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Iraq war resister convicted in Germany
Increasing numbers of US soldiers refuse to serve in Iraq
By Stefan Steinberg
9 March 2007
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On Tuesday, March 6, US soldier Agustin Aguayo was convicted
on charges of desertion by an American military court in Würzburg,
Germany. He was sentenced to eight months detention in a
military prison. He was also given a dishonourable discharge from
the army and stripped of pay and benefits. The US army prosecutor
had originally pleaded that Aguayo be locked away for two years.
Aguayo, a 35-year-old American citizen from Los Angeles, was
born in Guadalajara, Mexico. In 2002, he signed up for military
duty and was one of many Mexican Americans who were deployed to
Iraq. In the course of his basic training, however, Aguayo realised
he was opposed to war, and in February 2004, applied for a discharge
from the army on the basis of being a conscientious objector.
His appeal was ignored, and in the same year, he was sent to
serve a one-year tour of duty as a combat medic to Tikrit in Iraq.
Since 2004, Aguayo has continually sought permission for a discharge
from the army on the basis of his opposition to the war.
When his unit was ordered to return to Iraq for a second tour
of duty in early September last year, Aguayo decided he could
not obey the order with a clear conscience. After nearly three
years of struggling with the US Army to be recognised as a conscientious
objector, Agustin Aguayo went absent without leave on September
1, 2006, to avoid his units deployment to Iraq. One day
later, on September 2, 2006, he turned himself over to the military
authorities.
Instead of facing a court-martial, however, his commanding
officers insisted that he would be transferred to Iraqeven
if army personnel had to forcefully put him on the planei.e.,
with shackles or handcuffs. Aguayo then fled his military base
in Germany, and with the help of German anti-war activists, returned
to California. He remained in hiding until September 26, 2006,
and then, following a press conference in Los Angeles, once again
turned himself over to military authorities.
Aguayo explains the reasons for his refusal to deploy to Iraq
on his
website:
I also oppose war because I have seen first-hand the
direct result of deployments to war zones. As a result of Operation
Iraqi Freedom II, I have seen many veterans whose lives have been
shattered. Many men came back with missing parts, and countless
physical and emotional scars, such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
I have personally seen my comrades come back to commit suicide,
drink themselves to death, and develop a strong addiction to drugs.
It is obvious to me that these mens lives were destroyed
by war. What participation in war does to our own soldiers is
another reason why war is fundamentally immoral and wrong.
In my last deployment, I witnessed how soldiers dehumanise
the Iraqi people with words and actions. I saw countless innocent
lives which were shortened due to the war. I still struggle with
the senselessness of it allIraqi civilians losing their
lives because they drove too close to a convoy or a check point,
soldiers being shot by mistake by their own buddies, misunderstandings
[due to the language barrier] leading to death.
At the same September press conference, Augustins wife
Helga explained why she fully backed her husband. She said of
the war: It changed him, and not in a good way. Ive
seen my husband die, little by little. The greatest lesson he
could teach [our daughters] is to stand up for what you believe
in, and if you dont, you hurt the people around you.
A growing number of desertions
Aguayo has become the latest in a growing list of US soldiers
who are
facing trials and courts-martial for refusing to serve in Iraq.
Recently, Lt. Ehren Watada, 29, became the first US officer to
be tried for refusing to obey a command to return to Iraq.
In his defence, Watada argued he was merely following his constitutional
rights to oppose fighting in a war he regarded as illegal. The
Japanese American described the US invasion and occupation of
Iraq as an illegal and unjust war...for profit and imperialistic
domination. Watadas attorney, Eric Seitz, had sought
to defend his client on the basis of the Nuremburg Principlesi.e.,
that soldiers have the duty to disobey unlawful orders in the
case of an illegal and unjust war. Following a mistrial, Watada
faces a new proceeding in mid-March.
Also last month, US Army Specialist, Mark Wilkerson, 23, received
a seven-month jail sentence for desertion.
The move by American military authorities to press ahead with
a series of courts-martial against army personnel takes place
against a background of increasing discontent and plummeting morale
amongst US troops. Drawn primarily from working class families,
many recruits join as the only alternative to poorly paid work
or unemployment in the US itself.
Having signed up on the basis of limited deployments in a war
that they were told was being won and would soon end, many of
these soldiers are now being called upon to take on extra tours
of duty or denied the opportunity of returning home. Increasing
numbers of soldiers are questioning the legality and justification
for the war and their presence.
Michael Sharp, director of the Military Counseling Network,
a non-profit organisation in Germany that helps American soldiers
seeking to leave the army, says that there has been a dramatic
increase in applications for assistance. Since Bushs
[surge] speech, weve been swamped with new calls,
he says. Last month, the group took on 30 new clients, three times
its previous average.
Predictably, the US Department of Defence says it does not
keep figures on the number of American soldiers members currently
going absent without leave from units stationed overseas. However,
a strong indication of their increasing frequency, according to
Spiegel Online, is the number who receive Chapter
11 discharges at the main processing centres in the US (Fort
Sill, Oklahoma, and Fort Knox, Kentucky). These discharges are
for those going missing overseas and who turn themselves in, or
those arrested back home.
Between October 2002 and September 2005, the two centres
recorded an annual average of 1,546 such discharges. Last year,
the number grew to 1,988, or more than five per day. No figures
are yet available for 2007.
According to the War Resisters Support Campaign in Canada,
as many as 200 to 300 US soldiers may have headed north across
the border to escape deployment. Growing opposition to the war
from inside the ranks of the army is also expressed in a petition
to the US Congress that has been supported by nearly 1,600 active
soldiers and which reads in part: Staying in Iraq will not
work and is not worth the price.
Agustin Aguayo is now the first US soldier to be tried and
convicted in connection with the Iraq war by a military court
outside of US territory. The fact that the German government has
been content to merely look on and make no comment on the proceedings
against Aguayo taking place on German soil is an indictment of
the role of the current grand coalition (Social Democratic Party,
Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union) and its
predecessor, the SPD-Green Party coalition.
A leading German court has already declared the Iraq war to
be in violation of international law. In 2005, the German federal
administrative court in Leipzig passed judgement in the case of
the German officer Major Florian Pfaff, who refused to obey an
order following the invasion of Iraq by the US-led coalition of
forces. Pfaff argued that he was not prepared to follow orders
because it would involve his active support in a war he regarded
to be illegal. As a result, he was demoted from major to captain,
and the German army filed a criminal complaint against him for
insubordination.
In its 2005 judgment, the Leipzig court referred to the United
Nations charter and concluded that, in fact, the US war in Iraq
was illegal. It found in favor of the German officer and reversed
his demotion. In addition to judging the Iraq war illegal, the
court also concluded that the charges against the German officer
contravened Article 4, Paragraph 1, of the German Constitution,
which guarantees the right to freedom of conscience.
Keen not to offend its transatlantic ally, both the former
SPD-Green Party coalition and the current grand coalition government
have ignored this judgement and continued to support Washingtons
war behind the scenes. Only this week, it was announced that the
coalition government of Chancellor Angela Merkel had delayed the
release this year of Turkish-German Murat Kurnaz from Guantánamo
Bay by an additional two months. Kurnaz had already spent four
and a half years in detention, although shortly after his detention,
the German authorities were aware of his innocence and the US
authorities had given clearance for his release.
The recent trial and conviction of US soldier Augustin Aguayo
in Würzburg is yet another case that demonstrates the complicity
of the German government in US war crimes and underscores the
necessity for the complete removal of all American military bases
and facilities from German territory.
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