Truthout Original

When Refusing to Kill Has a Higher Sentence Than Murder

by: Ann Wright, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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An American soldier pauses before heading out to patrol near Tikrit, Iraq. According to Ann Wright, soldiers may be more severely punished for refusing to kill than for killing the wrong person. (Photo: AFP / Getty Images)

    From the beginning of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the United States military has come under intense criticism and scrutiny for the deaths of civilians. This week, the secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff made trips to Afghanistan and Pakistan to "acknowledge" the deaths of innocent civilians in attacks in those countries.

    In the five and one-half years of the US occupation of Iraq, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians have been killed by US military personnel at checkpoints, during convoy movements and during operations to find the "enemy." In the half-decade of US military presence in Iraq, a very small number of US military personnel and an even smaller number of CIA and contractors have been charged with manslaughter or murder in these deaths. The deaths of most civilians are counted in the "costs of war." A few dozen military have been court-martialed on allegations of mistreatment, manslaughter and murder of Iraqi civilians. With a very few exceptions, most who were court-martialed have been acquitted. Those who were convicted have generally served light sentences.

    This week we see again that punishment is less for murdering four Iraqis than for refusing to participate in a war that many citizens, and many in the military, see as a crime against the peace - a war crime.

    On September 18, 2008, the US Army sentenced Specialist Belmor Ramos to seven months in prison, demotion to private and a dishonorable discharge for standing guard from a turret in a Humvee while three others in his unit, the First Infantry Division, bound, blindfolded, shot in the heads and dumped the bodies of four unidentified Iraqi men into a Baghdad canal in 2007 in retaliation for deaths in Ramos's unit. According to Associated Press reports, during the court-martial, Ramos admitted his guilt: "I wanted them dead. I had no legal justification or excuse to do this."

    Ramos had been charged with conspiracy to commit murder, for which he could have received a life sentence. The military judge in Ramos's court-martial in Vilsek, Germany, would have sentenced him to 40 years in prison had the military prosecutor not agreed to a plea bargain for seven months to testify in the upcoming court-martials of the three non-commissioned officers - Sgt. John E. Hatley, Sgt. 1st Class Joseph P. Mayo and Sgt. Michael P. Leahy Jr. - who were charged on September 16, 2008, with premeditated murder, conspiracy to commit premeditated murder and obstruction of justice.

    Longer Sentences for Resisting War Than for Murdering Civilians

    Just one month ago, US Army Private Robin Long was sentenced to fifteen months in prison, reduced to private and given a dishonorable discharge for having been absent without leave from the Army rather than serving in a war he believed was unlawful. He had been deported from Canada where he had been speaking on his concerns about the legality of the war for three years and was handed over by Canadian immigration officials to the US military for prosecution. One month earlier, US Army Private First Class James Burmeister voluntarily returned from Canada and was sentenced in July 2008 to six months in prison for refusing to return to Iraq after two previous tours in which he was hit by three IEDs. In May 2008, Private First Class Robert Weiss was court-martialed in Vilseck, Germany, and sentenced to 7 months in jail for refusing to go to Iraq. Also in May 2008, Private First Class Ryan Jackson was also court-martialed and sentenced to 100 days in jail for refusing to go to Iraq.

    In 2007, the court-martial of US Army First Lieutenant Ehren Watada, the first commissioned officer who refused to deploy to Iraq, ended in a mistrial. He is still on active duty with the Army. Also in 2007, US Army Sergeant Mark Wilkerson refused to return to Iraq and was sentenced to seven months in jail. The Army denied the conscientious objection application of US Army medic Specialist Agustin Aguayo; he refused to return to Iraq and was sentenced to eight months in jail. Also in 2007, Specialist Melanie McPherson, a US Army Minnesota Reservist, refused to go to Iraq in a job she was not trained for; she was court-martialed and sentenced to three months in jail.

    In 2006, US Army Specialist Dale Bertell refused to return to Iraq and was sentenced to four months in jail. US Army Texas National Guard Specialist Katherine Jashniski refused to deploy to Afghanistan; she was sentenced to four months in jail. US Army Sergeant Ricky Clousing of the 82nd Airborne Division refused to return to Iraq and was sentenced to three months in jail. US Marine Corporal Ivan Brobeck voluntarily returned from 18 months in Canada and was court-martialed for refusing to return to Iraq; he was sentenced to eight months in jail.

