U.S. Bows Out After Plowshares Conviction is Vacated: Appeals Court Ill-Informed on Nuclear Overkill
Friday,
August 21, 2015 - 23:20 Updated 10 hours ago By John LaForge
The 2012
Transform Now Plowshares anti-nuclear action made the “Fort Knox” of
weapons-grade uranium look like “F Troop.” Three senior peace activists got
through four chain-link fences and past multiple “lethal force” zones before
stringing banners, spray-painting slogans and pouring blood on the
Highly-Enriched Uranium Materials Facility, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee – all
without being noticed by guards.
The
guard that finally spotted the three activists – Sr. Megan Rice, 85, of New
York City, Greg Boertje-Obed, 60, of Duluth, and Michael Walli, 66, of
Washington, D.C. – testified that he knew a peace protest when he saw one. He
had watched a lot of them while on duty at Rocky Flats, the former plutonium
warhead factory near Denver, Colorado. That’s why he shrugged off official
protocol and didn’t draw his gun on Greg, Megan and Michael that night.
Yet the
trial judge, the prosecutor, government witnesses, and the Knoxville,
Tennessee, jury decided to transform symbolic peace protest into “sabotage” –
the “intentional and willful” injuring of “national defense.” The trial judge,
Amul Thapar – after first forbidding any expert defense evidence or testimony
regarding the outlaw status of nuclear weapons production – played his part and
waited for the inevitable default convictions (on sabotage and damage to
property), then ordered the senior citizens jailed pending sentencing because,
he said, the technical terms of the charge fit the definition of a “federal
crime of terrorism.” Commentators howled at the idea of equating sloganeering
and spray painting with bomb building, but the religious pacifists were taken
away in cuffs and ankle chains – just like any dissident in China, Iran or
North Korea.
Finally,
after three years of legal wrangling and 24 months in jail and prison, a
successful appeal decision has hinted at what a kangaroo Kabuki dance the trial
was. Last May, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, voting two-to-one, threw
out the “sabotage” convictions, declaring, “No rational jury could find that
the defendants had that intent [sabotage] when they cut the fences… Nor could a
rational jury find that the defendants had that intent when they engaged in the
protest activities outside.” U.S. Circuit Judge Raymond Kethledge, writing for
the majority said, “It takes more than bad publicity to injure the national
defense.”
The
Appeals Court decision could have been challenged by the Justice Department
with an appeal to all 23 judges of the 6th Circuit, but on June 22 the
government threw in the towel. Re-sentencing on the damage charge is set for
Sept. 15, but no more prison time is expected after the Appeals Court wrote
that the two years already served by Greg, Megan and Michael is “substantially”
more than what federal guidelines require.
Blind
Spot Taints Appeals Court Decision
The
Appeals Court made one grossly ill-informed distinction between the case at
issue and two previous Plowshares actions. In symbolic protests against
Minuteman III nuclear missile silos, the “Silo Pruning Hooks” (Carl Kabat,
Helen Woodson, Paul Kabat, and Larry Cloud Morgan) damaged a concrete silo lid
in Missouri in 1985; and the “Sacred Earth and Space Plowshares” (Sisters
Ardeth Platte, Carol Gilbert, and Jackie Hudson) did symbolic damage to a silo
in Colorado in 2002.
The
Appeals Court claimed that, unlike actions taken at weapons manufacturing
sites, protests against bunkers with armed nuclear weapons on alert like
Minuteman missiles should be characterized as “sabotage” because “even a brief
disruption of operations would have grievously impaired the nation’s ability to
attack and defend. (Imagine, for example, if Soviet [sic] infiltrators had
similarly disrupted the facilities’ operations in the minutes before a Soviet
first strike.)”
This
hypothetical scenario by the Appeals Court betrays a profound ignorance of the
size of the U.S. nuclear arsenal, its diversity, and destructive capacity. The
United States had 450 Minuteman III missiles ready to launch, not just one.
Further,
in addition to dozens of nuclear-armed B-52 and B-2 bombers, the Navy has 14
Trident submarines, each armed with 24 missiles, each of which carry five to
eight nuclear warheads that can fly 6,000 miles. If only four of these
submarines are simultaneously on patrol, their 480-768 warheads could
incinerate every major city on Earth -- not merely those in “Soviet” territory.
Even the
Air Force knows its overkill capacity. A computer glitch at Wyoming’s FE Warren
Air Force Base in October 2010 took 50 Minuteman missiles off-line. Yet,
according to Lt. Gen. Dirk Jameson, Deputy Commander in Chief of Strategic
Command, the shutdown had “no real bearing on the capabilities of our nuclear
forces.” Lt. Col. John Thomas, a spokesman for the Air Force’s Global Strike
Command, said at the time, “The wartime capability of that squadron [of
missiles] was never significantly affected.” The Appeals Court is also ignorant
of the fact that dozens of Minuteman missiles are regularly “disrupted,” for
repairs or upgrades, without any slacking of U.S. nuclear war readiness.
The
Appeals Court cited the testimony of an Air Force Lt. Col. who said, regarding
missile protests, that “it would be unwise to launch the missile in those
circumstances.” And thousands of higher authorities have gone further and said
it would be unwise to launch nuclear attacks under any circumstances. In what
should stand as the last word on the subject, former Reagan Presidential
Adviser and Cold War anti-Soviet hawk Paul Nitze wrote in 1999, “I can think of
no circumstances under which it would be wise for the United States to use
nuclear weapons, even in retaliation for their prior use against U.S. …” This
from arguably the most hawkish of US officials in the Cold War.
John
LaForge, syndicated by PeaceVoice, works for Nukewatch, a nuclear watchdog
group in Wisconsin and edits its Quarterly newsletter.
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-366-1637; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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