West
Pointers, Where Are You?
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
More than two years ago, I wrote
a series of essays entitled Obedience to Orders, in which I suggested that graduates
of the professional military academies were much more likely to
blindly obey wrongful orders and much less likely to stand
up to their superiors in face of wrongful orders than graduates
of the Virginia Military Institute.
West Pointers inundated me
with emails, suggesting that West Pointers themselves would never
obey wrongful orders and would have the courage to stand up to their
superiors if faced with such orders.
Now, Capt. Ian Fishback, a
graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, has risked
his military career by going outside the military chain of command
to disclose systematic and routine torture of Iraqi prisoners and
detainees at the hands of U.S. soldiers in Iraq, which included
beatings as a form of recreation for the troops. The
abuse is alleged to have taken place at a different location than
Abu Ghraib.
Fishback’s allegations provide
strong evidence that disputes the Pentagons claim that torture
and abuse in Iraq was limited to a few bad apples. They
also suggest that the many Pentagon investigations and reports into
this scandal that exonerate higher-ups have been nothing more than
whitewashes
and cover-ups.
Capt. Fishback made his disclosures
to Human Rights Watch and members of the U.S. Congress only after
he had followed proper military channels and was continually rebuffed
by his military superiors for 17 months.
By his conduct, Capt. Fishback
has displayed the qualities and characteristics of the highest caliber
of military officer. I salute him and, in my opinion, he deserves
the salute of the entire country for taking a firm stand against
wrongdoing by his own government. Interestingly, perhaps because
Fishback is a graduate of West Point, no member of Congress is yet
accusing him of being unpatriotic.
Not surprisingly, Fishbacks
revelations are not being well-received by the Pentagon. According to the Los Angeles Times, Fishback is now prohibited
from traveling further than 50 miles away from his base at Ft. Bragg,
despite the fact that historically freedom of travel has been recognized
as a fundamental right in the United States. In fact, after the
Army learned of his meetings with Human Rights Watch, it denied
Fishbacks request to return to Washington.
Where do other West Pointers
stand with respect to Captain Fishback? The issue is black and white
for the Long Gray Line:
- Either Fishback is right
and the army is wrong; or
- Fishback is wrong and the
army is right.
It has been said that the hottest places in hell are reserved
for those who in times of great moral crises maintain their neutrality.
Abraham Lincoln once said, To sin by silence when one should
protest makes cowards out of men.
Where are the West Pointers
in this battle? Where are their op-eds? Where are their letters
to the editor? Where are their emails to the president and Congress?
Where are their petitions? Where are their blogs? Where are their
public protests?
Will West Pointers enter onto
the field of battle and come to the defense of their fellow West
Pointer, Capt. Ian Fishback? Will they help to finally put a stop
to the torture and sex abuse of prisoners and detainees and to the
Pentagons whitewashes and cover-ups of this scandal? Or will
they simply remain silent and walk away?
October
4, 2005
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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Hornberger Archives
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