Background: the view from Germany

Berlin, May 26, 2009. Early in June, President Barack Obama will sign into law the

supplemental funding of 92 billion U.S. dollars for the wars in Iraq,

Afghanistan, and Pakistan that was approved by the U.S. Congress last week.

Then he will depart for a speaking tour and meetings with heads of state in

Egypt and in Europe.

On June 5th, he will be coming to visit us here in Germany,

making stops at the concentration camp at Buchenwald, at Weimar, and at

Dresden, a site also of massive bombings of civilians during World War II. This

will be Obama's third visit to Germany in less than a year, and it seems likely

that he will once again, as in the previous two visits, make a pitch for more

German support for the ongoing "war against terror," particularly in

Afghanistan. Though Obama is popular here, the German government has for the

most part stonewalled his requests for further direct German involvement in

these wars.

The well-known German ambivalence towards the U.S.

"war against terror" is now being further tested by a U.S. soldier's

application for asylum in Germany. André Shepherd, who was stationed in

Germany, refuses to deploy to Iraq. Many U.S. soldiers stationed in Europe who

refused service in or support of the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan have been

tried in U.S. military courts in Europe and imprisoned in the U.S. military's

correctional facility at Mannheim; the most well known are Blake Lemoine (2005)

and Agustín Aguayo (2006-2007).

But

Shepherd is so far the first to turn to the

German government for help: last November he filed a formal application

to the German government for asylum. For the moment his case is

entirely outside of U.S.

jurisdiction.

Shepherd argues that there are strong reasons arising from

Germany's history for Germany to grant him asylum: the Nuremberg Principles and

the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Germany that has provisions written

in the spirit of Nuremberg. In 2005 the highest German administrative court

upheld a German military officer's right to refuse orders in 2003 to provide

software that might have been used by the U.S. for logistics during the

invasion of Iraq.

Shepherd's case is of significance in part because of

the strategic importance of the bases in Germany for the U.S. wars in the

Middle East. Outside of Iraq and Afghanistan,

the U.S. has far more bases in Germany than in any other country; ca. 68,000

U.S. troops are stationed at U.S. bases throughout southern Germany.

Approximately 80% of the soldiers and supplies to the war zones are routed

through Germany, which also hosts the Pentagon's commands for Africa (AFRICOM)

and for Europe and the former Soviet Union (EUCOM).

As

a sovereign nation, Germany could at any time restrict use of the U.S.

bases, as Turkey, also a NATO member, did in 2003. The German

government refused to provide its own troops for the Iraq war, which

did not have a UN mandate. But the German government interpreted the

NATO treaties as allowing the U.S. to use the U.S. bases in Germany for

the invasion of Iraq.

According

to a 2005 survey conducted by the German military

(Bundeswehr), 68% of the Germans polled oppose the use of war to solve

any

international conflict; in contrast ca. 90% of U.S. citizens support

the use of

war. Per numerous surveys, a majority of Germans oppose German

participation in the war in

Afghanistan. In the campaigns leading up to the parliamentary election

in September, it is likely that at least one parliamentary party will

call for the closing of all foreign military bases on German soil.

André Shepherd, 32, grew up in Ohio, where he

attended college. Like President Obama, he is an African-American. In 2003,

when unemployed, he joined the U.S. Army. He was trained as an Apache

helicopter mechanic and was stationed in Germany at the U.S. Army's

Ansbach-Katterbach base. From there he was deployed in 2004 to Iraq for six

months. In 2007, back in Germany, he received orders to return to Iraq. In

April 2007, he went absent without leave (AWOL) and lived underground in

Germany. He formally applied for asylum in Germany on November 26, 2008. His

application references a directive of the European Union under which soldiers

must be granted asylum in the E.U. if they have reason to fear persecution in

their home countries for refusing to participate in crimes or actions that

violate international law. Shepherd is

currently living in an asylum facility in western Germany together

with other asylum applicants, primarily from Iraq and Afghanistan;

the facility and a small living stipend are provided by the

German government pending the outcome of his case.

This interview was previously published in the national German daily newspaper junge Welt on May 23, 2009, the 60th anniversary of the German Constitution.

Since the "war on terror" began, there have been

many U.S. soldiers who have spoken out and many who have refused to serve. But

you are the first so far to apply for asylum in Germany. What are the grounds

on which your application is based?

Well, it's very simple: In the war of aggression against

the Iraqi people, the United States violated not only domestic law, but

international law as well. The U.S. government has deceived not only the American

public, but also the international community, the Iraqi community, as well as

the military community. And the atrocities that have been committed there these

past six years are great breaches of the Geneva Conventions. My applying for

asylum is based on the grounds that international law has been broken and that

I do not want to be forced to fight in an illegal war.

