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Conscientious objector sets stage for annual gathering
Army Spc. Katherine Jashinski, fighting back tears Thursday as she
explained why she is a conscientious objector, set the tone for this week's
SOA Watch protest just outside the gates of Fort Benning.
What started 15 years ago as a protest to close the School of the Americas,
which trained military personnel from Central and Latin America, is also becoming
an anti-war movement.
Jashinski, a member of the Texas Army National Guard, is fighting deployment
to Afghanistan and seeking a military discharge. A U.S. District Court judge
in San Antonio last week refused to grant the 22-year-old Army cook a temporary
restraining order that would have delayed her deployment to join her unit, already
in Afghanistan. She reported to Fort Benning this week for weapons training.
Father Roy Bourgeois, the Catholic priest who founded the SOA Watch movement,
called Jashinski's actions "courageous."
Jashinski's Fort Benning announcement comes as 15,000 protesters prepare to
gather in Columbus Saturday and Sunday. SOA Watch seeks the closure of the Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, which replaced the School of
the Americas in 2001. The institute is located at Fort Benning.
"We are here in the name of peace -- veterans, nuns, college students,
high school students, parents and grandparents," Bourgeois said Thursday.
"We are here to call for the closing of SOA/WHISC. But we cannot possibly
gather here without addressing the issue of Iraq and Afghanistan."
In the past three years, more anti-war protesters have joined the SOA Watch
protest in Columbus. Bourgeois expects more this year as anti-war sentiment
builds.
"We are not in the minority any longer," Bourgeois said. "The
front pages of this nation's newspapers clearly show that a majority of the
people in our country want this war to stop."
Aimee Allison, a conscientious objector during the Persian Gulf War and one
of Jashinski's advisers, said Jashinski's assignment to Fort Benning the same
week as the SOA Watch protest is a "happy coincidence."
Jashinski, originally from Waukota, Wis., enlisted in the Texas unit in April
2002.
She filed for a conscientious objector discharge in the summer of 2004, about
two months after her unit was activated.
She said her views on war have changed as she has matured.
She said she now must make a choice between "my legal obligation to the
Army and my deepest moral values."
"Because I believe so strongly in nonviolence, I cannot perform any role
in the military," Jashinski said.
Jashinski is scheduled for weapons training today.
"I will exercise every legal right not to pick up a weapon," Jashinski
said.
She said she will continue to seek conscientious objector status, while following
military orders that do not conflict with her beliefs.
"I am prepared to accept the consequences for adhering to my beliefs,"
Jashinski said.
In a ruling last week, U.S. District Judge Orlando Garcia said granting Jashinski
a temporary restraining order would cause substantial harm to the Army.
"The interests of one soldier do not outweigh the interests of an entire
country," the judge said.
"What she is doing is more courageous than going to war," Bourgeois
said as he and other anti-war protesters stood at Jashinski's side Thursday
morning at the main gate to Fort Benning.
Jerry White, a retired general and former commander of Fort Benning, served
two combat tours in Vietnam.
He does not see the courage in Jashinski's linking her cause to the SOA Watch
protest.
"It is obviously disgusting," White said. "You have got a soldier
protesting against the cause where her fellow soldiers are fighting and giving
their lives. Being a soldier and jeopardizing the lives of other soldiers is
intolerable and disgusting."
White said the SOA Watch protest has now clearly become an anti-war effort.
"It is absolutely an anti-war movement," White said. "If for
some reason they were to close the SOA, we would probably still be here. This
is a protest against the SOA, against the war in Iraq and God knows what else."