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This Veterans Day, U.S. Soldiers Say 'Stop the War'

By Benjamin Lewis and Brandon Neely, AlterNet. Posted November 11, 2008.


An open letter from war resisters calls for an end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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On this day, Veteran's Day, we would like to express to the American public why we, veterans of the Global War on Terror, have chosen to refuse orders to reactivate into military service. We are direct witnesses to the horrors of this war, having experienced its atrocities at their source, and we have decided that we can no longer carry out these illegal and immoral policies.

We believe that veterans and active-duty GIs are in a key position to stop illegal and unjust war, and we are inspired by the resistance of troops who stood against the war in Vietnam. One of the preeminent reasons for the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam was increasing dissent among the active-duty troops stationed abroad and at home. By the end of the war, there were entire units refusing to participate in combat, many going as far as outright mutiny.

The United States learned a lesson from the Vietnam War: that it is unlikely, except in the event of self-defense, that regular civilians will execute the life-threatening orders that are given to them by military authority. The solution of policy makers was to create an all-volunteer force that negated the need for a draft. This translates into a mercenary force composed of America's disadvantaged: a sector of the U.S. demographic that is particularly susceptible to military recruitment for lack of other options and finding themselves with deployment orders again and again.

To compensate for huge pitfalls in recruitment since the invasion of Iraq, the military has resorted to recalling former service members. This policy is known as "involuntary activation" and utilizes deactivated service members who still have time on their contracts in the Individual Ready Reserves (IRR) to fill shortcomings in specific job specialties. The abuse and misuse of this policy has escalated under the current administration to such a degree that it can now only be viewed as a "backdoor draft" that targets the same disadvantaged individuals the military sought out for enlistment, namely because they are better at not questioning orders.

However, we have now begun to question these orders. We are veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and members of the IRR who have refused or will refuse any activation orders that would lead to us serving an unjust and imperial U.S. foreign policy. It is a prevailing notion that this refusal is unpatriotic, but we consider our actions the only choice. Not only did the U.S. invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan do great harm to the people of those countries, but it undermined the ostensible goal with which the wars were begun: Instead of stopping terrorism, it has proliferated terrorism, an expectation that was predicted well before the war started.

By refusing activation, we are refusing to participate in wars that serve the purposes of furthering the careers of politicians and high-ranking officers. We openly support other IRR members who follow in these footsteps. The military is a force that rules through fear of retribution for disobeying its will. In reality, more than a third of IRRs simply refuse to report to duty. Most of the rest report out of fear that the military will change their discharge status or prosecute them for desertion, but up to this point, prosecution has been rare. Members of the IRR are not under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), and thus far, the military has had a practice of not prosecuting them with criminal charges unless they report in some form or function to activate. Very few willingly volunteer for activation.

There can be no promise that President-Elect Barack Obama will stop the stressful and unfair techniques of back-to-back deployments, "stop-loss" or the "backdoor draft" that are damaging the psychology of veterans in irreparable ways. Nor that he will stop encouraging global violence by unlawful uses of force. It is in this vein that we turn to organizations like Courage to Resist, Iraq Veterans Against the War and many other large-scale and grassroots organizations to solicit change in a largely unrepresentative democracy, and to allow the voices of the people to ring through the halls of the Capital.

Benjamin Lewis, former Marine Corps mortarman, Iraq veteran, IRR recall resister, peace activist

Brandon Neely, former U.S. Army Military police officer, Iraq veteran, IRR recall refuser

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War's only good for corporations like Halliburton and Blackwater
Posted by: masthead on Nov 11, 2008 3:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There shouldn't be any wars but since humans are such natural war mongering animals children need to be educated early on in grade and high school before recruiters get to them. One book that should be required reading is E.M. Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, for starters.

