By Robin
Long, prisoner of conscience.
November 6, 2008
Dear
President-elect Obama,
My name is
Robin Long. I am currently
serving a 15-month sentence at a
Naval brig in California. I am
locked up for refusing to
participate in the invasion of
the sovereign nation of Iraq, a
military action I felt was wrong
and an action condemned by most
of the international community.
It was
illegal and immoral.
My
sentence also includes
dishonorable discharge. I was no
doubt made an example, because
not only did I refuse to deploy
by going AWOL but I spoke out. I
spoke out about the atrocities
that are going on over there and
also the extensive web of lies
the Bush administration told us
and Congress, to go over there.
I did all of this very openly
while AWOL in Canada, where I
was making a life for myself.
When I
joined the Army in 2003 I felt
honored to be serving my
country. I was behind the
President. I thought it was an
honorable venture to be in Iraq.
I was convinced by the lies of
the Bush administration just
like Congress and a majority of
Americans. But just because I
joined the Army doesn’t mean I
abdicated my ability to evolve
intellectually and morally. When
I realized the war in Iraq was a
mistake, I saw refusing to fight
as my only option. My conscience
was screaming at me not to
participate.
I feel,
like many others, that a
government that punishes its
citizens for taking a moral
stand for humanity and against
injustices will lose the faith
of its people. The war in Iraq
was a Bush administration
mistake and my punishment is a
product of that mistake and
failed policy. Please see that I
am being punished for my ideals
and morals and for standing up
to a giant so my voice could be
heard. People can’t be afraid to
stand up and say “This is wrong,
we need change.”
You may
say I signed a contract. I’d
like to quote from a letter that
Thomas Jefferson wrote to George
Washington in April of 1793 on
his thoughts of contracts and
the French Treaties. And I quote
“When performance, for instance,
becomes impossible,
non-performance is not immoral.
So if performance becomes self
destructive for the party, the
law of self preservation
overrules the laws of
obligations to others. For the
reality of these principals I
appeal to the true fountains of
evidence, the heart and head of
every rational honest man.”
For me to
continue to participate in my
military contract would have
been self-destructive to me at
my deepest levels of self. It
goes against everything I
believe in, my ideals and
morals. In the case of the
invasion of Iraq, international
law was broken, as well as
violating our own Constitution.
Article VI of the Constitution
states that any treaty the US is
signatory shall be the supreme
law of the land. The invasion
broke the rules set out for
declaring war in the Geneva
Convention. And according to the
Nuremburg Principles laid out at
the Nuremburg Tribunals, I had a
higher international duty
supported by our Constitution to
refuse service in Iraq.
While I
was in Canada I had a child.
This sentence will have a
lasting impact not only on my
life but also on the life of my
son. My son and his mother are
Canadian (not duel citizenship).
With a felony conviction (a year
plus a day), it will be very
difficult for me to re-enter
Canada. I would like to live
there so I can be in my son’s
life. Every child needs a
father. I want to return to my
responsibilities as a father.
This
sentence is a great hardship
because it has an impact on my
life that could last well into
the future. This would
successfully separate a family.
My family needs me, to be a
father figure and a financial
supporter. My son was born after
the fact of me deserting. Please
don’t punish him more than I
already have by being gone now.
I love and miss him and the
thought of being reunited with
him is helping me get through my
time here. I feel I made the
right decision by refusing and
am more than willing to sit in
the brig for my ideals. But I
worry about the effect this has
on my family.
I ask you
to please consider granting me
presidential clemency or a
pardon. I have given this to
many different organizations and
people to ensure that you
receive a copy. I am so happy
that you were elected President.
I feel real change coming. You
are the light after the storm,
“Hurricane Bush” if you will.
If you
would like more information on
me you can listen to an audio
interview on
couragetoresist.org (below)
or read more at
freerobin.org,
ivaw.org,
resisters.ca
-Robin
Long
Write to
Robin in the brig at: Robin
Long; PO Box 452136; San Diego,
CA 92145-2136
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