Army Court-Martials
Resister For
Blowing
Whistle on
‘Bait-and-Kill’
By Dee
Knight
20/07/08 "ICH"
-- - Private
First Class
James
Burmeister
faces a
Special
Court
Martial at
Fort Knox on
July 16. The
charges are
AWOL and
desertion.
He returned
to Fort Knox
voluntarily
in March,
after living
10 months in
Canada with
his spouse
and infant
child. He
refused
redeployment
to Iraq
while on
leave in May
2007.
In most such
cases at
Fort Knox,
the Army has
in recent
years
quietly
dismissed
the resister
with a less
than
honorable
discharge
“for the
good of the
military.”
This time
it’s
different.
The brass
“offered”
Burmeister a
year in
military
prison and a
dishonorable
discharge if
he agreed to
plead
guilty.
Burmeister
refused the
offer. His
father,
Erich, says
the Army is
making an
example of
James for
denouncing a
secret
“bait-and-switch”
program he
was forced
to
participate
in while in
Iraq. In
media
interviews
last year in
Canada,
James
described
the program
as a war
crime he was
forced to
commit.
Shortly
afterward,
the
program’s
details came
out in the
Washington
Post.
“Baiting is
putting an
object out
there that
we know they
will use,
with the
intention of
destroying
the enemy,”
the Post
quoted Capt.
Matthew
Didier,
leader of an
elite sniper
scout
platoon. “We
would put an
item out
there and
watch it. If
someone
found the
item, picked
it up and
attempted to
leave with
the item, we
would engage
the
individual.”
The Post
reported
that “Eugene
Fidell,
president of
the National
Institute of
Military
Justice,
said such a
baiting
program ...
raises
troubling
possibilities,
such as what
happens when
civilians
pick up the
items. ...
‘You might
as well ask
every Iraqi
to walk
around with
a target on
his back,’
Fidell
said.”
(Sept. 24,
2007)
James had
asked to be
classified
as a
conscientious
objector
following
his training
in Germany,
but his
request was
ignored by
his
commander.
Instead, he
became a
machine
gunner. “Our
unit’s job
seemed to be
more about
targeting a
largely
innocent
civilian
population
or
deliberately
attracting
confrontation,”
he wrote in
his
deposition
seeking
asylum in
Canada.
“These
citizens
were almost
always
unarmed. In
some cases
the Iraqi
victims
looked to me
like they
were
children.”
(Eugene
Weekly, May
22)
In Iraq,
Burmeister
had been
knocked
unconscious
and his face
filled with
shrapnel
when his
Humvee was
hit by a
roadside
bomb. The
shrapnel
wounds left
him with a
traumatic
brain
injury, and
he suffers
from severe
Post-Traumatic
Stress
Disorder.
His parents
insist that
he urgently
needs
medical and
psychological
help, not
jail time.
His parents
have waged
an unceasing
struggle for
the Army to
release him.
They called
on their
representative,
Peter
DeFazio, to
launch a
congressional
inquiry into
James’s
case, but
have so far
heard
nothing.
James’
mother,
Helen
Burmeister,
flew to Fort
Knox in
June, with
help from
anti-war
ex-Colonel
Ann Wright.
Helen spoke
directly to
the base
commander
there,
demanding
that her son
be
discharged
in lieu of a
court
martial. She
then joined
supporters
from
Veterans for
Peace and
Vietnam Vets
Against the
War
demonstrating
outside.
On July 8
the Army
invited
Helen to
attend her
son’s court
martial on
July 16.
This time
both she and
her husband
Erich are
going.
They’re
determined
to keep
James out of
jail. “I
bought a
one-way
ticket,”
Erich told
Workers
World. “I’m
not leaving
without my
son. If I
have to sit
outside the
base and
wait for
him, I’ll do
it. Even if
I have to go
on a hunger
strike,
that’s what
I’ll do. My
son does not
deserve
another day
in jail.”
In an
interview
with Courage
to Resist,
Erich said:
“[James]
struggles
with PTSD,
yet he is
quartered
within
earshot of
the shooting
range and
tank
training
area, daily
hearing the
gunfire and
explosions.
He has been
prescribed a
dangerous
cocktail of
anti-psychotic
drugs and
sleep aids
by Army
doctors,
while the
command
decides if
they want to
send him to
prison, as a
coward, a
soldier who
faced death,
and followed
orders to
‘shoot to
kill.’ The
cowards—George
Bush and
Dick Cheney,
those in
Congress and
the generals
with the
blood on
their
hands—why
are they the
punishers
instead of
the
punished?” (couragetoresist.org,
May 12)
Supporters
can contact
the Fort
Knox post
commander,
General
Campbell, to
demand a
speedy
discharge
and no
further
punishment
for James.
Send email
to knox.pao@conus.army.mil,
or call the
Fort Knox
public
affairs
office at
502-624-7451.
Ask that
they
discharge
PFC James
Burmeister
now so that
he can get
the help
that he
needs.
Articles
copyright
1995-2008
Workers
World.
