By
Sarah Lazare, Courage to Resist
for
AlterNet.
23 October , 2008
"I believe war is the crime of
our times," Blake Ivey, a
specialist in the U.S. Army,
said over the phone in a slow,
deliberate voice.
Ivey, currently stationed in
Fort Gordon, Ga., is publicly
refusing to deploy to
Afghanistan. The 21-year-old
soldier filed for conscientious
objector status in July but was
ordered to deploy while his
application was being processed.
He is determined not to go, and
as of our last phone call, was
still actively serving on his
base, weighing his options for
refusal.
Ivey joins what appears to be a
growing number of troops
refusing to fight in the
so-called Global War on Terror.
While there is no way to tell
the exact number of resisters,
military statistics indicate
that resistance is on the rise.
Since 2002, the Army has court-martialed
twice as many soldiers for
desertion and other unauthorized
absences per year than for each
year between 1997 and 2001. The
Associated Press reports AWOL
rates in the Army at its highest
since 1980, with the desertion
rate (defined as 30 or more days
of unauthorized absence) having
jumped 80 percent since the
start of the Iraq War. More than
150 soldiers have publicly
refused to fight in the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, and an
estimated 200 war resisters are
living in Canada.
Many war resisters are
conscientious objectors (C.O.s)
who were deterred at early
stages of the C.O. application
process or ordered to deploy
before their C.O. paperwork went
through. Just last week,
19-year-old conscientious
objector Tony Anderson at Fort
Carson, Colo., publicly shared
his experience. Anderson had
been discouraged by his
commanding officers from
applying for C.O. status, and he
disobeyed orders to deploy to
Iraq. He now faces steep
punishment at the hands of the
military.
Ivey, who grew up in Augusta,
Ga., just a few miles from the
Fort Gordon base where he is now
stationed, joined the Army
willingly. After the events of
Sept. 11, 2001, he felt that it
was "his generation's time to
stand up in defense of the
country." He states, "I went to
the recruiter myself. No one
approached me." So, in 2005 he
joined the service out of high
school, despite his mother's
pleas that he take more time to
think it over.
Yet once Ivey was in the
military, his feelings about war
changed. He found it unsettling
to chant "Blood, blood, blood
makes the grass grow" in basic
training, and he wrote a letter
home to his mother describing
his discomfort. When he was
deployed to Korea in 2006, he
started questioning the value of
military service. Halfway
through his yearlong deployment,
he began studying anarchist
philosophers and nonviolent
thinkers such as Martin Luther
King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi.
The refusal of close friend Ryan
Jackson to deploy to Iraq led
Ivey to re-evaluate his own
situation. They got to know each
other in Advanced Individual
Training in 2005 and were in the
same unit together in Fort
Gordon after Ivey's return from
Korea. They discussed at length
their reluctance to go to war.
Ivey provided simple advice to
Jackson: "I told him, you've got
to do what you believe in." So,
Jackson decided not to go. He
attempted to gain administrative
leave, but when his paperwork
failed to go through, he decided
to go AWOL rather than face
deployment. Ivey remained close
with Jackson throughout the
process, giving him emotional
support when he went AWOL in
2007 and was court-martialed and
sentenced to 100 days of
confinement. "When I talked to
Jackson before he went to
court-martial, that's when I
decided I was going to start on
my conscientious objector
paperwork," says Ivey.
Meanwhile, Ivey continued to
research alternatives to war,
immersing himself in the texts
of nonviolent philosophers. He
also got involved in his local
community, helping start a
chapter of Food Not Bombs, a
collective movement to serve
free food, mostly vegan and
vegetarian, to others. "I want
to make a difference in people's
lives," he says.
While his conscientious objector
paperwork was being processed,
Ivey was ordered to deploy to
Afghanistan. Application for
C.O. status cannot forestall
deployment, but applicants are
supposed to be assigned tasks
that do not conflict with their
C.O. convictions. However, this
military directive is subject to
ambiguous interpretation, and
the commanding officer has
considerable discretion in
determining appropriate
assignments. Furthermore, many
conscientious objectors consider
deployment to a combat zone by
definition ethically
compromising.
If Ivey refuses to deploy, he
could be charged with "Missing
Movement" -- Article 87 of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice
-- by a general court martial,
punishable by up to two years in
the stockade, loss of pay and a
dishonorable discharge. There is
also the danger that the
military might try to pile on
charges against him, such as
Article 90, "willfully
disobeying superior officer,"
and General Article 134, which
covers all conduct "unbecoming"
a service member.
Ivey is determined not to go to
Afghanistan, and he is working
with a civilian lawyer to
explore his options. He has also
enlisted the support of Courage
to Resist, an organization that
supports the troops who refuse
to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan
and has worked with several GIs
in similar situations, including
Anderson and Jackson.
Ivey's mother, who lives in
Augusta a few miles from where
Ivey is stationed, is supportive
but worried about her son. "I am
concerned because any time
someone you care about is in a
situation that could cause them
turmoil in their life or legal
charges, whether they are right
or wrong, I am going to worry,"
she says. "But I would in no way
encourage him to do anything
different. He is following his
moral beliefs, and he has to do
that."
Despite the threat of steep
punishment, Ivey remains
steadfast in his commitment to
nonviolence. "I am against
organized war," he says. "It is
flat-out murder."
http://www.couragetoresist.org/x/content/view/631/1/
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