Original at 
About Face
by MARC COOPER
[from the January 8, 2007 issue]
Mark Dearden chooses his words with extreme precision. And not just with
the deliberateness of a 36-year-old with a BA from Brigham Young, an MA
in public health from Tulane and an MD from George Washington
University. Dearden is also an active-duty lieutenant commander in the
Navy who joined in 1997 and is still considering the possibility of a
lifetime military career. "So this was a very difficult decision for me
to come to," he says in a quiet, thoughtful voice. "I don't take this
decision lightly."
Nor should he. Just a few weeks ago Dearden took the dramatic step of
signing a petition to Congress--what's being called by its organizers an
Appeal for Redress--opposing the war in Iraq and calling for the
withdrawal of US troops. When the Appeal is delivered to Capitol Hill in
mid-January, all the names of its almost 1,000 uniformed endorsers will
be seen by members of Congress, if they care to look. But with his
Nation interview, Dearden is now going public. And while the military
cannot take reprisals against those who have supported the Appeal, many
of the signers agree that there are an infinite number of ways they can
be punished, including internal evaluations, denial of promotions and
harsh assignments or postings. "I'm expressing a right of people in the
military to contact their elected representatives, and I have done
nothing illegal or disrespectful," says Dearden, now an
anesthesiology resident at the Naval Medical Center in San Diego. After
two tours in Iraq attached to a Marine battalion, including
participation in the initial 2003 invasion, Dearden says that
signing the Appeal gave him "closure" on what he describes as
very tough deployments. "It gave me peace," he says.
Dearden has indeed joined the most significant movement of organized and
dissident GIs seen in America since 1969, when 1,366 active-duty service
members signed a full-page ad in the New York Times calling for an end
to the Vietnam War. The Appeal for Redress, surfacing only in late
October, has taken anti-Iraq War sentiment that's been simmering within
the ranks and surfaced it as a mainstream plea backed by the enormous
moral authority of active-duty personnel. It's an undeniable
barometer of rising military dissent and provides a strong argument
that the best way to support the troops is to recognize their demand to
be withdrawn from Iraq. While clearly inspired by the GI movement of the
Vietnam era, it takes a much different tack. Instead of attacking or
confronting the military, as the resistance movement of the 1960s often
did, the Appeal works within the military's legal framework.
The Appeal was posted as a simple three-sentence statement on a website
managed by a Navy seaman:
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.
The Appeal comes as the natural culmination of previous flickerings of
military discontent with official Iraq policy. The bogging down of the
war, along with the Bush Administration's use of a "backdoor draft"--the
extension of tours of duty and an unprecedented call-up of active and
inactive reserves--has stoked the discontent. Two years ago, some two
dozen Army reservists refused to carry out a supply mission in Iraq,
complaining that their vehicles were unsafe. Twenty Florida National
Guard members petitioned their commanders to bring the troops home. In
Kansas, Army reserve family members collected 8,000 signatures on a
website protesting extended tours. While figures are difficult to
confirm, counselors at the GI Rights Hotline estimate that as many as
1,000 or more troops and reservists go AWOL every month, not wanting to
serve in Iraq. About 200 to 300 have fled to Canada, according to
military rights lawyers. And in a half-dozen or so high-profile cases,
uniformed personnel are facing court-martial and jail for refusing
deployment to Iraq.
Therein resides the power of the Appeal for Redress. Its signers don't
marginalize themselves as lawbreakers, resisters or deserters.
Potential signers have been assured they are sending a communication to
Congress protected under the Military Whistleblower Protection Act and
will not be subject to reprisal. The result has been electrifying. In
the two months since it surfaced, almost three times as many people have
signed it as are members of the two-year-old Iraq Veterans Against the
War. Almost three-quarters of the signers are active duty (the rest are
reserves), and include several dozen officers, of whom a handful are
colonels.