In your asylum application, you mention the

Principles of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, which were

incorporated in the UN Charter. In Nuremberg, the chief U.S. prosecutor, Robert

H. Jackson, stated: "To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an

international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from

other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the

whole." In opening the trial on behalf of the United States, he stated

that "while this law is first applied against German aggressors, this law

includes and if it is to serve a useful purpose it must condemn aggression by

any other nations, including those which sit here now in judgment." What

does Nuremberg mean to you?

The Nuremberg statutes are the foundation of many U.S.

soldiers' refusal of the Iraq war, and to some extent of the Afghanistan war.

The United States with its Allies after World War II crafted these laws stating

that even though you've gotten orders to commit crimes against humanity, you

don't have to follow them, because every person has their own conscience. That

was more than 60 years ago. Today the U.S. government seems to be under the

impression that those rules do not apply to it. In invading Iraq, they did not

wait for a UN mandate, they didn't let the inspectors do their job, and they

made up stories about who's a real threat. This totally violated everything

stated in the Nuremberg statutes. The U.S. Constitution states that the U.S. is

bound to our international treaties, for example with the UN. When we ignore

the UN, we are violating the U.S. Constitution, which every U.S. soldier is

sworn to uphold. And the U.S. must also respect our own very strict laws

against war crimes and torture. Since the Obama administration refuses to

investigate and prosecute the previous administration, it's clear to me that

the Obama administration is an accomplice to the previous administration's

crimes. They're setting a very dangerous precedent for the future of the world,

something I don't want to see. The German people are well aware of the history;

it is here that the Nuremberg tenets were first set down. Now we have to find a

way to restore those tenets, to actually respect the Nuremberg tenets as well

as the Geneva Conventions. Germany needs to tell the U.S., "Look, you guys

helped create these laws, and now you guys should abide by your own rules. "

When you were stationed in Ansbach-Katterbach,

were you aware of the German citizens' campaign to prevent the U.S. from

enlarging the base there?

Yes, there were protests outside of the Katterbach base.

Being inside, we understood that the German people weren't against us as

soldiers. They were just protesting against Germany's further involvement in

U.S. imperialism. So the relationship between us Americans and the Germans

working on the base was actually still good. We were of course not allowed to join

the protests. I am sure the U.S. military assumed that 50% of the GIs would

have been out there protesting. A lot of the

soldiers understand what is going on - to the point that we realize that we are

just a mercenary army for a few rich people. But a significant number of GIs,

about 60%, have families, so it's very difficult for them to go AWOL or make

massive resistance.

As part of their protest, the citizens of Ansbach

and Katterbach circulated a petition citing Article 26 of the German

Constitution, pronounced 60 years ago on May 23rd, 1949, in the Basic Law of

the Federal Republic of Germany. Article 26 states that the preparation of

aggressive war from German soil is unconstitutional and a criminal offense. In

Kaiserslautern and in Ramstein, where there are also U.S. bases, there were

also petitions circulated citing this Article. These German believe that the

U.S. is violating the German Constitution by preparing aggressive war from

German soil. Were the GIs aware of this provision of the German Constitution?

We received almost no information about the German

Constitution at all. This seems strange to me, because if we're supposedly in

Germany to defend German democracy, shouldn't we know something about it? The

fact is that wherever U.S. soldiers are sent, they are taught almost nothing

about the people, the culture, the beliefs and laws in the countries we are

occupying. When I was in Iraq, they didn't teach us any Arabic. In Ansbach,

they do offer an optional German course, but we work long hours speaking

English all day, so most GIs don't learn much German. Now that I have been

living among Germans for the past eighteen months, I have learned that very

many of them are very much against using war to solve international problems or

to aggress against people. This comes from what they've learned from their own

history. Article 26 of the German Constitution was written in the spirit of the

Nuremberg statutes, which state that launching an aggressive war is the most

serious crime. The U.S. and the Western Allies approved and authorized the

German Constitution. How can the U.S. say we are here in Germany to defend

democracy when we are ignoring and violating not only the Nuremberg statutes

and the Geneva Conventions and the U.S. Constitution, but also the German

Constitution?

What is your understanding of why Germany is

allowing the U.S. to conduct these wars from German soil?

Honestly, I cannot answer that: you could look at it

from the political side; you could look at it from the economic side. Or maybe

Germany just has a hands-off approach: "You guys are paying the gas, you guys

are paying us for the rental space, so you guys just do your thing, and we're

not going to do anything about it."

