A
HISTORY OF MILITARY RESISTANCE
and
peace movement support for resisters
by Zoltan Grossman
The public refusals at Fort Lewis of Army 1st Lt. Ehren Watada, Sgt.
Kevin Benderman and Spc. Suzanne Swift to
deploy to Iraq are the most recent chapter of a long and noble history of
resistance within the U.S. military. To understand this history, and where it
might lead, it helps to see how resistance varies strongly according to rank,
class and race, and how difficult it is for resisters to express their patriotic
viewpoints alone, without support from the larger peace movement.
Dissent from soldiers during foreign interventions has been reported throughout
U.S. history, such as in Mexico in the 1840s and the Philippines in the 1900s.
Even during World War II, African American rebellions against internal racism
shook the military, and eventually forced unit desegregation. After the war
ended in 1945, soldiers and sailors demanded a postwar demobilization and
tickets home. Starting in Manila, they formed a huge and successful movement
that may have prevented a U.S. intervention against the Chinese Revolution later
in the decade, though did not prevent the Korean War of the 1950s.
During the Vietnam War, the military ranks carried out mass resistance on bases
and ships in Southeast Asia, the Pacific, U.S. and Europe. Military resistance
was instrumental in ending the war by making the ranks politically unreliable.
This history is well documented in Soldiers
in Revolt by David Cortright. Servicemen
and women were heavily influenced by the antiwar and African American liberation
movements back home, as well as by personal contact with Vietnamese civilians.
But this resistance took years to develop after the initial deployments in 1960,
not catching fire until after the 1968 Tet Offensive showed that the war was
unwinnable.
Personnel in all service branches carried out explicitly political
actions—signing antiwar petitions, wearing buttons and patches, disobeying
illegal orders, avoiding battles, passing information to the peace movement, and
carrying out strikes, sit-ins, and rebellions, and well as sabotage of
equipment. The breakdown in
discipline was evidenced by high levels of internal organizing, racial conflict,
drug use, desertion, and being absent without leave (AWOL).
The sources of the rebellions were as much tied to domestic racism as to
overseas militarism.
At one time in 1972, three aircraft carriers on duty in the Western Pacific (off
Vietnam) were simultaneously put out of commission—one by an African American
uprising on board, and two by internal sabotage.
The U.S. mining of North Vietnamese harbors later that year was
frustrated by the defusing of many ship mines by Naval Magazine personnel at
Subic Bay Naval Base in the Philippines. Some
GIs refused to be deployed to Vietnam, including six at Fort Lewis in 1970. The
“Fort Lewis Six” were beaten in the stockade, and sentenced to 1-2 years,
creating a wave of local support for GI dissenters. (The support went both ways,
when Native American soldiers organized to support and protect treaty rights
activists on rivers next to the base.)
While some GIs publicly resisted as individuals, or applied for Conscientious
Objector (CO) status, most carried out their resistance in a more collective,
quiet or surreptitious manner, slowing
down the war machine by delaying and undermining their own mission (as anyone
who has worked at a crappy job knows how to do). Some GIs sent out on patrol in
Vietnam, for example, would simply have a little party, and later return to base
with lurid accounts of encounters with the rebels.
U.S. military resistance was not simply sparked by the period of the Vietnam War
and the military draft. Cortright provides evidence that disobedience was in
fact greatest not among draftees, but among enlistees, who had more of a
working-class background, or enlisted out of patriotism and expected more out of
the service. Selective Service was not an equal opportunity institution, since
white and middle-class youth had social advantages to avoid the draft, just as
they have had in the recruitment-based “poverty draft” since Vietnam.
Radicalism within the ranks led the Reagan-Bush Administration in the 1980s to
turn increasingly toward air war strategies, proxy armies, and more
capital-intensive, high-tech weapons systems which only smaller skilled units
could operate. The Navy restricted sailors’ access
to parts of the ship where it might be “threatened from
within…especially during times of great international tension.”
Nevertheless, the unwillingness of the ranks to fight in another Vietnam
contributed to the success of the antiwar movement in preventing a full-scale
U.S. invasion of Nicaragua or El Salvador.
During the 1980s, anti-intervention and anti-nuclear activists who distributed
peace literature to military personnel noticed widespread sympathy in the lower
ranks. I helped produce the About Face
newspaper for GIs, and worked with veterans to educate activists in Europe and
the Philippines on reaching GIs. This was possible because the military allows
personnel one copy of literature. Department of Defense Directive 1325.6 Sec 3.5
still today states that “the mere possession of unauthorized printed material may not be
prohibited….The fact that a publication is critical of government
policies or officials is not, in itself, a ground on which distribution may be
prohibited.”
During 1983 women’s peace actions against the deployment of nuclear missiles
from a New York army depot, women who dialogued with Military Police were told
by an MP officer: “My men are scared and confused. They want to come down and
kill all of you. But they also want to come down and join all of you.” His
statement summed up the contradictory ‘dual consciousness’ within many
soldiers, who may be open to dialogue with activists respectfully encouraging
the positive part of their hearts and minds.
The 1991 Gulf War helped the Pentagon to overcome the ‘Vietnam Syndrome,’ by
presenting a sanitized video-game image of war, focused on a dehumanized Arab
enemy. Military dissent became very difficult to express under these
circumstances (with the exception of brave individual refusers such as Jeff
Paterson, and many others who were jailed after the military stopped approving
CO discharges). As national associate director of
the Committee Against Registration and the Draft, I was involved in a
project to produce a cassette for GIs. The
war too ended quickly for dissent to come out into the open, but the peace
movement’s campaign for “sanctuary” for military resisters briefly made
some headway. After the Gulf War,
the Clinton Administration’s repeated bombings of Iraq, Serbia, and other
countries created a public impression that warfare bore little if any cost for
U.S. military forces.