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» "Humans"??? Posted by: henderson
» RE: "Humans"??? Posted by: sirios
» RE: "Humans"??? Posted by: john mont
» RE: "Humans"??? Posted by: peacefullaim
» Just Stop Now Becuase When President Obama... Posted by: theVRWCwhodatesLiberals
The Universal Soldier
Posted by: 911FalseFlag on Nov 11, 2008 3:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My number came up 13 in the first Draft lottery back in 1969 while I was a senior in college. I was sufficiently politically aware that I knew the Vietnam War was based on lies and there was no way I was going to sacrifice my life for a government that is lying to us. I joined the National Guard which back then allowed you to avoid fighting in an illegal war. My parents would have done whatever was necessary to have their two sons not be used as pawns by the government.
I applaud anyone in the military who stands up and says that he will not serve in Iraq anymore. I understand the economic reasons why many people join the National Guard and/or the army. However, it also seems clear to me that many parents today have forgotten the lessons about Vietnam and that whenever the government says they are fighting a war for democracy and freedom that this is a lie.
The song "Universal Soldier" speaks to the reality that without the individual falling prey to the lies of a government in order to fight that governments illegal wars that wars could not be waged.
I have many articles and videos on the Iraq war and many other topics on my website which is 911 insidejob.net
I hope that many more National Guard and reserve individuals say no to this government.

Joe, webmaster

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» RE: The Universal Soldier Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: The Universal Soldier Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: The Universal Soldier Posted by: adempatriot
Happy Vets Day
Posted by: 2thepoint on Nov 11, 2008 5:21 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Actually parents who have been in wars need to educate their children to the horrors of war. Most people I know that are currently in the military are anything but war mongers. They are responsible and in many cases generous people willing to help anyone.

That said, it takes two to fight. Who's going to educate the other side!

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» RE: Happy Vets Day Posted by: Live Gently
RE: War??
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 11, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let me give it a shot. True, Bush never declared war, which then brings into question why he has all these "war time president" powers. But in terms of each individual human being fighting and/or dying, I'm sure it looks like war to them. It certainly is expensive. Maybe it gives some dignity to people who serve in the military. We can't very well call them fools. It will go down in history as a cruel invasion & occupation of Iraq by the U.S. We have just completed 8 years of history that will trump everything in our past. This is the ultimate tragedy so far. We have to call it something. Anna

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RE: War??
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 11, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let me give it a shot. True, Bush never declared war, which then brings into question why he has all these "war time president" powers. But in terms of each individual human being fighting and/or dying, I'm sure it looks like war to them. It certainly is expensive. Maybe it gives some dignity to people who serve in the military. We can't very well call them fools. It will go down in history as a cruel invasion & occupation of Iraq by the U.S. We have just completed 8 years of history that will trump everything in our past. This is the ultimate tragedy so far. We have to call it something. Anna

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» RE: War?? Posted by: john mont
Contracts
Posted by: taxidriver on Nov 11, 2008 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a tough call. Yes, I want to see the wars (or invasion/occupation) of Iraq and Afghanistan put to an end, and the troops to come home.

But these vets did sign a contract that made them eligible for recall from the IRR. Like it or not, the government is not "drafting" you: you volunteered and signed on the dotted line. You accepted your government's shilling, so sometimes you have to dance to its tune. If you refuse, you accept the consequences of that refusal.

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Unpatriotic??
Posted by: PheonRen on Nov 11, 2008 6:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to vehemently disagree with anyone who thinks your refusal to participate in the evil deeds the Bush regime has perpetrated is "unpatriotic."

It seems to me that "patriotic" has become a word used to coerce people into accepting the immoral as moral. To make catastrophic failures on the part of our government into 'acceptable losses.'

I count your actions as among the HIGHEST and MOST "patriotic" of all. And not only are you being deeply patriotic to the USA, but to all humanity.

You're not as alone as you seem to feel. Many of us will support your choice 110% (and more). I would die for your right to say you will NOT serve this brutal regime (or any other that seeks to destroy you so that they can further themselves on the bodies of the innocent dead).

People who still support the war are lying to themselves, and being lied to. They refuse to see the truth that is there right before everyone's eyes. And they still listen to the media who tells them that only "the bad people" die, and if a civilian does now and then, well... it's not ON PURPOSE, you know.

These are human beings. It's time that people stop allowing the media and our government to dehumanize them. WE ARE KILLING HUMAN BEINGS.

And you are absolutely RIGHT to stand up and say, "No, I WON'T!"

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» RE: Unpatriotic?? Posted by: johnjmccarthy
The only reason this country's stuck in Iraq is OIL.
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 11, 2008 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are alternatives to oil such as better biofuels such as hemp and switchgrass instead of corn and sugar and then there's solar, wind, tidal, and geothermal. In addition, people need to stop laughing at and persecuting others who want to make public transportation better and affordable and actually help them out for a change. We also need to stop belittling and persecuting people who choose to be frugal and taking part in conserving, recycling, and reusing. Furthermore, the American electorate needs to stop and ask "Aren't these oil prices too low or too high to be true and why do we guzzle and cause high volume traffic and major accidents and explosions on the highway everytime these prices are reduced artificially as has been the case for the past 28 years?" I know this sounds a bit too much for some here to digest but think about it all and then ask yourselves what these troops who are being dragged into doing the dirty work would be doing today if the electorate thought differently.

