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 NEWS & LETTERS, November 2004

Workshop Talks

Frontline resistance, then and now

by Htun Lin

Nineteen soldiers from a reserve unit from Nasiriya, Iraq, serving in the supply and transport mission for coalition forces refused to deliver contaminated fuel from a convoy which they felt was inadequately protected from attacks by insurgents. These soldiers called it a "suicide mission," because the convoy lacked adequate armor, properly working vehicles and an adequate armed force to guard the convoy.

Revelations of the disappearance of 400 tons of explosives from occupied Iraq and the reappearance of Bin Laden on election eve buried developments in this story. It reminded me that real voting is done with one’s feet, with one’s committed actions--actions which indicate that we are ready for real lasting change: the kind of revolutionary change that could be carried out only by workers.

Never underestimate the power of committed action carried out by rank-and-file workers or soldiers in the frontlines. Private Joseph Darby caused an avalanche of exposes of the tortures at Abu-Ghraib, by simply refusing to stay silent. But Darby was abiding by the military’s own written code of conduct. The 19 soldiers who refused to follow orders are challenging the military occupation of Iraq at a whole new level.

Many young soldiers in Iraq express frustration towards a lack of not only clarity in their mission--not knowing who is exactly the enemy, but also a feeling of having been abandoned to do an impossible job without adequate equipment, protection or direction.

Ms. Lessin, mom of one of the 19 soldiers, said, "People are saying, ‘This is the same thing that happened to my son,’ and if the Army tries to spin this as ‘just a few bad apples,’ people need to know that these are common problems and what these soldiers did required a tremendous amount of courage."

When workers directly involved in war production go on strike and refuse to follow orders, the military calls it a "mutiny." It is so serious, it could carry a penalty of death. That’s because the generals and civilian apparatchiks who maintain the structures of "law and order," especially in times of war, know that there’s a fine line between mutiny and revolution. It’s the spark which they fear could set off potentially explosive social unrest.

PORT CHICAGO

That was also the case 60 years ago in another military production incident--the "Port Chicago Mutiny" of 1944, when Black enlisted men were court-martialed for refusing to return to work where over 300 of their comrades had died and over 400 injured in a devastating munitions explosion, while they were at the docks loading two cargo ships headed for battle. Fifty men were eventually convicted. To this day, the families of these men refuse to accept a pardon, and continue to demand exoneration. They say that this was not a mutiny but rather a labor strike, protesting unsafe working conditions set by white officers commanding Black sailors in a segregated Navy.

Today’s soldiers accused of mutiny in Iraq face a similar unjust situation. It is in the context of resisting unsafe work-conditions which we must defend the 19 resisters. Today’s military, unlike the days of Port Chicago, has been "desegregated." Yet the poor, Blacks, and minorities overfill its ranks with disproportionate representation.

Bush vehemently denies that he’ll bring back the draft. It indicates how deep the opposition to his war is--those who "voluntarily" serve as part of the "economic draft" are showing signs of insubordination. To date, thousands of soldiers who have already served a tour of duty are refusing to obey orders to extend their tours.

Workers on the frontlines of war or of production are familiar with speed-up and unsafe working conditions, whether they work in Chinese assembly lines or American chemical factories, producing commodities for trade or commodities for warfare. In war, as in production, we are the ones performing the duties and the ones doing the suffering and dying.

ECONOMIC DRAFT

Workers often take up extremely hazardous jobs, like the military, because there are not many options left. In Iraq, many Iraqis are joining the new army, in spite of the threat of assassination. The ranks of America’s own army are filled with economic draftees, unable to find adequate employment in the civilian economy.

The new revolts within the ranks in Iraq and the new level of interest on the part of young workers in this election can radically transform the movement against permanent war and terror endemic to militarized capitalism. Only by reclaiming our own labor will we see fundamental change, and no longer continue to die in capitalist wars of the future.

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