This historic complacency ended with 9/11, the invasion of Afghanistan, and
occupation of Iraq. Military
enlistees began to realize again that signing up and re-upping had real-life
consequences, and recruitment became more difficult. The Pentagon’s stop-loss
policy forced Iraq War veterans and reservists back to the frontlines, angering
even the most pro-war personnel and families. A major change since the Vietnam
and Gulf wars is that personnel now have access through the Internet to
alternative sources of information and resources. The Internet was an important
factor in Lt. Watada’s self-education, and it can be used by the military
community to dialogue about the war and conditions outside official channels
(since military culture intimidates most internal critics into silence).
Opposition within the military is far higher after three years of the Iraq War
than it was three years into the Vietnam War. More than 8,000 personnel have
deserted since the war began (according to USA
Today), about 400 of whom have gone to Canada. The military has been
reluctant to punish refusers from the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR) beyond
discharging them. The capture of
Saddam and death of Zarqawi have ironically weakened Bush’s case that our
troops need to stay to “protect” Iraqis against their will. With about a
dozen refusals to deploy, and a recent Zogby poll that shows 72 percent of
troops stationed in Iraq support a withdrawal within a year, the military
resistance will only grow. But resisters need public support, particularly from
their local communities.
Some media expressed surprise that Lt. Watada refused deployment so soon after
the Olympia protests against armored vehicle shipments from his Stryker Brigade.
Yet soldiers and antiwar protesters have something very crucial in
common: they both take the war seriously, and take risks because of it. At a
June 2 ceremony marking the Stryker deployment, Fort Lewis Commander Lt. Gen.
James Dubik observed that “Less than 1 percent of the nation is carrying 100
percent of the burden of this war.” As
Lt. Watada agreed five days later, “Soldiers who come back from Iraq say they
get the impression many people don't know a war is going on; they say even
friends and family seem more involved in popular culture and American
Idol. People are not interested in the hundreds of Iraqis and the dozens of
Americans dying each week.”
When soldiers see
hundreds of people in the street protesting the war, they can realize (whether
they agree with the message or not) that at least the protesters are interested
and care that there’s a war on, and are sacrificing some comfort and daily
routine because of the war. In this
way, visible antiwar actions can spread the “burden” to a wider circle, and
help build a bridge to military personnel and their families, but only if the
protesters also open a respectful dialogue with them.
--------------------
Zoltan Grossman is a
member of the faculty in Geography and Native Studies at The Evergreen State
College in Olympia, WA: http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz
A version of this article first appeared in the London journal Race Today.
DIRECTORY
OF WEBSITES
A
Matter of Conscience: GI Resistance during the Vietnam War
http://amatterofconscience.com
Bring
Them Home Now http://www.BringThemHomeNow.org
Center on Conscience and War
http://www.centeronconscience.org
Central Committee
for Conscientious Objectors
http://www.objector.org
Citizen Soldier
http://www.citizen-soldier.org
Courage to Resist
http://www.couragetoresist.org
Department of Defense Directive on dissident activities
http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/html2/d13256x.htm
GI Rights Hotline 1-800-394-9544
http://girights.objector.org
Gold
Star Families Speak Out
http://www.GSFSO.org
Iraq
Veterans Against the War http://www.IVAW.net
Kevin
Benderman Defense Committee
http://www.topia.net/kevinbenderman.html
Kevin Benderman Timeline
http://www.bendermantimeline.com
Know All You Can Know: Student privacy & alternatives to militarism
http://www.knowallyoucanknow.com
Military Families Speak Out
http://www.MFSO.org
Military Families Speak Out (WA chapter)
http://coastalrain.tripod.com/wmfso
Military
Law Task Force (National Lawyers Guild)
http://www.nlg.org/mltf
Mission Rejected: U.S. Soldiers Who Say No to Iraq
http://www.chelseagreen.com/2006/items/missionrejectedpa
National Gulf War Resource Center
http://www.NGWRC.org
Not
in Our Name
http://www.notinourname.net/troops
Not Your Soldier
http://www.notyoursoldier.org
Olympia
Movement for Justice and Peace
http://www.OMJP.org
Operation Truth http://www.OpTruth.org
Poll of troops in Iraq: 72% for withdrawal
http://www.zogby.com/news/ReadNews.dbm?ID=1075
Seattle Draft & Military Counseling Center
http://www.SDMCC.org
“Sir! No Sir!” Film and Library
http://www.sirnosir.com
Soldiers for the Truth http://www.SFTT.org
Thank You, 1st Lieutenant Watada
http://www.ThankYouLT.org
U.S. Heros of the Iraq War
http://www.tomjoad.org/WarHeroes.htm
U.S. Military Interventions Since 1890
http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz/interventions.html
U.S. Military Base Network Expansion
http://www.counterpunch.org/zoltanbases.html
Veterans Call to Conscience
http://www.oz.net/~vvawai/CtC
Veterans for Common Sense http://www.VeteransForCommonSense.org
Veterans for Peace http://www.VeteransForPeace.org
Veterans for Peace #109 (Rachel Corrie Chapter) http://www.vfp109.org
Vietnam
Veterans Against the War http://www.VVAW.org