It's hard even
to remember anymore the true state of the U.S. military as the Vietnam
War ground toward its bloody end. By the late 1960s, the statistics
flowing back to Washington about the American war machine were enough
to give any general nightmares. Drug-taking was rampant. (By 1971,
up to 60% of returning soldiers admitted to some use.) Desertions
stood at seventy per thousand, a modern high; small-scale mutinies
or "combat refusals" were at critical levels; incidents of racial
conflict had soared; and strife between officers ("lifers") and
soldiers ("grunts") was at unprecedented levels; reported "fraggings"
assassination attempts against unpopular officers
or NCOs had risen from an already startling 126 in 1969 to 333 in
1971, despite declining troop strength in Vietnam. According to
military count, as many as 144 underground newspapers were then
being published by, or aimed at, soldiers. ("In Vietnam," the Ft.
Lewis-McChord Free Press typically wrote, "the Lifers, the Brass,
are the true Enemy, not the enemy.") And the country was experiencing
the largest political exodus of potential soldiers, AWOLs, and deserters
since large numbers of Tories left the country two hundred years
earlier, after the American Revolution.
In 1971, Colonel
Robert D. Heinl, Jr. reviewed the evidence for Armed Forces Journal
in an article entitled "The Collapse of the Armed Forces," and concluded:
"[T]he foregoing facts point to widespread conditions among American
forces in Vietnam that have only been exceeded in this century by
the French Army's Nivelle mutinies of 1917 and the collapse of the
Tsarist armies [of Russia] in 1916 and 1917." Hardly less threatening
to military cohesion at the time, active-duty soldiers in relatively
small numbers as well as significant numbers of Vietnam veterans
were by then beginning to organize against the war.
If you want
part of the explanation for why the Vietnam War ended and all of
the explanation for why the draft that once did result in a genuine
citizen's army was abandoned for an all-volunteer military, look
no further than this traumatic set of events. And it's been true
that, whatever the problems and
they've been multifold staffing an overstretched volunteer
military to fight two increasingly unpopular wars without end in
Iraq and Afghanistan, Vietnam-style unrest in the military has been
slower to grow. But there's nothing like a losing war in an alien
land among an increasingly hostile populace to throw one's worst
acts into strong relief. So, despite the obstacles, small but growing
numbers of American soldiers like Lieut.
Ehren Watada, "the Army's first commissioned officer to publicly
refuse orders to fight in Iraq on grounds that the war is illegal"
have stepped forward to challenge the Bush administration,
its war-making, and the military. Their often lonely acts of resistance
reflect an extra degree of courage in comparison with the Vietnam
era and where it's been difficult for them military families
as well as parents of the American dead in Iraq like Cindy
Sheehan have heroically stepped into the void.
Former federal
prosecutor, Elizabeth de la Vega, whose new book U.S.
v. George W. Bush et al. will be published this December (and
highlighted at this site), considers one of these new military resisters
in her own unique way. If you want to look for "profiles in courage"
in the age of Bush and Cheney, this is certainly a good place to
start. ~ Tom
Move
Over G.I. Joe and Han Solo: Sgt. Ricky Clousing, Peace Action Hero
By Elizabeth
de la Vega
I look forward
to the day when Mattel makes a Sgt. Ricky Clousing action figure.
As the mother
of sons born eight years apart, I spent nearly half my adult life
surrounded by and stepping on action figures. They
were everywhere: a phalanx of tiny knights in shining armor on the
windowsill; Batman and Robin frozen in an ice tray; and GI Joe guys
in camouflage among the hosta. One Christmas, Luke Skywalker and
Han Solo even ended up in the manger scene along with Jesus, Mary,
and Joseph, two cows, three sheep, and several Ewoks. My kids spent
hours and hours in a fantasy world populated by villains and heroes
of every description except one; there were no peace heroes.
I met a peace
hero at Camp Democracy
in Washington, D.C. not too long ago: Sgt. Ricky Clousing. He will
not remember me, but I will not forget him. On a brilliant, blessedly
unhumid day, Ricky sat on a makeshift platform within shouting distance
of the Lincoln Memorial and told a story that was simultaneously
agonizing and inspiring to hear.
On September
11, 2001, Ricky was working in an orphanage and "building some roads
and stuff" in Thailand. When his stint as a volunteer ended, he
made his way to Germany where he met American soldiers returning
from Afghanistan. Caught up in the wave of post-9/11 patriotism,
he decided he would join the Army rather than return to college
in his native Seattle. That way he could serve his country and have
money for his education when he got out. Two years later, having
completed basic training and intensive language instruction at the
Monterey Defense Language Institute, Sgt. Ricky Clousing found himself
in Baghdad, an interrogator with the 82nd Airborne Division out
of Ft. Bragg, North Carolina.
