Watada
Beats the Government
by Marjorie Cohn, February 7, 2007
When the Army judge declared a mistrial
over defense objection in 1st Lt. Ehren Watada's court
martial, he probably didn't realize jeopardy attached. That
means that under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Constitution,
the government cannot retry Lt. Watada on the same charges
of missing movement and conduct unbecoming an officer.
Lt. Watada is the first commissioned officer to publicly
refuse orders to deploy to Iraq. He claimed those
orders were unlawful because the war is illegal and he
would be an accomplice to war crimes if he followed them.
The judge refused to allow me and others
to testify as expert defense witnesses on the illegality
of the Iraq war and the war crimes the Bush administration
is committing there.
The Uniform Code of Military Justice sets forth the duty
of military personnel to obey only lawful commands. Article
92 says: "A general order or regulation is lawful unless
it is contrary to the Constitution, the law of the United
States …"
Lt. Watada said at a June 6, 2006 press conference in Tacoma,
Washington, "The war in Iraq is in fact illegal. It is
my obligation and my duty to refuse any orders to participate
in this war." He stated, "An order to take part in an illegal
war is unlawful in itself. So my obligation is not to follow
the order to go to Iraq."
Citing "deception and manipulation … and willful
misconduct by the highest levels of my chain of command," Lt.
Watada declared there is "no greater betrayal to the American
people" than the Iraq war.
The "turning point" for Lt. Watada came when he "saw
the pain and suffering of so many soldiers and their families,
and innocent Iraqis." He said, "I best serve my soldiers
by speaking out against unlawful orders of the highest
levels of my chain of command, and making sure our leaders
are held accountable." Lt. Watada felt he "had the obligation
to step up and do whatever it takes," even if that means
facing court martial and imprisonment.
Lt. Watada did face court martial, and four years in prison,
until the judge declared a mistrial.
This is what I would have said had I been allowed to testify
at Lt. Watada's court martial:
The United States is committing a crime against the peace,
war crimes, and crimes against humanity in Iraq.
A war of aggression, prosecuted in violation of international
treaties, is a crime against the peace. The war in Iraq
violates the Charter of the United Nations, which prohibits
the use of force. There are only two exceptions to that
prohibition: self-defense and approval by the Security
Council. A pre-emptive or preventive war is not allowed
under the Charter.
Bush's war in Iraq was not undertaken in self-defense.
Iraq had not attacked the US or any other country for 12
years. And Saddam Hussein's military capability had been
effectively neutered by the Gulf War, 12 years of punishing
sanctions, and nearly daily bombing by the US and UK over
the "no-fly-zones."
Bush tried mightily to get the Security Council to sanction
his war on Iraq. But the Council refused. Bush then cobbled
together prior Council resolutions, none of which, individually
or collectively, authorized the use of force in Iraq. Although
Bush claimed to be enforcing Security Council resolutions,
the Charter empowers only the Council to enforce its resolutions.
Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions constitute war
crimes, for which individuals can be punished under the
US War Crimes Act. Willful killing, torture and inhuman
treatment are grave breaches.
The torture and inhuman treatment of prisoners in US custody
at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere in Iraq are grave breaches
of Geneva, and therefore, war crimes. The execution of
unarmed civilians in Haditha and other Iraqi cities are
also war crimes.
Commanders in the chain of command, all the way up to the
commander in chief, can be prosecuted for war crimes if
they knew or should have known their subordinates were
committing war crimes and failed to stop or prevent them. The
torture policies and rules of engagement were set at the
top. It is George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld
and Colin Powell who should be on trial - for the commission
of war crimes.
Inhumane acts against a civilian population are crimes
against humanity and violate the Fourth Geneva Convention.
The targeting of civilians and failure to protect civilians
and civilian objects are crimes against humanity.
The dropping of 2,000-pound bombs in residential areas
of Baghdad during "Shock and Awe" were crimes against humanity.
The indiscriminate US attack on Fallujah, which was collective
punishment in retaliation for the killing of four Blackwater
mercenaries, was a crime against humanity. The destruction
of hospitals in Fallujah by the US military, its refusal
to let doctors treat patients, and shooting into ambulances
were crimes against humanity. Declaring Fallujah a "weapons-free" zone,
with orders to shoot anything that moved, was a crime against
humanity.
Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson was the chief prosecutor
at the Nuremberg Tribunal. He wrote: "No political or economic
situation can justify the crime of aggression. If certain
acts in violation of treaties are crimes they are crimes
whether the United States does them or whether Germany
does them, and we are not prepared to lay down a rule of
criminal conduct against others which we would not be willing
to have invoked against us."
Lt. Ehren Watada was correct when he said the war is illegal
and he would be party to war crimes if he deployed to Iraq. The
orders to deploy were unlawful and Lt. Watada had a duty
to disobey them. Although he faces the possibility
of a dishonorable discharge, the judge's grant of a mistrial
precludes retrial on the same criminal charges.
Marjorie Cohn, MWC News Magazine senior editor,
is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law,
president of the National Lawyers Guild, and the
US representative to the executive committee of the
American Association of Jurists. Her new book, Cowboy
Republic: Six Ways the Bush Gang Has Defied the Law,
will be published this spring by PoliPointPress.
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