So in filing this application for asylum, it's not

just about finding a place to live or something like that: you're trying to

raise a larger historical and political principle?

Yes, that's correct, because it is my sincere belief

that the United States has gone too far. In Iraq alone 1.3 million people have

died so far, and that includes American soldiers as well. We've attacked

several countries over the past eight or nine years: Afghanistan, Syria,

Pakistan, Iraq, and some places in the Sudan. All over the world, we're just

destroying property and killing people, all based on lies. And I feel like that

I have to do everything I can to help put an end to this. I feel guilty enough

for having taken a part in this war for almost five years. I want to be able to

atone for that.

Why didn't you go through the U.S. legal system

and apply to the Army for conscientious objector status?

When I asked my NCO (officer) about applying as a CO

(conscientious objector), he told me that you have to be against fighting in

all wars of every form. And that doesn't work for me, because of course if

you're being overrun by a foreign invader, you would have to fight back.

According to U.S. Army regulations, this means you are not a conscientious

objector. I also learned of the case of Agustín Aguayo and saw how the military

treated him. He was based Schweinfurt, Germany, not far from where I was in

Ansbach. He tried to go through the military procedures to be recognized as a

conscientious objector, and he refused to load his weapon. Twice he turned

himself in to the U.S. authorities and said, "Look, I'm a CO, and I can't do

this." But the military wanted to force him to go back and fight anyway.

Ultimately they put him in jail in Mannheim. This showed me that I could not

expect any help from within the military, and I decided to fight for my rights

from the outside.

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Can you think of any moment when you suddenly

realized, "What I'm doing here is wrong?"

I can't pick only one moment, because this was a process

that went on for years. Falludja was one. Looking at the aftermath of that

battle, especially what the Marines, and the Air Force, and the Apache

helicopters did to that city -- the devastation caused by these machines and

the air war, also in Basra and in many other Iraqi cities -- I realized that if

it weren't for my work and the work of the other mechanics, those Apaches

wouldn't have gotten very far. We were constantly working, 12 hours a day, 6

days a week, to make sure this sophisticated equipment continued to fly,

especially in the hard conditions in Iraq with all the sand storms and the

temperature changes from 140 degrees in the day to 60 at night. Had we, the

mechanics of these aircraft, not done our jobs and refused from the beginning

to take part in this war, a lot of those people would still be alive, and a lot

of the infrastructure in Iraq would still be functioning.

And then there was when one of the Iraqi guys working

for the U.S. Army on our sandbags told me how he didn't understand why we were

destroying their city, destroying their infrastructure, arresting people. And

I'm just standing there like "what?!" I can't believe this stuff is happening,

because I thought the military is supposed to be fighting for the rights of

people. They're not supposed to torture. They're the ones who are supposed to

get rid of the torturers and to stop the rapists and to help people to have a

better life. And when I heard what we're really doing - it just turns your

whole world upside down!

And then there are the 937 lies of George W. Bush to the

American people: you just feel like a fool, because we signed up to do X, but

we wound up doing Y and Z and who knows what else. We killed people; some of

our people got killed. An entire country, two countries, are completely

destroyed. I keep wondering: what was this all for?

Ask anybody, why are we in Iraq? And you hear several

theories: Israel, oil, strategic purposes for Iran, whatever, but no one really

has the answer. Same thing in Afghanistan: the NATO mission only went to

Afghanistan because of U.S. insistence. We have to force the U.S. to clarify

what the actual objective in Afghanistan is. Are they there to help out the

drug dealers cultivating heroin, or for the Unical pipeline, or are they there

just to have a forward base to go into China or Russia? Why are we there?

Do you think President Obama is going to change

any of this?

No. Obama has the backing of the international

corporations. And the people who gave him the most money are the ones whose

interests are going to be served first. And it's quite obvious. He won't go

after the prior administration for the war crimes; he won't pull out of Iraq.

He's leaving 50,000 soldiers to conduct combat missions in Iraq. That means the

war is continuing. He wants to escalate the war in Afghanistan. He wants to

keep pushing for AFRICOM, the U.S. command for Africa based in Stuttgart, and

he's pushing for the missile shield to try to encircle Russia and Iran. These

things show me that Barack Obama is not going to change anything. And Obama is

only one guy. He still has to deal with the entire Congress, the court system,

the Pentagon. The military has been around for over 220 some years, and they're

not going to change overnight just because there's a new Commander-in-Chief.

They're still arresting people who refuse to fight. They're still putting them in

jail, giving them dishonorable discharges, and some are facing possible felony

convictions. But Obama has yet to speak of the growing number of soldiers

refusing to fight for him - well, first Bush, and now him. So I don't see

President Obama granting anyone clemency until the entire "war on terror" is

finished, and Afghanistan and Iraq are part of the same war.