As a tactical
interrogator assigned to question detainees at the scene of infantry
raids, Ricky did not witness the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
What he did witness, however, was hardly less horrifying: American
soldiers indoctrinated to view Iraqis as less than human, as "ragheads"
or worse; American soldiers out on the streets of the Iraqi capital
ramming the cars of Iraqi civilians for sport; American soldiers
laughing as they slaughtered the livestock of local farmers; and
American soldiers shooting an Iraqi teenager who had simply made
a wrong turn.
Ricky was
on patrol when he saw a boy, "probably 18 years old, a small maybe
high-school age kid" turn down a road his unit was attempting to
secure. The teenager, Ricky said, was quite visibly terrified at
the sight of "a whole bunch of Americans with big weapons" staring
him in the face. He started turning the car around, but didn't get
very far. This is how Ricky described what happened next:
"One
of the soldiers in the turret of the humvee behind me just opened
up fire on the machine gun on the vehicle. As the vehicle was turning
away, all I heard above my head was "pop, pop, pop, pop." This was
my first deployment, my first combat experience was that moment
right then, and just the sound of machine guns going off over my
head. He popped about five or six rounds in the side of the vehicle.
Myself and two of the other guys ran over to the vehicle, smashed
the window, and pulled the guy out to provide first aid on him…
I was looking down at this kid who had just been shot in the stomach
for no reason really he was trying to leave…I was still just
standing there in shock, looking down at this kid, and he looked
right up at me. And his mouth was foaming. His stomach was falling
out in his hands… I was looking down at this kid, this young boy
who was just trying to drive around town and took a wrong turn and
tried to go the other direction, was shot at and killed, and I'm
looking down at him now. And we made eye contact for about five
seconds, and he just looked at me with the most empty, terrified
look in his face that will never leave me in my whole life I'm sure."
That Iraqi
boy died on the way to the hospital. I think the boy in Ricky Clousing
died that day as well, but what an extraordinary man he has since
become. Deciding he would be haunted forever if he kept silent about
such an egregious violation of the rules of engagement, Sgt. Clousing
notified the unit's Platoon Sergeant, who did not "take kindly"
to his advice.
Clousing continued
to object to American war crimes for the rest of his time in Iraq,
though no one ever took kindly to his objections. When he returned
to the U.S., he talked to his commanding officers, to the chaplain,
to mental health workers and anyone else who would listen to his
problems with the invasion and occupation of Iraq. He was told he
could get out of the Army if he said he was gay. But he couldn't
say that because he's not gay. He was told to claim he had
post-traumatic stress disorder, but he couldn't do that because
he didn't think he had PTSD. He was told to file as a conscientious
objector; but he couldn't do that because he wasn't against all
war. He was told he could avoid going back to Iraq by taking an
assignment in the United States. He couldn't do that either because
and this is exactly what Ricky Clousing told us on that sunny
afternoon in Washington:
"I
felt that my involvement in the army, whether it be directly or
indirectly, whether in Iraq or training guys to go to Iraq, I was
still that piece of machine in the system that was still allowing
this war to take place and still supporting that. My actions, whether
or not they were on the front line or back safely at home, were
still part of the body of the machine that's occupying [Iraq]. So
I ultimately felt that the only thing I could do was to leave, so
I packed my stuff last June and I went AWOL."
On August
11, 2006, the day he turned himself in, Sgt. Clousing made a simple
statement:
"We
have found ourselves in a pivotal era where we have traded humanity
for patriotism. Where we have traded our civil liberties for a sense
of security. I stand here before you sharing the same idea as Henry
David Thoreau: as a soldier, as an American, and as a human being,
we mustn't lend ourselves to that same evil which we condemn."
Ricky Clousing
now serving a three-month sentence in a military brig at
Camp Lejeune in North Carolina is not the only peace hero.
Others are making themselves known in growing numbers and you can
read about them at the Courage
to Resist website. Although we have no way of assessing the
numbers from here, I have no doubt that there are also soldiers
trying to do the right thing in Iraq.
But when I
read about a President who doesn't know the meaning of "outrages
upon human dignity" because he so clearly does not consider
the very people he claims to have liberated human; when I
read about a vice president who does not even have the courage to
admit to the meaning of the words he uses ("dunk
in the water," "last
throes"); when I read about a defense secretary who tells reporters
to back
off if the questions get too tough, then I think about Ricky
Clousing.
Twenty-four
years old, Clousing told the world in simple declarative sentences
why he had to give up his college money, receive a dishonorable
discharge, and go to jail to take a stand against the invasion and
occupation of Iraq. He'd make a very cool action figure. Come to
think of it, Sgt. Ricky Clousing tattooed arms, Laguna Beach
t-shirt, and all would make an awesome shepherd in that manger
scene. Han Solo and Luke Skywalker are just going to have to move
over.