Interviews with more than two dozen signers, both in Iraq and on
domestic US military bases from Fort Stewart in the east to Hawaii's
Hickam Air Force Base, reveal a movement that includes low-level grunts
and high-ranking officers, as well as a rich diversity of racial,
economic and educational backgrounds. The signers offered a variety of
motivations--ideological, practical, strategic and moral--but all
agreed the war was no longer worth fighting and that the troops should
be brought home. As the debate on Iraq sharpens in the wake of the
Baker-Hamilton report and as a new Democratic Congress is seated, the
collective voice of active-duty opponents of the war is likely to add
considerable clout to the antiwar movement.
This Martin Luther King holiday weekend, members of the Appeal will
appear on Capitol Hill to formally present the petition to Congress
to press their case. For an all-volunteer force, says Eugene Fidell,
president of the National Institute of Military Justice, "it's
simply unprecedented."
The genius of the Appeal resides not only in its simplicity but also in
its nonconfrontational tone. "This is not about resistance. This is
about working inside the democratic process," says lawyer J.E. McNeil,
who helps run the GI Rights Hotline and who has helped advise the Appeal
organizers. "This is about being proud of being a soldier, an airman or
a marine, about being proud of your duty without giving up your rights
as a citizen."
This was certainly the attraction for Dearden and for many other signers
interviewed. "I love the military," Dearden says. "I was thrilled to
find this legal outlet for what I felt. If more active duty knew there
were legal and respectful ways to make their opinion known, they would eagerly join."
The inspiration to create the Appeal came to 29-year-old Seaman Jonathan
Hutto earlier this year while he was floating off Iraq on the aircraft
carrier Theodore Roosevelt. Born into an Atlanta family of civil rights
activists, a former student body president at Howard University, and
someone who had worked with Amnesty International and the ACLU, Hutto
was not the most typical of Navy enlistees when he joined up in 2003.
But with $48,000 in student loans to pay off and with a young child to
support, he thought the Navy would be a "good transition."
As the war in Iraq worsened, Hutto felt he could no longer maintain his
silence. He had an impeccable service record, having been named "sailor
of the quarter" among his junior enlisted shipmates. But he had to do
something to come out against a war he thought immoral and unnecessary.
That's when one of his former professors sent him a thirty-year
anniversary copy of Soldiers in Revolt by David Cortright. Now a Notre
Dame professor and one of America's leading peace activists,
Cortright wrote his book as a chronicle of the 1960s GI movement he
helped to found. "The title alone just hit me," says Hutto, as we talk
in a Washington-area coffeehouse, on a day he's off duty from his
Norfolk base. "This was all new to me. And I got to thinking, What's to
prevent active-duty folks from doing the same sort of thing right now?"
Hutto immediately contacted Cortright and started talking over the idea
of the Appeal with a few close friends. Last June Hutto organized a
Friday night screening of the antiwar documentary Sir! No Sir! at the
local YMCA just off the Norfolk naval base. Filmmaker David Zeiger's
documentary reconstructs the GI movement of the Vietnam era. Cortright
came as guest speaker and found a receptive crowd of about seventy-five.
One of those who attended the talk was 22-year-old Liam Madden, who had
joined the Marines in 2002. "I was visiting a friend in Norfolk and
thought we were going to a bar," he remembers. Instead, his buddy took
him to the YMCA event and they caught the last half of Cortright's
speech. Madden had already completed an Iraq tour in Anbar province with
an all-reserve unit and had come back disillusioned with the war. "If
anything, it convinced me that no tangible results could be achieved in
Iraq," he says. "No one was safer. No one was happier because we were
there."
Hutto, Madden, Cortright and a few others moved ahead with the idea of
the Appeal. On October 29 Hutto published an op-ed piece
announcing it in the Navy Times. Three days earlier the
Appeal had appeared on the Web.
"Amazing," is how Cortright describes the chain of events that grew
out of that YMCA meeting. "That encounter alone was one of the
most fascinating moments of my last thirty-five years," he says over
lunch in Washington. "Even I wasn't prepared for the depth and
intensity of feeling against this war by so many active-duty members.
