The Case of Sergeant Benderman
By Camilo Mejia
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Fort Stewart, Georgia - When
Sgt. Kevin Benderman went to Iraq on March of 2003, he saw
the destruction of a nation, he saw a little girl with a burnt
arm asking the soldiers for help they were ordered not to
provide, he saw people drinking water from mud puddles, and
he saw that Iraqis were regular people, just like himself,
and that our military should not bring destruction to that
country. What Sgt. Benderman saw in Iraq changed him in a
way so profound, that after ten impeccable years in the Army,
he decided to apply for conscientious objection. But Sgt.
Benderman also spoke truth to the people about what is going
on in Iraq, and he spoke about how the war is not destroying
Iraq alone, but our own country as well. He spoke of how American
soldiers are dehumanized by the war.
But today's general Court-Martial did not deal with Sgt.
Benderman's war experience, nor with the dehumanization of
America's children in Iraq; it mostly dealt with a forty-five
minute meeting Sgt. Benderman had with his Sgt. Major just
an hour before his unit was to deploy to the Middle East,
where they were to provide logistic support to American infantry
units, and they were to train Iraqi police officers and military
personnel.
The defense successfully showed how during that meeting
Sgt. Benderman's chain of command, not knowing how to deal
with his Conscientious Objector packet, released him to work
on documents and to have dinner with his wife, just an hour
prior to his unit's deployment, and how they made no effort
to get him to the airfield, or to get him onboard a later
flight. The defense showed how Sgt. Benderman, far from being
absent without authority or having missed movement, continued
to perform a sergeant's duties while and after his unit deployed
to Iraq.
The defense also showed the ambiguity in Sgt. Benderman's
chain of command. For instance, one of the government's arguments
in seeking both a conviction and a harsh punishment was that
Sgt. Benderman's logistic duties were crucial for the unit
in Iraq, yet the defense proved that his chain of command
had planned to fire him from his job and to assign him to
latrine duty. Another argument was the hazardous component
of the unit's mission in Iraq, yet the 1st Sgt. insisted that
Sgt. Benderman would be perfectly safe and in a position were
he would see no combat at all. The defense successfully showed
the humiliation Sgt. Benderman went through because of his
Conscientious Objector beliefs, from the harassment of his
wife by the Sgt. Major (who admitted to commenting on her
physical figure) to his 1st Sgt. calling him a coward.
Why then, one wonders, was Sgt. Benderman convicted of Missing
Movement by Design, and sentenced to 15 months of confinement,
reduction to the lowest rank, and a dishonorable discharge?
The defense strategy was sound and solid. The government's
prejudice and Sgt. Benderman's chain of command's unmeasured
persecution and incompetence were all made evident. Why the
conviction and the harsh sentence then?
Perhaps because a legal strategy is no match for a political
strategy. The Army had in its hands a blond, blue-eyed, six
foot two, all American soldier, born and raised in the south,
someone white America can look up to and identify with, someone
who went to Iraq and came back with his humanity enhanced,
most definitely a threat to a government on a mission to militarize
its society and spread its empire. The government threw the
book at Sgt. Benderman to ensure others like him don't follow
behind. Therefore, his case should not have been boiled down
to a forty-five minute meeting, because in doing so, the defense
disconnected itself from the humanity of the action and from
its message of resistance, and that is something America cannot
afford at this time.
Sgt. Benderman is not an African American Muslim, he is
not a Cuban Buddhist, his parents are not Latin Americans.
Unlike other recent conscientious objectors, Binderman looks
like he belongs at a George W. Bush rally. The humanity he
displays in his refusal to fight a senseless war cannot be
blamed on a foreign ethnicity, or on the color of his skin;
it cannot be blamed on his religion either. And he cannot
be accused of being a Yankee liberal. Sgt. Benderman's courageous
stance gives the conscientious objector response to the war
in Iraq a universal touch that breaks down barriers and goes
beyond borders, bringing down the issue of war resistance
to the humanity in each and every one of us, regardless of
who we are or where we come from.
Sgt. Kevin Benderman chose to put his weapon down; he chose
not to kill but to love his fellow human beings; he chose
to put his career and physical freedom in jeopardy; he chose
to speak truth in the face of power and adversity; he was
harassed, humiliated, accused, tried, convicted, and sentenced
to jail. He kissed his wife goodbye, and he kept his head
up high as he walked to his fifteen months of confinement.
I have never seen a freer man.
Camilo E. Mejia is a former prisoner of conscience, Iraq
war veteran, war resister, and member of Iraq Veterans Against
the War. Camilo's conscientious objector application is still
pending. He served nine months in confinement for refusing
to return to Iraq after a two-week leave.
To find out more information
about Kevin Benderman's Court-martial, or to contribute to
his defense, please visit: www.bendermandefense.org

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