Soldier of Conscience Granted Clemency, Released

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Report

Soldier of Conscience Granted Clemency, Released
Sgt. Travis Bishop. (Photo: via Travis Bishop)

Last August, Travis Bishop refused to serve in Afghanistan. Having filed for Conscientious Objector (CO) status, Bishop, based at Fort Hood, Texas, in the US Army's 57th Expeditionary Signal Battalion, was court-martialed and sentenced to 12 months in a military brig. He was released from the brig today.

Bishop served his time in Northwest Joint Regional Correctional Facility at Fort Lewis, Washington. This military brig is notorious for being a particularly difficult jail to serve time.

While in the brig, Bishop was recognized by Amnesty International and received support from hundreds of people from around the world who wrote letters of encouragement to him and wrote letters to Lt. Gen. Robert Cone, the commanding general of Fort Hood, asking for Travis to be released from prison.

During his court-martial at Fort Hood last August, Bishop was tried by the military for his stand against an occupation he believes is "illegal." He insisted that it would be unethical for him to deploy to support an occupation he opposed on both moral and legal grounds, thus his decision to file for CO status. A CO is someone who refuses to participate in combat based on religious or ethical grounds, and can be given an honorable discharge by the military.

In February, Bishop was granted a three-month reduction in his sentence by General Cone as a result of a successful clemency application.

In a letter to Truthout from prison, Bishop wrote this of his being granted clemency:

"Three months clemency. Wow. I am truly astonished. Great for me? Sure. Great for future resisters? Even more so. I cannot believe that I told the Army "No," refused to deploy, pleaded not guilty, and then indicted the entire system and blamed my command in court, and still merited clemency."

Bishop's case brings to light an important question for those serving in the US military today - that of the soldiers' ability, while serving, to follow their conscience during a time of war.

This topic was the focus of a recent conference, Truth Commission on Conscience in War, that took place March 21-22 at the Riverside Church in New York City.

The conference brought together veterans and national religious, academic and advocacy leaders to honor and protect freedom of conscience in the military. It featured testimony from recent veterans and national experts on the moral, psychological and legal dimensions of conscience and war.

According to a press release about the event, "The March 21 public hearing will launch the Commission's eight-month campaign to bring national attention to decisions of moral and religious conscience facing American service members, culminating with the Veterans Day release of the Commission's Final Report."

During his court-martial, Bishop told Truthout he was "opposed to all war," based on his religious beliefs, that "as a real Christian, I must be opposed to all violence, no matter what, because that is what Jesus taught."

The Truth Commission chair, Rev. Dr. Kaia Stern, who is also the director of the Pathways Home Project at the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School, announced before the commission:

"The United States of America is founded on principals of political and religious freedom. When we punish the soldier who heeds his or her moral compass, our democracy is in grave danger."

During the commission, Truthout spoke with Ian Slattery, who is a member of the planning committee for the commission, and is an associate producer of the nationally broadcast film "Soldiers of Conscience." 

"From our point of view, Travis's story is indicative of something that is a broader issue, and that is that every service member has a conscience," Slattery explained to Truthout, "The meeting we had this week in New York, and in the private meetings to follow, we looked at stories across the board that service members are experiencing. His story is like some of the other CO's we've seen, who've had their claims denied or approved. These are folks who have chosen the harder road - to follow the call to conscience they've heard within themselves."

According to Slattery, Bishop's story is "a good example of service members' consciences not being honored."

One of the main points James Branum, Bishop's civilian lawyer, made in defense of Bishop during his court-martial was that Bishop had never been given proper training that would have informed him of the CO option.

"Travis was never told about his option of conscientious objector status," Branum, told Truthout last August.

Branum explained to Truthout. "If an enlisted soldier isn't informed that he has a right, then he effectively does not have that right. Just one to two days before he was set to deploy, in the midst of moral questions, he heard about CO status.

During his trial, Bishop's defense called two witnesses to the stand, Pfc. Anthony Sadoski and Specialist Michael Kern, both of whom were active-duty soldiers at Fort Hood who said that they, too, had never been informed that filing for CO status was an option.