    In 2005, US Army Sergeant Kevin Benderman refused to return to Iraq and was sentenced to 15 months in jail; he served 13 months. US Army Specialist Blake LeMoine refused to return to Iraq and served seven months in jail. When the conscientious objection application of US Army Private Neil Quentin Lucas was denied, he refused to go to Iraq and served 13 months in jail.

    In 2004, US Army Sergeant Camilo Mejia refused to return to Iraq and was sentenced to 12 months in jail. The highest-ranking non-commissioned officer to refuse orders to Iraq, US Army Sergeant First Class Abdullah Webster, was sentenced to 14 months in jail. He was within two years of retirement when he refused to deploy to Iraq. US Navy Petty Officer Third Class Pablo Paredes refused to deploy on a ship carrying Marines to a war he considered illegal. He was sentenced to three months confinement. The US Marines denied the conscientious objection application of Corporal Joel Klimkewixz and he was sentenced to seven months in jail.

    In 2003, the US Marines denied the conscientious objection application of Marine Reservist Stephen Funk and sentenced him to six months in jail. All of the war resisters who have been court-martialed for refusing to go to Iraq or Afghanistan have been given either dishonorable or bad conduct discharges.

    Thousands of other military service members who privately and silently oppose the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have been given administrative discharges upon their voluntary return to the military after having been absent without leave.

    Light Sentences for the Murders of Iraqis

    Some of the more prominent cases where US military personnel have been court-martialed, but not necessarily convicted, for the murders of Iraqi civilians include:

    On August 29, 2008, a civilian jury in Riverside, California, acquitted former US Marine Sergeant Jose Nazario Jr. on charges of voluntary manslaughter in the deaths of four unarmed Iraqi detainees during the siege of Fallujah, Iraq, in 2004.

    In June, 2008, a U.S. military judge dismissed charges against Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey Chessani, who had been accused of failing to investigate the November 2005 massacre of 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians in the town of Haditha. Of the eight Marines originally charged in the Haditha massacre, only one still faces prosecution. Criminal charges have been dismissed against six of the Marines and a seventh Marine was acquitted.

    In 2007, seven Camp Pendleton Marines and a Navy corpsman were charged with murder and related offenses in the April 2006 kidnapping and killing of a 57-year-old retired Iraqi policeman in the village of Hamdania northwest of Baghdad. Only one of the men, squad leader Sergeant Lawrence Hutchins III, remains in jail, convicted of murder and sentenced by a Camp Pendleton military jury to 15 years. The other six either served out the terms they agreed to in plea deals or had their sentences commuted by Lieutenant General James Mattis, the Commanding General of Camp Pendleton. Mattis ordered the men below Hutchins's rank released after a military jury in July 2007 found Corporal Trent Thomas guilty for his role in the murders but limited his sentence to time already served. In releasing the others, General Mattis determined that Thomas's sentence created an unfair disparity for his fellow Marines who had been convicted with higher sentences.

    In December 2007, US Marine Reservist Lance Corporal Delano Holmes was convicted of negligent homicide for the stabbing death of Iraqi Army Private Munther Jasem Muhammed Hassin, a man he shared guard duty with at Camp Fallujah, Iraq, on December 31, 2006. Holmes killed Hassin, stabbing him 17 times, slashing him another 26 times and nearly slicing his nose from his face. A military jury sentenced Holmes to time served, the second time in five months that a Camp Pendleton Marine military court jury allowed a defendant convicted in a homicide case to be sentenced to only time served. Holmes was reduced in rank from lance corporal to private and given a bad conduct discharge.

    In August 2008, Article 32 hearings were held in Vilsek, Germany, to determine whether to proceed with criminal charges against Staff Sergeant Jess Cunningham and Sergeant Charles Quigley for the death of an Iraqi. The hearing officer has not yet decided whether the two will be court-martialed.

