to promote disloyalty or disaffection among members of the armed
services. A declaration of personal belief can amount to a disloyal
statement if it disavows allegiance owed to the United States by
the declarant. The disloyalty involved for this offense must be to
the United States as a political entity and not merely to a
department or other agency that is a part of its
administration.
Yes, but even you have to admit that "stop loss" isn't
forever, only up to 90 days after the deployment is
complete.
Sure, but if you're slated to leave the military in May of '07, and
your unit gets deployed to Iraq in April '07, you're stuck with a
hell of a lot more than 90 extra days. Keep in mind also that the
military can (and does) extend the tours of units, thus delaying
the start of that 90-day clock - the 172nd Stryker Brigade leaps to
mind.
The law allowing stop-loss (linked under my name again) doesn't
have any limit on the amount of time a soldier can be kept, as long
as the war in question isn't over. Since the War on Terror will
never end...
Number 6,
Hmm. My longer post appears to have been eaten, so I'll trim this
down considerably. Check the MCM directly above your referenced
paragraph. One of the required elements of the charge is
"intent
to promote disloyalty or disaffection".
Even under the most generous reading of the element, I don't think
petitioning the Congress quite qualifies. Intent is generally a
bitch to prove in any court, so unless some troop is caught on
record saying his intent was to create dissension in the ranks, I
think he'd walk.
Anyhow, I agree that they can be brought up on charges under the
UCMJ. That's akin to indictment in the civilian world. I don't
think they'd get convicted, since the conduct in question is not
prima facie illegal.
There does seem to be a risk here. Troops can be put under a
great deal of pressure by those above them in the chain of command.
If they can take political action like this of their own accord,
then they can be coerced and bullied into signing whatever
political statement their superiors want them to. Look at all of
the
Since these troops are clearly adopting a political stance at odds
with the administration and the politicized elements of chain of
command, it's highly unlikely that that's happening here, but it
could still be the camel's nose under the tent.
On the other hand, we can't turn into Turkey and shut our troops
out of politics altogher. I don't know what the answer is.
"...it's my opinion that nobody has the right to question that
soldier's patriotism, nobody."
This person doth protest too much, methinks.
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