- Reaction score
- 11,505
- Points
- 1,260
I know this concerns Jeremy Hinzeman, but I put in a new topic because I am more interested in the moral and legal notions of an "illegal order" and I don't want to see this discussion get drowned out in 30 pages of "send the bum home" (which is important, but in a different way).
I suspect Hinzeman's motives are more personal then political, but he is not taking the "I was afraid/I didn't want to fight/I shouldn't be put at risk" defence because his name is on a contract that implies unlimited liability, so this approach would be far to easy to shoot down.
However, Hinzeman is trying to make a strong case on the "illegal order/war of aggression" approach which is drawing a good deal of support from the anti-Iraq crowd here in Canada. I was listening to Peter Warren on talk-radio who was hosting one of the Anti-War guys in Canada and discussing Hinzeman's case. The amount of screaming and yelling back and forth was quite ridiculous ("Coward", "Nuremberg Trials", ect, etc) - nobody seemed to really want to prove a point, only to yell at the other guy.
Pretty disappointing, I tried calling but couldn't get on because I wanted to specifically address the issue of "illegal order/unjust order".
On the topic of "legal orders" - what constitutes a an illegal order? My understanding is that an illegal order is one that would violate the Laws of Canada.
If the Government of Canada ordered Canadian soldiers to go to Iraq, it seems that taking off and saying it was an "illegal" order wouldn't work, because the Army telling soldiers where to deploy is not illegal. If a command element issued an order like "execute those prisoners" or "just burn down that Mosque"; it seems a case could be made for objecting - but this never happened to Hinzeman.
The Anti-War guy on the radio was saying that the conception of an unjust war can make actions "illegal" - the German Commanders in WWII (Jodl, Keitel, etc) were charged with "conducting a war of aggression" and this is the defence the guy was using for Hinzeman. I think his actions fell short on two counts (which I was trying to phone in and discuss with him):
1) The German's charged with "conducting a war with aggression" were giving direct orders to carry out manifestly illegal actions. Hinzeman, as a Rifleman, was in no place to claim this defence as he was not responsible for giving orders.
2) Many other soldiers (some on these forums) fought in Iraq and didn't do anything illegal in the conduct of there duties. Hinzeman, as a private soldier, does not have the moral authority to decide what constitutes illegality - he was ordered to deploy by the Government of the United States of America, which he - in signing his contract and getting his benefits - recognized as the legitimate authority to send him where it saw fit. Hinzeman is not the Government and cannot make decisions (skipping a war) when he held himself to obeying his government.
Unless he was faced with a specific incident which was manifestly illegal under US Law (which he was responsible to) his claim of "fighting an illegal war of aggression", with all the rhetoric of Nuremberg and illegal actions that he and his supporters are bringing up, doesn't seem to hold water.
There is an important line in the military in that we cannot pick and choose which orders we wish to obey - violating the laws of the state is something that professional soldiers are ordered not to do - but clearly this was something which Hinzeman was never ordered to do. The orders that Hinzeman received (to deploy to Iraq with his unit) were legal and came from the proper and legitimate command authority; if all the sudden his "conscious" kicked in, he should have recognized that he was morally obligated to his squad, the 82nd Airborne, and his Country.
Does this make sense? It seems that this is how the Law should be spelled out. I'm putting this up because some of the arguments I seen coming from Hinzeman's supporters left a real bad taste in my mouth - they seem to assume that the morality and legality of a military action is dependent on the opinions of individual soldiers; the state defines what constitutes an illegal action and it is the soldiers responsibility not to obey an order that countermands the law, not his personal opinions or ideals.
I suspect Hinzeman's motives are more personal then political, but he is not taking the "I was afraid/I didn't want to fight/I shouldn't be put at risk" defence because his name is on a contract that implies unlimited liability, so this approach would be far to easy to shoot down.
However, Hinzeman is trying to make a strong case on the "illegal order/war of aggression" approach which is drawing a good deal of support from the anti-Iraq crowd here in Canada. I was listening to Peter Warren on talk-radio who was hosting one of the Anti-War guys in Canada and discussing Hinzeman's case. The amount of screaming and yelling back and forth was quite ridiculous ("Coward", "Nuremberg Trials", ect, etc) - nobody seemed to really want to prove a point, only to yell at the other guy.
Pretty disappointing, I tried calling but couldn't get on because I wanted to specifically address the issue of "illegal order/unjust order".
On the topic of "legal orders" - what constitutes a an illegal order? My understanding is that an illegal order is one that would violate the Laws of Canada.
If the Government of Canada ordered Canadian soldiers to go to Iraq, it seems that taking off and saying it was an "illegal" order wouldn't work, because the Army telling soldiers where to deploy is not illegal. If a command element issued an order like "execute those prisoners" or "just burn down that Mosque"; it seems a case could be made for objecting - but this never happened to Hinzeman.
The Anti-War guy on the radio was saying that the conception of an unjust war can make actions "illegal" - the German Commanders in WWII (Jodl, Keitel, etc) were charged with "conducting a war of aggression" and this is the defence the guy was using for Hinzeman. I think his actions fell short on two counts (which I was trying to phone in and discuss with him):
1) The German's charged with "conducting a war with aggression" were giving direct orders to carry out manifestly illegal actions. Hinzeman, as a Rifleman, was in no place to claim this defence as he was not responsible for giving orders.
2) Many other soldiers (some on these forums) fought in Iraq and didn't do anything illegal in the conduct of there duties. Hinzeman, as a private soldier, does not have the moral authority to decide what constitutes illegality - he was ordered to deploy by the Government of the United States of America, which he - in signing his contract and getting his benefits - recognized as the legitimate authority to send him where it saw fit. Hinzeman is not the Government and cannot make decisions (skipping a war) when he held himself to obeying his government.
Unless he was faced with a specific incident which was manifestly illegal under US Law (which he was responsible to) his claim of "fighting an illegal war of aggression", with all the rhetoric of Nuremberg and illegal actions that he and his supporters are bringing up, doesn't seem to hold water.
There is an important line in the military in that we cannot pick and choose which orders we wish to obey - violating the laws of the state is something that professional soldiers are ordered not to do - but clearly this was something which Hinzeman was never ordered to do. The orders that Hinzeman received (to deploy to Iraq with his unit) were legal and came from the proper and legitimate command authority; if all the sudden his "conscious" kicked in, he should have recognized that he was morally obligated to his squad, the 82nd Airborne, and his Country.
Does this make sense? It seems that this is how the Law should be spelled out. I'm putting this up because some of the arguments I seen coming from Hinzeman's supporters left a real bad taste in my mouth - they seem to assume that the morality and legality of a military action is dependent on the opinions of individual soldiers; the state defines what constitutes an illegal action and it is the soldiers responsibility not to obey an order that countermands the law, not his personal opinions or ideals.