Navy Judge
Finds War Protest Reasonable

By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Report
Friday 13 May 2005
"I think that the government has successfully proved
that any service member has reasonable cause to believe
that the wars in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq were
illegal."
-- Lt. Cmdr. Robert Klant, presiding
at Pablo Paredes' court-martial
In a stunning blow to the Bush administration, a Navy
judge gave Petty Officer 3rd Class Pablo Paredes no
jail time for refusing orders to board the amphibious
assault ship Bonhomme Richard before it left San Diego
with 3,000 sailors and Marines bound for the Persian
Gulf on December 6th. Lt. Cmdr. Robert Klant found Pablo
guilty of missing his ship's movement by design, but
dismissed the charge of unauthorized absence. Although
Pablo faced one year in the brig, the judge sentenced
him to two months' restriction and three months of hard
labor, and reduced his rank to seaman recruit.
"This is a huge victory," said Jeremy Warren,
Pablo's lawyer. "A sailor can show up on a Navy
base, refuse in good conscience to board a ship bound
for Iraq, and receive no time in jail," Warren
added. Although Pablo is delighted he will not to go
jail, he still regrets that he was convicted of a crime.
He told the judge at sentencing: "I am guilty of
believing this war is illegal. I am guilty of believing
war in all forms is immoral and useless, and I am guilty
of believing that as a service member I have a duty
to refuse to participate in this War because it is illegal."
Pablo maintained that transporting Marines to fight
in an illegal war, and possibly to commit war crimes,
would make him complicit in those crimes. He told the
judge, "I believe as a member of the armed forces,
beyond having a duty to my chain of command and my President,
I have a higher duty to my conscience and to the supreme
law of the land. Both of these higher duties dictate
that I must not participate in any way, hands-on or
indirect, in the current aggression that has been unleashed
on Iraq."
Pablo said he formed his views about the illegality
of the war by reading truthout.org, listening to Democracy
Now!, and reading articles by Noam Chomsky, Chalmers
Johnson, Naomi Klein, Stephen Zunes, and Marjorie Cohn,
as well as Kofi Annan's statements that the war is illegal
under the UN Charter, and material on the Nuremberg
and Tokyo tribunals.
I testified during the sentencing hearing at Pablo's
court-martial as a defense expert on the legality of
the war in Iraq, and the commission of war crimes by
US forces. My testimony corroborated the reasonableness
of Pablo's beliefs. I told the judge that the war violates
the United Nations Charter, which forbids the use of
force, unless carried out in self-defense or with the
approval of the Security Council, neither of which obtained
before Bush invaded Iraq. I also said that torture and
inhuman treatment, which have been documented in Iraqi
prisons, constitute grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions,
and are considered war crimes under the US War Crimes
Statute. The United States has ratified both the UN
Charter and the Geneva Conventions, making them part
of the supreme law of the land under the Supremacy Clause
of the Constitution.
I noted that the Uniform Code of Military Justice requires
that all military personnel obey lawful orders. Article
92 of the UCMJ says, "A general order or regulation
is lawful unless it is contrary to the Constitution,
the laws of the United States...." Both the Nuremberg
Principles and the Army Field Manual create a duty to
disobey unlawful orders. Article 509 of Field Manual
27-10, codifying another Nuremberg Principle, specifies
that "following superior orders" is not a
defense to the commission of war crimes, unless the
accused "did not know and could not reasonably
have been expected to know that the act ordered was
unlawful."
I concluded that the Iraq war is illegal. US troops
who participate in the war are put in a position to
commit war crimes. By boarding that ship and delivering
Marines to Iraq - to fight in an illegal war, and possibly
to commit war crimes - Pablo would have been complicit
in those crimes. Therefore, orders to board that ship
were illegal, and Pablo had a duty to disobey them.
On cross-examination, Navy prosecutor Lt. Jonathan Freeman
elicited testimony from me that the US wars in Yugoslavia
and Afghanistan also violated the UN Charter, as neither
was conducted in self-defense or with the blessing of
the Security Council. Upon the conclusion of my testimony,
the judge said, "I think that the government has
successfully proved that any service member has reasonable
cause to believe that the wars in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan
and Iraq were illegal."
The Navy prosecutors asked the judge to sentence Pablo
to nine months in the brig, forfeiture of pay and benefits,
and a bad conduct discharge. Lt. Brandon Hale argued
that Pablo's conduct was "egregious," that
Pablo could have "slinked away with his privately-held
beliefs quietly." The public nature of Pablo's
protest made it more serious, according to the chief
prosecuting officer.
But Pablo's lawyer urged the judge not to punish Pablo
more harshly for exercising his right of free speech.
Pablo refused to board the ship not, as many others,
for selfish reasons, but rather as an act of conscience,
Warren said.
"Pablo's victory is an incredible boon to the anti-war
movement," according to Warren. Since December
6th, Pablo has had a strong support network. Camilo
Mejia, a former Army infantryman who spent nine months
in the brig at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, for refusing to
return to Iraq after a military leave, was present throughout
Pablo's court-martial. Tim Goodrich, co-founder of Iraq
Veterans against the War, also attended the court-martial.
"We have all been to Iraq, and we support anyone
who stands in nonviolent opposition," he said.
Fernando Suárez del Solar and Cindy Sheehan,
both of whom lost sons in Iraq, came to defend Pablo.
The night before his sentencing, many spoke at a program
in support of Pablo. Mejia thanked Pablo for bringing
back the humanity and doubts about the war into people's
hearts. Sheehan, whose son, K.C., died two weeks after
he arrived in Iraq, said, "I was told my son was
killed in the war on terror. He was killed by George
Bush's war of terror on the world."
Aidan Delgado, who received conscientious objector status
after spending nine months in Iraq, worked in the battalion
headquarters at the Abu Ghraib prison. Confirming the
Red Cross's conclusion that 70 to 90 percent of the
prisoners were there by mistake, Delgado said that most
were suspected only of petty theft, public drunkenness,
forging documents and impersonating officials. "At
Abu Ghraib, we shot prisoners for protesting their conditions;
four were killed," Delgado maintained. He has photographs
of troops "scooping their brains out."
Pablo's application for conscientious objector status
is pending. He has one year of Navy service left. If
his C.O. application is granted, he could be released.
Or he could receive an administrative discharge. Worst
case scenario, he could be sent back to Iraq. But it
is unlikely the Navy will choose to go through this
again.
Marjorie Cohn, a contributing
editor to t r u t h o u t, is a professor at Thomas
Jefferson School of Law, executive vice president of
the National Lawyers Guild, and the US representative
to the executive committee of the American Association
of Jurists.
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