How is your asylum application progressing?

We had a hearing on the 4th of February with

my attorney, Dr. Reinhard Marx, and myself at the Federal Office of Migration

and Immigration. Dr. Marx was recommended to me by Amnesty International. I

believe that we presented our case very well, and we're waiting to see what the

decision is. If the Office of Migration and Immigration were to deny my request

for asylum, then I would bring my case to court in Germany. Because of the

political sensitivity of this case, and because this is a precedent-setting

case, it could take a lot of time.

Many U.S. soldiers who have fled the military are

living underground in the U.S. and dozens more are likely in Europe. In Canada,

many of them have applied for asylum, but since last summer they are being

deported and then imprisoned in the U.S. What if Germany rejects your asylum

application?

Then I'm facing a U.S. military court martial and jail

time. I'm not saying I would go back to the U.S. willingly; I would still try

to find another way to build a life somewhere.

What if you are granted asylum in Germany?

The day I am legally allowed to go to the German

Employment Office, I will probably camp outside so I can be the first one in

there, because being 32 years old and healthy, I feel I should be able to make

my own way. I'm taking classes to learn German, and I'm trying to get into the

University of Karlsruhe so that I can study computer science. I want to get the

Bachelor's or even the Master's so that I can eventually start my own business.

My ultimate dream job would be to work with German and Japanese companies,

which are the foremost leaders in information technology, to develop artificial

intelligence.

If Germany granted you asylum, would large numbers

of GIs who are stationed here start walking off the bases?

I would see maybe like 100 or 200, but I don't see

30,000 soldiers applying for asylum in Germany. It's no easy thing, because

you're basically saying goodbye to your country, perhaps for the rest of your

life. That's a really big step. You have to say goodbye to your family. You've

got to learn a new language and try to fit into the culture. You've got to deal

with homesickness. It is a very important personal step that a lot of soldiers

would find difficult.

But you are taking all these difficulties upon

yourself. Why do you feel called to do this?

Because I was sick of watching the United States degenerate

into something I can't even recognize anymore. The America that I grew up in

isn't there anymore. Between Clinton, Bush, and now Obama, the U.S. is sliding

from the constitutional republic that it was to where now the corporations are

just taking all the fruits of the American people's labor; the country's really

poor, we've got endless war everywhere. 60 years from now people will be saying

that we were the country that destroyed half the Middle East for nothing.

They're building up a civilian corps that'll spy and turn in everybody, you

know, like a modern day Stasi. These things are very disturbing. This is a

country that I don't want to live in or raise my future children in. America's

going down the exact same path as the Roman Empire, and it's really sad, having

grown up there, to watch the destruction slowly happen before your eyes.

Sometimes you feel, no matter what you do, it's going to happen anyway. There

have been many people before who have been sounding the alarm bells, many peace

organizations. And I want to help, put my hand in and try to stop it as well.

And this is something that's been building up over time, because I'm totally

hurt. I feel cheated. I feel lied to. You know, I helped murder people in Iraq

for nothing. These are things I'm not proud of whatsoever, and I want to be

able to turn this around and bring the people ultimately responsible for this

to justice. Because had I known back then what I know now, I never would have

signed up in the first place.

What can people do to help you?

Help raise awareness internationally, because this is

not just about me. It's about the other soldiers as well. We're all in this

together. And especially it's about the Iraqi people, the Afghan people, the

dead soldiers, just everyone. Organizations people can contact are Military

Counseling Network (MCN) or Connection e.V., Tübingen Progressive Americans,

Munich American Peace Committee, Iraq Veterans Against the War, and it's good

to contact with DFG-VK in Germany - they're a national organization. Right now

we're collecting letters to give to the German government to show the support

of the German people. The German government also needs to know that Americans

and people from other countries support my request for asylum. This is an

international problem, and I believe in an international solution.

To support André Shepherd, contact:

girights-germany@dfg-vk.de

or see www.connection-ev.de

***

Elsa Rassbach is U.S. citizen, filmmaker and

journalist who often lives and works in Berlin, Germany. She co-founded

American Voices Abroad Military Project, an initiative to support GIs who

resist in Europe, and she is active in DFG-VK (the German affiliate of War Resisters

International, WRI) as well as in Code Pink and the International Committee of

United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ). Her award-winning film, "The Killing

Floor," set in the Chicago Stockyards, will be re-released this year.

Translation into German by Eva Brückner-Tuckwiller.

Both photos: Credit: Connection e.V.