Thou Shalt Not Kill
By Chris HedgesJune 08, 2015
"Information
Clearing House" - "Truthdig"
- The military in the United States portrays itself as
endowed with the highest virtues—honor, duty, self-sacrifice, courage and
patriotism. Politicians, entertainers, sports stars, the media, clerics and
academics slavishly bow before the military machine, ignoring its colossal
pillaging of state resources, the egregious war crimes it has normalized across
the globe, its abject service not to democracy or freedom but corporate profit,
and the blind, mind-numbing obedience it inculcates among its members. A lone
soldier or Marine who rises up inside the system to denounce the
hypermasculinity that glorifies violence and war, who exposes the false morality
of the military, who refuses to kill in the service of imperial power, unmasks
the military for what it is. And he or she, as Chelsea Manning has learned,
swiftly pays a very, very heavy price.
Spc. Robert Weilbacher as a new Army combat medic stationed in
South Korea listened to stories told by combat veterans, many suffering from
trauma and depression, about the routine and indiscriminate slaughter of
civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was horrified. He had believed the
propaganda fed to him over the years. He considered himself a patriot. He had
accepted the notion that the U.S. military was a force for good, intervening to
liberate Iraqis and Afghans and fight terrorists. But after hearing the
veterans’ tales, his worldview crumbled. He began to ask questions he had not
asked before. He began to think. And thinking within any military establishment
is an act of subversion. He soon decided he did not want to be part of an
organization that routinely snuffed out the lives of unarmed people, including
children. He applied in February 2014 for a classification known as
Conscientious Objector (1-0).
He instantly became a pariah within his unit. No one wanted to
associate with him. He was taunted as a “traitor,” “coward,” “faggot” and
“hippie.” He was assigned to the most demeaning jobs on the base. And the
military bureaucracy began making him jump through hoops that he is still trying
to negotiate two years later. He became an example to his fellow soldiers of the
physical and emotional harassment, as well as humiliation, that is visited on
all who dare within the military to challenge the sanctity of war and
discipline.
“I feel as if my own government is torturing me,” he said when
I reached him by phone in his barracks at Fort Campbell, Ky.
Weilbacher, 27, grew up in poverty, raised by a single mother,
in the inner city of Columbus, Ohio. As a student at Ohio State University,
where he was a political science and English major, he started two organizations
to help feed the homeless. He was an idealist. He wanted to serve humanity. And,
in the warped culture in which he lived—American culture—the best way to do that
was to join the military, which was organized, he thought, around “noble
ideals.”
“The public perception, including at Ohio State, which has a
big ROTC program, is that soldiers are heroic,” he said. “They’re serving their
country. They’re in the best Army in the world. I didn’t question this. I
watched the commercials with the climatic background music for the Marine
Corps—‘the few, the proud, the Marines.’ The Marines have the biggest masculine
factor. I thought, I have the credentials to be a Marine officer.”
“Every message given to me by popular culture was that
violence was a means of conflict resolution,” he said. “This was especially true
in the inner city where I grew up and where there is a lack of education. Video
games, such as ‘Call of
Duty,’ normalize violence. You don’t realize the impact it has. Your
conscience is subverted. In ‘Call of Duty’ you get rewarded for killing—you rank
up in the system. The message is if you like ‘Call of Duty’ you’ll like the
military. And, of course, the military also incentivizes killing. If you do well
at marksmanship you get rewarded with three-day passes. You only think about the
points you can get from becoming an expert marksman. You don’t think about the
act of taking a human life. Every aspect of popular culture incentivizes
violence, from television shows to movies like ‘American Sniper.’ Killing is
presented as noble. Those who kill are supposed to be heroes. And this prepares
us for the military.”
When he graduated from college he signed up for Marine Officer
Candidates School and was sent to Quantico, Va., for boot camp.
“When we marched in formation we shouted out cadences,” he
said. “Most of the cadences were about killing. We shouted ‘Kill! Kill! Kill!’
We shouted ‘What makes the green grass grow? Blood! Blood! Blood!” We shouted
‘AT&T. Reach out and touch someone.’ The intent of OCS [Officer Candidates
School] was to normalize violence, to condition us. It was very effective.
Again, I didn’t think about what I was doing. All I was thinking about was being
a Marine Corps officer.”
But four weeks into his training in early 2012 he was injured
and had to drop out. He was devastated. He did not want to begin the whole
application process again with the Marines, and he enlisted in the Army in April
2013. He went to Fort Sill, Okla., for basic training. He was then trained as a
medic (68W) at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. He enrolled in airborne school at
Fort Benning, Ga., and during the second week of training was injured during a
practice for landing falls.
