A Peace Movement Victory Against Drone
WarfareWednesday, September 22, 2010 at 08:36 AM EDT
In his weekly online column for the
National Catholic Reporter, Fr. John Dear has a wonderful piece about what transpired in court last week when he and
13 others stood trial for protesting the use of drones last year at Creech Air
Force Base, outside of Las Vegas.
At the start of the trial the judge stated that he would not allow
testimony
on international law, the necessity defense or the drones. He only wanted to
hear about the charge of "criminal trespassing."
While the defendant were expecting that the judge wouldn't allow their
expert witnesses to speak, the proceeded to call on Ramsey Clark, former U.S.
attorney general under President Lyndon Johnson; Ann Wright, a retired U.S.
Army colonel and one of three former U.S. State Department officials who
resigned on the eve of the 2003 invasion of Iraq; and Bill Quigley, legal
director for the New York City-based Center for Constitutional Rights to
testify. To their surprise, the judge let them all speak, and their testimony
went on for hours.
Here is an excerpt from a powerful, spontaneous closing statement made by
Brian Terrell of the Des Moines Catholic Worker:
Several of our witnesses have employed the classic metaphor
when
talking of a necessity defense. There's a house on fire, and a child crying
from the window and there's a no trespassing sign on the door. Can one ignore
the sign, kick down the door and rescue the child?It was a great privilege for
us to hear Ramsey Clark, a master of understatement, who put it best. "Letting
a baby burn to death because of a no trespass sign would be poor public
policy."
I submit that the house is on fire and babies are burning in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Pakistan because of the activities at Creech AFB.
The baby is burning also in the persons of the young people who are
operating the drones from Creech AFB, who are suffering from post traumatic
stress disorder at rates that even exceed that of their comrades in combat on
the ground.
[...]
The house is on fire. And we fourteen are ones who have seen the smoke from
the fire and heard the cries of the children. We cannot be deterred by a No
Trespassing sign from going to the burning children.
John Dear describes happened next:
As he finished, Brian burst into tears and sat down. Many in
the
courtroom wept. Then Judge Jansen stunned us by announcing that he needed
three
months to "think about all of this" before he could render a verdict. He
marked
twenty five years on the bench just the day before, he said, and this was his
first trespassing case and he wanted to make the best decision he could. There
is more at stake here than the usual meaning of trespassing, he noted. The
prosecutors were clearly frustrated and disappointed. With that, we were
assigned a court date of January 27, 2011, to hear the verdict. As he left, he
thanked the fourteen of us and the audience, and then seemed to give a
benediction: "Go in peace!" Everyone applauded.
This article originally appeared on Waging Nonviolence. |