And in case you haven't noticed, ever since the age of oil, foreign policy has been more narrowly defined as wars and "free" trade scams. That could possibly be the curse of black gold.

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Day of shame
Posted by: Pop on Nov 11, 2008 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We must force our government to finally publish the truth of what really happened on September 11, 2001. A real investigation will prove that the AlQaeda and Osama bin Laden had nothing at all to do with the treasonous mass murder of 9-11. The World Trade Center was brought down by demolition and it is being covered up by our own government. The "War on Terror" that so far has murdered close to 2 million innocent Middle Eastern people that were not any way a threat to the United States.

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» RE: Day of shame Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: Day of shame Posted by: Carol Burns
» RE: Day of shame Posted by: EncinoM
» Bunk debunk nothing solved Posted by: Bliss Doubt
» RE: Bunk debunk nothing solved Posted by: Bliss Doubt
Hmm...well
Posted by: JohnJlws on Nov 11, 2008 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I disagreed with the invasion of Iraq well before we went to war. I wasn't that concerned with Afghanistan because I believe bin Laden's band of cowards are responsible for 9-1-1. (I also don't believe there was anyone else on the grassy knoll.) However, the execution of Afghanistan has been a complete cluster f**k since pretty much its inception.

That to say I hesitate to accept this rewrite of history. I watched the Vietnam conflict wind down and it wasn't driven by "entire units refusing to participate in combat, many going as far as outright mutiny." That's simply silly.

It was driven, as all wars are driven, by economics. War is often thought of as "profitable," but endless conflict is a resource drainer and cannot be sustained. We've seen this repeatedly trough history. We're seeing it again today.

And, I'd need to look again at the demographics of the military, but the last I checked (some time back), the all volunteer force was not composed primarily of the poor and destitute.

Here's the thing. I don't support war and I don't support Iraq in particular. It's as big a waste as any we've ever been involved in and is being fought for all the wrong reasons, which is to say it is being fought without legitimate reason. But I don't think a successful argument can be made using questionable tenets. There are enough legitimate reasons (drain on resources, no goals, deaths of hundreds of thousands, maiming of many hundreds of thousands more, immorality, illegality, displacement of millions, advertising for terrorists, etc., etc., etc.) to preclude us from rewriting history.

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War of the Words
Posted by: willymack on Nov 11, 2008 11:27 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Proud to be an American. Proud to be a war veteran. Proud to be pro-life, a Republican, a Democrat, a christian, etc., etc. How about GRATEFUL to be an American, HOPEFUL there will be NO MORE war veterans, SUPPORTIVE of enlightened reproductive choice, and DREAMING of a day when we have a true democracy, free of fear, religion, and doubt? We've been living by the former, and it's pretty much SUCKED. Time to live by different words.

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I'm a veteran, and I say, this war must continue
Posted by: blogbooks on Nov 11, 2008 2:15 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nothing is wasted until we leave without accomplishing our goals.

Our goals are regional hegemony for the next several decades. This is gained by permanent bases on Iraqi soil.

If we leave without accomplishing our goals, we will have wasted lives and resources, while losing all credibility in the world.

Luckily, Obama isn't pulling us out of Iraq. He'd never have been allowed to run for office if he intended to do that.

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F#%^ all holidays that glorify war!!!!!!
Posted by: sirios on Nov 11, 2008 5:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a veteran of the vietnam era and throughly ashamed of it. The USA can take all of the holidays that have anything to do with celebrating war and superiority and remove them from the calendar, forever.

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Futility
Posted by: greenPuker on Nov 11, 2008 6:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Futility

"Move him into the sun , say all of us
Its warm touch on his body may wake him again
Hooched down in fearful fatique we often whispered things
This wind-blown blood-soaked desolate land kills even spittal
He's dying ...and he's only six days from home
The kind old sun will bleach him to gawking bones."

Hey patriotic ones... think about the body bags with your friends in them. Tell me again that it will be a waste if we stop the killing and go home?

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Real heroes
Posted by: badkitty on Nov 11, 2008 8:23 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Real heroes refuse to fight illegal wars.

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