I'm stunned. It's been moving so fast we can barely think it through."
Cortright sees an enhanced if not central political role for the rising
active-duty movement. "They have been there and seen it, seen the
disaster," he says. "It's much more real for them than for others in the
peace movement. MoveOn and other groups got focused on the election
while vets, families and active-duty folks are still suffering the
burdens of the war." He adds, "Some of our liberal friends will again
soon start focusing on the '08 election. So these active-duty folks over
the next two years could become a key force in pushing for withdrawal."
The most compelling voices among the active dissenters who have signed
the Appeal are those of troops still on the front lines in Iraq. Among
them is a thirtysomething Army major, a Distinguished Military Graduate
from a prestigious Southern university. Now on his second tour, "Major
Frank," as I will call him, was first deployed to Baghdad just weeks
after the 2003 invasion. "I believed wholeheartedly in the mission to
oust Saddam Hussein," he says, "and would have been proud to die
liberating Iraq from the evil dictator, because at the same time I felt
I was protecting my country and my family [from] weapons of mass
destruction."
Now, Frank says, he sees no point in the war, and no end. His Iraqi unit
is 97 percent Shiite and is sympathetic to the extremist militia of
fundamentalist cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. "We are merely being used as
military pawns in a political struggle for Iraq," he says. "So, yes! I
am opposed to our brave men and women dying every day for nothing
because we cannot control this civil war."
Frank says he can pinpoint the precise moment when he turned against the
war: last June 23. He was on patrol with his Iraqi unit when they came
upon an illegal checkpoint set up by Sadr's Mahdi militia. The militants
were using ambulances taken from the Ministry of Health to
block the roads, thereby preventing American troops from maneuvering. He
was flabbergasted when the Iraqi Army troops refused not only to take
down the checkpoint but also returned to the militia a number of
automatic weapons that had been seized from them by the army.
This sort of depressing reality is what prompted Frank to sign the
Appeal. "I proudly joined the Appeal for Redress out of the sense of
hopelessness that I had inside for what we are actually doing here," he
says. He's angry with both the Bush Administration and the top brass in
Iraq. "They sit behind their desks in the Green Zone and filter reports
to their bosses. No one wants to admit that we are failing." Frank says
he's quite open about his views, and finds overwhelming support for them
among his fellow soldiers. "Yes, yes, yes," he says, "My entire team
feels the same way I do. And the other battalion [trainers] that I have
come across feel that way, including my commanders.... In
fact, I have not had one person in the last five months disagree with
me. The typical response is, 'I know what you mean.'"
That sentiment was, indeed, echoed by an Army officer and signer of the
Appeal who wanted to be identified only by his real last name.
Lieutenant Smith, a 24-year-old Kansan deployed with an infantry unit in
Baghdad, joined up six years ago not only because he saw the military as
a route to pay for college but also because he felt it was an obligation
to "pay back" America for the opportunities it affords. His doubts about
the war, strong from the beginning, only hardened. "I became very angry
after two friends from college were killed, both in their 20s," Smith
says. "I started to wonder what they had died for. Both were killed by
roadside bombs near the area where my unit operates now. And when I
found out about them before I deployed, my outlook changed. I started to
lose any sense of satisfaction with what I was doing for the Army
because what I was doing was in some roundabout way supporting what had
just killed two friends."
Smith says it was his stateside father-in-law who directed him to the
online Appeal. Smith had heard about another Army lieutenant, Ehren
Watada, who has been resisting deployment to Iraq on the grounds that
the war is unconstitutional and who now faces court-martial [see sidebar
page 14]. But that was not a route he wished to travel. "I have an
antiwar history from college," Smith says. "But I hate what Lieutenant
Ehren Watada did and the way he did it. I wanted a way to say I thought
the war was wrong without looking like a coward." At the same time,
however, Smith says that he wants his voice to be heard. "I hope the
Appeal will cement in the mind of Congress growing unrest about the
war," he says. "Congress got a mandate from Americans that the war was
not popular, and now they can get an official mandate from troops
serving abroad that we feel the same way but are limited in the way we
can express it."