In December 2013 he was deployed to Camp Hovey in South Korea,
10 miles from the border with North Korea. He was attached as a medic to the
4-7 Cavalry.
He began to hear disturbing stories about the wars in the Middle East, not the
glorified stories spun out by recruiters, the media or the entertainment
industry, but stories about whole families being blown up or gunned down by U.S.
troops in the streets of Iraq and Afghanistan. He lived among soldiers who were
suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. Many were drinking heavily. He
listened to them talk about being prescribed anti-depressants by Army doctors
and then being redeployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. He may have been a medic, but
he was required to carry a weapon and to use it in combat. He knew that for him,
to do so would be impossible.
“I joined the military because I wanted to help people, to
fight for the greater good,” he said. “And then I learned about innocent people
being routinely blown up in war. I started researching the statistics on
collateral damage in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
“A medic in the Army weaponizes soldiers so they can go back
out and kill,” he said. “When we are trained as medics we are told that our task
is to preserve fighting strength. Being a medic in the Army is not about helping
the people who need it most. Treatment is first directed towards casualties that
have the best chance to survive. Army medics exist to perpetuate warfare.”
He discovered the
Iraq Body Count website and was appalled by what he learned there. He began
to devour the writings and statements of Martin Luther King Jr., Mahatma Gandhi,
Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn,
the Rev. John Dear, Muhammad Ali and the Dalai Lama. He could no longer
watch violent movies or play violent video games.
“I began to read about the wars in Vietnam and World War II,”
he said. “I read about Nagasaki, Hiroshima, Agent Orange, radiation and how it’s
still affecting people today, how people are still dying or being born with
congenital defects. I found Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn. I had never heard of
them. I guess there was a good reason I had never heard of them. I read ‘A
People’s History of the United States,’ by Zinn. I read ‘Understanding Power,’
by Chomsky. A lot of my influences, even though I am an atheist, came from
religious figures like Gandhi, Father John Dear and King. I read
‘Pilgrimage to Nonviolence.’ I know why they do not tell us the truth about
war. We have a volunteer Army. If people knew the truth it would decrease the
numbers who want to join. I had been betrayed.” Then, in early February of 2014,
he went online to the website of the
Center on Conscience & War, led
by Maria Santelli and Bill Galvin. Soon he contacted the two activists and told
them he was a conscientious objector.
Everything about the military culture, from its celebration of
violence and hypermasculinity to its cult of blind obedience, began to disturb
him. He was disgusted by the military’s exploitation of Filipino women who
worked in the numerous bars and clubs near the base where he was stationed in
South Korea.
“Filipino women were brought over to sing in the bars,” he
said. “They were great singers. They worked in bars where Korean women had been
‘comfort women’ during the Japanese colonization. The bar owners took the
passports of the Filipino women. ... Soldiers bought drinks and sexual services
from these exploited women. I had a big issue with that. It demonstrated a lack
of values.”
When he was off base he would meditate in Buddhist temples.
That helped, he said, to keep him sane.
Although Army regulations required that his application be
sent to the Department of the Army Conscientious Objector Review Board (DACORB)
within 90 days, it took more than 200 days for the document to arrive there. On
Dec. 16, 2014, he was granted status as a conscientious objector and an
honorable discharge. But the deputy assistant secretary of the Army for review
boards, Francine Blackmon, unilaterally overrode the DACORB determination and
denied his application, even though Army regulation
AR 600-43, Par. 2-8,
states that a review board decision is final. Now, in a final bid to achieve
conscientious objector status, he has turned to the American Civil Liberties
Union.
“I have obeyed the rules during the whole process,” he said.
“But in the military there is a double standard. If I do not obey the
regulations I get court-martialed. If they do not obey the regulations nothing
happens. It is I who suffers. If I lose this last bid I cannot reapply.”
This will be his last bureaucratic battle with the Army. He
has followed the rules for two years. He will not, he said, be in the Army in
2017 at the scheduled end of his tour.
“If I’m forced to remain in the Army, I expect to eventually
receive an order that I—as an objector—will be unable to comply with, resulting
in a court-martial.”
The opinions expressed are solely those of the reporter and
Robert Weilbacher and do not represent the United States Army in any way.
Chris Hedges previously spent nearly two decades as a
foreign correspondent in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the
Balkans. He has reported from more than 50 countries and has worked for The
Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and
The New York Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
© 2015 Truthdig, LLC. All rights reserved.