    In only one murder case in Iraq have convicted US military personnel received substantial sentences. In August 2007, a military jury convicted US Army Private First Class Jesse Speilman of rape and four counts of felony murder for the rape and murder of Abeer Qassim al-Janabi, a 14-year-old Iraqi girl, and the murders of her parents and younger sister on March 12, 2006, in Mahmoudiya, a village about 20 miles south of Baghdad. Speilman was sentenced to 110 years in prison, but will be eligible for parole in ten years. During their court-martial, Specialist James P. Barker and Sergeant Paul Cortez testified they took turns raping Abeer while Private Steven Green shot and killed her mother, father and younger sister. They also testified that Green shot Abeer Qassin in the head after raping her. They then set her body on fire to destroy evidence. Cruz was sentenced to 100 years in prison under a plea agreement and will be eligible for parole in 10 years. Barker pleaded guilty at his court-martial and was sentenced to 90 years in a military prison, with the possibility of parole. Private Bryan Howard was sentenced to 27 months in prison under a plea agreement. Private Steven D. Green was discharged from the Army for anti-social behavior before the murders had been discovered. However, he was arrested and charged with rape and murder in the Western District Court of Kentucky. He will be tried in that court on April 29, 2009. His attorney has filed documents for an insanity defense.

    Higher Punishment for Killing Fellow Servicemen Than Iraqis

    Punishment for murder of other U.S. service members is dramatically higher than for murder of Iraqi and Afghan civilians.

    In April 2003, US Army Sergeant Hasan Akbar, a member of the 101st Airborne Division, allegedly threw grenades into a tent at Camp Pennsylvania in Kuwait that killed two officers and wounded 14. Akbar was sentenced to death in April 2005.

    In June 2005, US Army 42nd Infantry Division Staff Sergeant Alberto Martinez allegedly killed two superior officers with an anti-personnel mine and grenades inside one of Saddam Hussein's palaces, near Tikrit, Iraq. Martinez's court-martial is underway at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. If convicted, he could face the death penalty.

    Earlier this week, on September 14, 2008, two US Army soldiers, assigned to the 3rd Infantry Division, were shot and killed, reportedly by another soldier at their base, near the town of Iskandariyah, about 30 miles south of Baghdad. The soldier who reportedly killed the two others is confined and will be brought before a military magistrate this week for pretrial procedural determinations.

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Ann Wright is a retired US Army Reserves colonel with 29 years of military service. She also was a US diplomat who served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. She was on the small team that reopened the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, in December 2001. She resigned from the US diplomatic corps in March 2003 in opposition to the Bush administration's decision to invade and occupy Iraq. She is the co-author of "Dissent: Voices of Conscience," profiles of government insiders who have spoken and acted on their concerns of their governments' policies.

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It would be great to get the

It would be great to get the thrust of your message. John's Hopkins University has claimed over 1 million Iraqis are dead and in my opinion for exactly no reason. We could have gotten rid of Saddam in a variety of different ways and denied support for 3 different coup attempts leading into the invasion.

It would be great to get

It would be great to get more context around the data mentioned in the piece. For example, X number of people have been denied 'conscientious objector' status - out of how large a pool, 1 in 100, 1 in 500,000, 1 in 1,000,000? It is very argumentative to assert that the Iraq debacle is a war crime - that term carries much weight and historical context - this piece would be that much more powerful without the proselytizing. There are few (in or out of the military) that think war is good - but a Kantian response of pure pacifism works well in academia or other safe, confined environments, it doesn't work so well in international affairs with competing and conflicting national and international agendas. Please solve the issues of international conflict without having to resort to the use of force. You'd be the hero.

Hey you. Excellent response.

Hey you. Excellent response.

In response to Tree Frog's

In response to Tree Frog's post: the author does not investigate why the deaths/killings of military personnel are regarded differently from Iraqi civilians because she is operating on the basic principle that all of these lives should be held equal. Anyone possessing an ounce of human decency should be able to discern this. Furthermore, the piece is primarily informational, not opinionated, so you should digest the material and check your own moral compass for the "reasoning" behind these heinous acts and equally heinous legal responses. Lastly, the author's source is likely the most methodical and comprehensive analysis of civilian deaths in Iraq, which was conducted by The Lancet, a very well-reputed medical journal without a political agenda (NOT the widely discredited, lie-through-your-teeth, "we don't do body counts" Pentagon).