Some within the ranks have been more outspoken about that discontent,
mostly as a product of accelerated politicization and radicalization
while in uniform. Take the case of 28-year-old Californian Ronn Cantu,
an Army sergeant stationed at Fort Hood, Texas. Both his grandfathers
served in the Army, his father was drafted into Vietnam and Cantu
himself enlisted in 1998 as a self-described "Bush conservative."
After serving out his contract, Cantu re-enlisted in March 2003. "I was
in junior college studying journalism but couldn't re-adjust to civilian
life. And as a journalism major I was constantly watching and reading
the news, and I got totally sold that Iraq was a threat, that it had
WMD, that it was going to erase America off the map."
Next thing he knew, Cantu was attached to an infantry unit in Iraq. In
charge of ammo, and after making more than 300 harrowing convoys, he had
seen enough. He voted against Bush in 2004 and now strongly opposes the
war. While still on active duty he has not only signed the Appeal but
has joined Iraq Veterans Against the War. On its website he's a
contributor of pointed essays bucking Bush Administration policy. He's
also started his own website--soldiervoices.net--where he's running his
own freewheeling online GI forum. A firm supporter of troop withdrawal,
Cantu has nevertheless enlisted for three more years and is currently
preparing for a second tour of Iraq. "I'm going back with a job in
military intelligence. It's a job that I think can help end the war," he
says. "Working in human intelligence, I will be able to talk to Iraqis
and that way find and hear the truth."
A few of the antiwar dissidents lean more toward resistance than
re-enlistment. Marc Train, 19, is an Army grunt stationed at Fort
Stewart, Georgia, and a signer of the Appeal. A native of Salina,
Kansas, Train joined the Army right out of high school, convinced that
he had no other real career prospects.
Some of his comrades in the Third Infantry Division are scheduled to
deploy to Iraq for a staggering third tour of duty. For Train, it will
be his first--if he doesn't refuse. He says he wasn't very political
before enlisting, but now he's been radicalized. He realizes now he
joined the Army only to get a job and that he's grown suspicious of the
Administration's motives for war in Iraq. "I think it's all about oil,"
he says. Train has made clear to his superiors that he's not happy about
deploying to Iraq and might refuse to step over the line when the
mobilization order becomes effective in January. He's already lost the
security clearance for the intelligence job he was trained for, and he's
now enmeshed in a series of official investigations. "I want separation
from the Army because I don't want to be just a cog in the machine. I've
registered as a member of the Socialist Party USA."
Asked whether he will refuse duty if not given the discharge he seeks,
Train answers: "That's a very strong question for me, a very strong
consideration. Right now, I'm about 70 percent leaning toward not
going."
Some expert observers of military affairs, like Robert Hodierne, senior
managing editor of Army Times Publishing, argue that the numbers of
active-duty soldiers and sailors who have signed on to the Appeal and
expressed some sort of public dissent aren't impressive. "Dissent of
that nature represents but a small percentage of the people in uniform,"
Hodierne says, pointing out that 1.4 million serve in the armed forces.
"What we are sensing is a great deal of disenchantment with the way the
war has been fought, not whether it is or is not an unjust war."
But Kelly Dougherty, co-chair of the board of Iraq Veterans Against the
War, who served with the Colorado Army National Guard in Iraq in
2003-04, says that critics like Hodierne are underestimating the level
of dissent in the ranks. "Critics will say 800 or 1,000 signers isn't
significant. I think it is," she says from her Philadelphia
headquarters. "For everyone who has heard about the Appeal there are so
many dozens of others who agree with it but have not heard about it or
agree with it but are intimidated by the military." The military,
meanwhile, has so far taken a hands-off approach to the Appeal. None of
the active-duty personnel interviewed for this piece reported any
reprisals. "The only official word I've gotten came from my public
affairs officer," said Appeal founder Hutto. "He told me the rules:
Don't do anything while in uniform or while on duty. And that was that."