The judge in Bishop's court-martial, Maj. Matthew McDonald, said that whether Bishop was notified or not about his right to file for CO status was not relevant to the case.

"If every soldier in the Army who disobeyed an order could claim it was because they weren't notified of conscientious objector status, we probably wouldn't have a military any more," he added.

Branum told Truthout at the time that he felt Major McDonald was attempting to establish a precedent with the trial, regardless of the outcome. "We want to change the law, and I would argue that when soldiers are informed of their deployment, which is generally two to six months in advance, they should be giving training about CO status. I will argue that if you don't do the training, you can't deploy."

Questions like this and others are what Slattery and others at the Truth Commission hope to bring to the national stage.

"With two conflicts in the last nine years, hundreds of thousands of service members have come home, and we've yet to bring matters of conscience to the table to talk about," Slattery explained, "The commissioners that met on Monday at the church will be working together in the coming months to release a report on Veterans Day, that may include recommendations on policy and policy changes that will better protect the consciences of people like Travis and those to come in the future."

In Bishop's case, he had filed for CO status after his realization that he was morally opposed to all war. However, one of the issues of the Truth Commission was that of selective CO's. "One of the ironies of the all-volunteer Army is that the only way we'll recognize their conscience is if they are a CO ... but Travis's story teaches us that justice is a part of war, and when they attempt to exercise that conscience, they are only recognized if they are opposed to all war," Slattery added. "We hope this will open up this possibility for people who come in the future like Travis. We want to bring all this into a discussion, and do so without being accused of being unpatriotic, but we owe it to service members to respect their conscience and their choices."

The film Slattery helped produce, "Soldiers of Conscience," was broadcast nationally on PBS in October 2008.

In the film, Camilo Mejia, a US Army veteran of Iraq who was the first service member to publicly refuse to return to Iraq, states what may well be the core spirit of the Truth Commission and CO's like Bishop: "There's no higher assertion of freedom than to follow your conscience."

"The film has been critical to doing what we did at the Truth Commission," Slattery told Truthout, "which is to bring together people to look at an issue considered as taboo, from different perspectives. But the film has facilitated this and been an important resource for folks to do this, those who are not antiwar with those who are, along with religious groups and other professionals."

Rev. Dr. Rita Nakashima Brock, project director of the Truth Commission, said of the Truth Commission:

"In his Nobel acceptance speech, President Obama argued that nations will at times 'find the use of force not only necessary but morally justified,' We are asking: 'What happens when service members are asked to fight in a war they believe is not morally justified?"

In January, VA Secretary Eric Shinseki confirmed that young male veterans are committing suicide at an increasing rate - losses that go uncounted as casualties of the current US wars. At the same time, new VA research on "moral injury" highlights the lasting moral and psychological harm of violating one's sense of right and wrong in war.

It is this point the Truth Commission highlighted, along with the need to respect not just CO's, but "selective conscientious objection."

Rev. Herman Keizer Jr., the commission's honorary host, is a retired Army chaplain, Vietnam veteran and former chair of the National Conference on Ministry to the Armed Forces. Keizer is also an outspoken leader in a growing movement for "selective conscientious objection," the right to object morally to a particular war.

Current military regulations only recognize objections to "war in any form." In a recent letter to President Obama, Keizer argued: "The conscience of the selective objector deserves the same respect as the conscience of the pacifist."

Meanwhile, Branum plans to force the issue with the military to at least have CO training better represented within the military.

Branum told Truthout that he plans to take the result of Bishop's trial to the Military Court, the US Army Court of Criminal Appeals, the US Military Court of Criminal Appeals and "then Habeus Review and take it to a civilian court, then, if necessary, the Supreme Court."

Branum added, "If Travis goes to jail, he wants it to be for something. He wants it to count." The attorney said he will continue to demand the Army provide CO training, "and my hope is that when troops are going to be deployed, they'll be read their Bishop rights."

In another letter from prison, Bishop wrote to Truthout about how he felt his story should inspire future war resisters.

"I can't wait to get out of here, if only to tell people, "Hey! Look at me! If I can do it, surely more people can too!!"

Now that he is free, Bishop plans to continue to speak out about conscientious objection and work as an advocate for other conscientious objectors.  

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.