The thirst for GLORY seems

The thirst for GLORY seems to be the villain The ruiner of men and economies.....it sells well but its intoxication and the passion it imbues lead to reckless action, murder & rape.

"In the five and one-half

"In the five and one-half years of the US occupation of Iraq, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians have been killed by US military personnel at checkpoints, during convoy movements and during operations to find the 'enemy.'" Miss Wright, what's your source for stating that the hundreds of thousands line? That figure would seem to encompass sectarian violence and the considerable, but hazy, amount of undocumented deaths. You raise some valid points, but honestly, why not take it a step further and ask people "Why is this happening like this?" Why does the U.S. military value military people more than Iraqis? There's no examination of the reasoning behind the difference in sentencing in this article. I'm given a few facts, a subsection heading and an apparent assumption that I'm going to be righteously angry over something that's not actually being said.

Rights Groups File Motion to

Rights Groups File Motion to Compel Department of Justice to Release Documents on U.S. Secret Detention, Rendition, and Torture Program http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?lang=e&id=ENGUSA20080722002

What our corporations,

What our corporations, lobbyists and politicians apparently do not realize is that is that these men are not under their command unless that man is willing to walk with them through the battles, be honest to them and honor their great personal sacrifice. George W. Bush and Richard Cheney ran and hid during 9/11; while the real heroes under the attack were the fire-fighters and rescue workers who showed the entire world what being an American meant to us. Those men led that day and the world stood beside them in solidarity. Where is there memorial? Where did their bodies get interred while men rescued gold from those monstrous towers.? I read with great sadness this article and thought not of punishment but of reward. Sgt. Rafael Peralta, a United States Marine Seargent, who threw his own body over a live grenade to save his comrades and does not receive the Medal of Honor. Another young man, whom I had the Honor of attending the University of Arizona with, Patrick Daniel Tillman, gave up fame and fortune as a professional football player for the Arizona Cardinals to become a United States Army Ranger with his brother, Kevin. The Army sent a young woman to break the news to his wife and family. They were told he was killed in the line of duty and was awarded a Silver Star for gallantry charging the enemy to defend his fellow soldiers. They later learned what the Army and his fellow soldiers had all known, he had been killed by "friendly fire." What upset Pat's mother and brother so much was that even as the army was telling them the lie to cover it up, the story did not have the ring of authenticity to it which led them to pursue the real truth that it took them 5 long months to obtain. It their family's desire to bring some real Honor to Pat Tillman, they began the Pat Tillman Foundation. These men served in 9/11. PLEASE SEE THESE LINKS: What Really Happened to Pat Tillman? http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/05/01/60minutes/main4061656.shtml Pat Tillman Foundation http://www.pattillmanfoundation.org/ Marine Hero Praised By Bush Wont get Medal of Honor http://www.suntimes.com/news/nation/1171890,medal091808.article I urge you all to demand President Bush show the proper acknowledgment to Sgt. Rafael Peralta's family. And I greatly honor these brave men of conscience above who objected to their service in a war of deception, extraordinary rendition, torture and backdoor drafting!

The whole business of war is

The whole business of war is a barbaric,de-humanising activity encouraged only by those who do not have to actually participate in it and risk their lives. All talks of defending the country/democracy/our civilized values are hog wash to indoctrinate and brain-wash young men and women and use them as canon fodder. Humanity is capable of rising above such debased behavior and achieve Peace and goodwill for all if selfish, power hungry politicians were seeking immense wealth,power and acontinuation of strife in some part of the globe to profit from the military/industrial nexus and sale of arms

The whole Us Military and

The whole Us Military and the American Congress and of Course the Bush/Cheney cabal are the largest terrorist organization on the planet... serial mass murderers . We have descended to the bottom of the pit in moral and spiritual depravity, we have become the most hated nation on earth!! My heart is broken and I am deeply ashamed to be an American...we need to bring this administration and all the war criminals to justice if we are to have any hope for restoration of democracy, freedom and justice which have fled far from the shores of this once great nation!