Commander Chris Sims, spokesman for the Atlantic Fleet Naval Air Force,
says that Hutto violates no military regulations if he's off-duty when
speaking out. And Pentagon spokesman Maj. Stewart Upton, when asked
about the Appeal, said: "Members of the armed forces are free to
communicate with Congress in a lawful manner that doesn't violate the
Uniform Code of Military Justice."
Lawyer J.E. McNeil at the GI Rights Hotline is convinced that the benign
response from the higher command reflects the level of doubt that
currently permeates the military. "There are enough people in the
military who agree with these guys is why they are not getting much
flak," she says. "I think there's a lot of sympathy among officers. We
talk to them all the time. And while a lot of them don't want to stand
up publicly, we know they admire those who have signed the Appeal.
Admire them and support them."
One barometer of discontent is the sheer number of calls and inquiries
that keep pouring in to the GI Rights Hotline, holding steady for the
past year at about 3,000 a month. From the National Lawyers Guild
Military Law Task Force comes a similar report. "There's no let-up,
we're swamped all the time," says San Francisco-based co-chair Marti
Hiken. "And whenever a reserve unit is activated, our phones begin
ringing off the hook. We hear from people who didn't even know they were
still in the reserves and can't understand what's happening to them."
That so-called backdoor draft, the mobilizing not only of National Guard
and Army reserves but even of the Individual Ready Reserve (the IRR was
called up for the first time since the Gulf War) has been a major
catalyst for the military antiwar movement. It helped fuel the
founding of Military Families Speak Out (MFSO) four years ago and
has since helped it grow to include more than 3,000 families.
Two years before the media focused the spotlight on Cindy Sheehan, the
Gold Star mother who camped out for weeks at a time near Crawford,
Texas, trying to confront George W. Bush on the reasons for her son
Casey's death in Iraq, Nancy Lessin and her husband, Charley
Richardson--with a son in the Marines--began publicly campaigning
against the war. One of the organizations sponsoring the Appeal, MFSO
brought a few dozen military families to the Washington Mall on
Veterans Day weekend to lobby for a meeting with Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld. By the time their plane touched the ground,
however, Rumsfeld had been dumped and instead they met with a
representative of incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Lessin, who works as a safety and health coordinator for the
Massachusetts AFL-CIO, describes that meeting as cordial but
unsatisfying. She expresses fear that even with an incoming Democratic
Congress, or maybe as a result of it, there will be too much room for
distraction. Whether it moves toward impeachment or the convening of
protracted hearings or endless debate over the Baker-Hamilton report,
Lessin argues it's all beside the central point. "What we are looking
for from Congress is action, not words," says Lessin. "We're worried the
Democrats will focus the headlines on hearings, on how bad the
management of the war has been--but we know that already. To the
politicians who say we need two or three months to consider this or that
plan, we ask: What do you say looking in the eye of one of those whose
child is killed in those two or three months?"
Soon, some of those Congress members will have the opportunity to look
in the eyes of not only the parents but also the troops. Appeal
organizers, working on the Martin Luther King Day appearance on the
Hill, are hoping to help galvanize Democratic support for a more
explicit pro-withdrawal position. So far, only veteran antiwar
Congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio has explicitly
endorsed the Appeal. Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont has made some
complimentary remarks. How much support the Appeal can muster
on the Hill in the coming weeks could be a watershed test for Democrats.
Phil Waste, a 67-year-old retired elevator repairman turned activist
with MFSO, with three sons and two grandchildren who have served or are
currently deployed in Iraq, thinks the window of opportunity for
Democrats to take up the call of organized active-duty dissidents is
narrow. If the new Congressional majority dawdles over the war, the
Democrats will become targets of the antiwar protesters. "I think those
who say they oppose this war have to act now, not months from now," he
says. "And I am most definitely talking about the Democrats. This past
election was a referendum on the war, and that mandate better be heeded.
If not, two years from now they will be out on their butts. And I along
with everyone else I know will work my ass off to see that happen."
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