Comments

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Why join the military in the

Why join the military in the first place if you are opposed to all combat operations. Sorry I don't buy the Soldier of Conscience label he just got scared and did not want to serve. He deserved to do the full sentence.



I'm so glad for Travis! It's

I'm so glad for Travis! It's hard for gang members to get out of any gang, and no gang is more destructive to society and to a soldier's soul than the military. What do we call a person who isn't allowed to quit his job? Oh yeah, a slave. Travis sets a good example to all the others suffering forced servitude. In the fight for freedom, fight for your own freedom first.



When you join the military

When you join the military it is UNDERSTOOD that at any time you can be called to serve in a war zone....it may be against your religion or morals....you may not know the reason you are going.......BUT you go. PERIOD. Soldiers enjoy many perks......like having a JOB that pays monthly and you know that next month you won't be laid off. Plus 30 days of paid leave a year. Free medical and dental. Housing allowances. So to "COLLECT" all those "perks" and monthly income and turn around and say..."sorry, I'm not going to actually DO anything for the money"....why didn't he just stay home and get on welfare?



I admire Mr. Bishop for

I admire Mr. Bishop for standing up against war. I'm also glad to hear a Christian say that it is against the principles of Jesus, but I have to ask why someone who believes war is wrong would join the military?



I find the above story to be

I find the above story to be satisfying, powerful, uplifting, filled with gratitude, and hopeful. I am old enough to remember the body bag counts from Vietnam on the evening news every night of the week. I congratulate Mr. Bishop, and all who follow their Selves in their military resistance. I thank all who chose to serve in the military. We all deserve to be honored. Each of us stand for whatever issue moves she or he. If only we could learn to stand together in peace.



"If every soldier in the

"If every soldier in the Army who disobeyed an order could claim it was because they weren't notified of conscientious objector status, we probably wouldn't have a military any more,"

What a great idea !!!



Bishop, Get a Clue! The

Bishop, Get a Clue!

The entirety of CO status is very puzzling to me. Ultimately the mission of the military is to "kill people and break things.." This is true no matter which of the services you select for yourself -- except for one, the Coast Guard.

If you don't know this the day you join, it should be very evident by the end of the first or second week of Basic, when you are issued a weapon, and taught how to use it. You clearly had been in the Army for more than a couple of weeks.

Whether your job involved direct combat, or you were to be in a supporting role, it was not rocket science to discover that people would get hurt or killed as a result of what you would be assigned to do.

So, Bishop, my question to you is how come it took you to shortly before deployment to figure this out. If you didn't know the first day you got in, you should have been applying to get out by the end of the first week or two,

Finding out about CO status and how to access it entailed only one activity -- it's called READING -- and if you were incapable of doing that there were Chaplains available to give you help.

Sorry, no sympathy for ignorance.



I appreciate this story

I appreciate this story (especially the context of connecting Travis' experience with the problems of the C.O. process generally) but did want to clarify a few points that have been debated elsewhere online...

2. The quotes from Travis Bishop were taken from letters written by him to Dahr while in prison. Travis did authorize Dahr to use content from the letters in the past, so Dahr didn't do anything wrong.

However, please understand though that Travis spoke what he did while dealing with a very trying and difficult experience in jail. This context is critical.



3. On the day of his release

3. On the day of his release from jail, Travis decided to make no interviews with the press himself until he had some time to decompress.

We (his defense and supporters) did send out a press release to Dahr and other members of the media, but we expressly said that Travis would make no statements himself until the weekend. I did speak on his behalf to Dahr and the Seattle Times/AP, but if I recall correctly it was to confirm that he was released from jail, that he was grateful to the many people who helped him, to confirm some details on the legal process that had taken place, and to tell them that Travis would speak more in a few days.

Since, then Travis himself has been speaking out himself and will be issuing a formal statement of his own soon. I can say though that there many people that he wants to thank, and he understands very clearly that this victory is not his alone. In the interviews he has done thus far (with KEXP, KUOW and with Real Change newspaper) he has expressed gratitude to many people who have helped him along the way, and especially to the commanding general at Fort Hood who granted his clemency.

Anyway I hope this helps some in understanding the context of this story.