Murder is murder. Give them

Murder is murder. Give them the death penalty or let the murderers in U.S. prisons out. One or the other. But first, try the people responsible for them being there for their crimes. That includes every member of Congress who went along with the program.

Having long been a protester

Having long been a protester for the Vietnam War, having studied the crimes of the US Calvary against the Indian tribes already living here, I was also upset to learn about the execution of Private Eddie Slovak in WWII for simply NOT killing anyone!? How twisted is this logic? Yet politicians of today are not required to serve after their bad decisions are made. Every citizen of the World becomes 'collateral damage?' Yet now we have a criminal president who went AWOL in the National Guard during the war and a GOP candidate who had previously bombed over 100 sailors misfiring rockets onto the USS Forrester, becoming a POW (I wore a bracelet for MIAs back then) and whom his fellow prisoners witnessed "McCain sang like a bird" to the VietCong? THIS is all that party has to offer? That and a cartoon of a female VP, not like Farrerra? Angela Davis would have made a much better choice! A VOTE for Barach O'Boma (I like to think of him as being a fellow black Irish) is a vote for America, not the Colonies of Corporations like GeoW and McCrazy have set up for us! Which are all financed by our lenders of China and Saudi Arabia. Just keep printing up that money, George...we all know it's not worth a handful of loose change.

I am glad you are writing

I am glad you are writing about this, the fact that many of these soldiers, probably had criminal records before they joined the military. At the same time the way a person must survive, in War where you don't Know who the enemy is. this environment turns you into a killing Machine, that has one purpose, to stay Alive. This why we really need to be sure that war is the only way.

I just read an article on

I just read an article on Huffington Post by Allison Kilkenny which states that those AWOL people are receiving stricter sentences than murderers! What is happening to the morals and ethics of our leaders?

Ann Wright is a true

Ann Wright is a true american hero, for standing up and voicing her opinion,against this administration who so arrogantly led us into the quagmire that is now Iraq.Unlike many generals, who are now writing their books and giving their lectures,she made a stand against this war ,when she was still a government employee.She opted for honor,and conscience,while others opted for paychecks and new BMW's.Bravo Ann!

This is a worsening problem,

This is a worsening problem, for those who have killed on command but with satisfaction, as well as those platoon leaders who, so to say ,set the tone. The Army is thoroughly broken, recruiters based in impoverished and gang invested communities go after drug dealers and addicts, and recruit gang members on the buddy system. the passing score for the Army from the military entrance exam is now in the low average range,and these are recruits whose capabilities and judgement others depend on. The Army stationed in Hawaii has a huge meth problem, as well as alcoholism. The screening for PTSD is maybe three minutes, and there is a line of soldiers waiting, which serves to 'hush' up talking about the horrors witnessed or participated in. In the meantime, it's fallen off newsprint, and even blogs, that are more concerned with whether the surge worked and the fact that our own casualties have gone down. These soldiers will come back to civilian life with no m ore job skills they left with, but with far more experience killing and raping. Who is in Hawaii, asking questions of our soldiers? Why aren't they writing about it?

It breaks my heart to say

It breaks my heart to say this: this sounds more like what happened during the invasion of Berlin by the Russians on 1945. I remember it only too well. What happened to this, my country, the beacon of light. The people of the Berlin airlift, the "Schokoladen Bomber"?

Thank you for this article.

Thank you for this article. It is remarkable but unsurprising that these events do not receive much attention. With its much weakened international and economic position and a potential collapse of the entire order of things looming on the horizon, it is entirely possible that war crimes trials may eventually prosecute the perpetrators. It is imperative that this take place. If these war criminals are allowed to get away with their egregious offenses against peace and humanity under the surreal cloak of the corporate media, we will decend into an age of darkness the likes of which history has never before witnessed.

Not a particularly palatable

Not a particularly palatable topic, but well written, and a sad indictment upon the good people that may still be living in the US for delusional hope, that all can be justified. The whole darn business seems to be one friggin' mess and pack of contradictions from topic to topic, scenario to scenario ... what kind of nightmarish society is being created in the name of freedom and so-called democracy? More like "demonocracy" ... it would seem!