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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005. If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author directly. If you have questions about the archives, email rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, send email to [log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the body (drop the "").
(Feb 2006) Thank you. Elliott Parker ====================================================================
SOLDIER OR CITIZEN IN THE DIGITAL AGE?
How access to technology and the Embedded Media Program effect First Amendment protections for speech and the military's authority to restrict it
Anaklara Hering College of Journalism and Communications University of Florida
2360 S.W. Archer Road, Apt 109 Gainesville, FL 32608 760-458-7455 [log in to unmask]
AV Requirements: laptop equipped with PowerPoint and projector
SOLDIER OR CITIZEN IN THE DIGITAL AGE?
How access to technology and the Embedded Media Program effect First Amendment protections for speech and the military's authority to restrict it
When defining First Amendment protections for military personnel, courts balance the need for a viable military against preservation of rights for those called to arms. Most often, national security wins at the expense of speech, however embedded war correspondents and sophisticated communication devices present challenges to these precedents. This article explains the rationale that holds service members as soldiers first and citizens second and proposes education before the press loses its access to the battlefield.
Introduction The 2003 U.S.-led war in Iraq ushered in an era of warfare distinguished by unprecedented media coverage of the battlefield and access to sophisticated communication technology, like the Internet and cellular telephony.[1] Virtual lines of communication ran directly from bunkers in Baghdad to living rooms across America. Additionally, the advent of the Department of Defense (DOD)-sanctioned Embedded Media program[2] placed journalists and photographers on the battlefield, gave them direct access to troops, and created an environment devoid of the government censorship characteristic of conflicts since the Vietnam War. These two developments combined– service members' access to communication technology and media access to the battlefield –created an environment ripe with opportunities for individual service members to communicate with the world. Regardless of these newfound outlets for speech, stringent military regulations exist that restrict the speech of service members. Content-based restrictions limit service members from expression that would otherwise be constitutionally protected.[3] The distinction that generates this free-speech debate from others involving civilians is that members of the U.S. Armed Forces do not, by necessity, traditionally warrant the same constitutional protections for their speech as do non-military citizens, a standard upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. The dichotomy between a service member's constitutionally protected right to express him and the restrictions against him make a discussion on "free speech in the military" an oxymoron. However, new considerations now refuel the debate about constitutional protections for the speech of service members. Consider the latest developments surrounding access to technology and media access to the battlefield. From the basic infantryman to the intelligence officer, cellular telephony, satellite communications, and the Internet are all elements of current military training. In the last decade, these technological tools were elevated from obscurities to essential components of the battlefield. They now serve to characterize the generation of soldiers fighting the War on Terror.[4] ManyM Increased access to such tools while in a combat zone revolutionized communication between the soldier and the home front. Thus, the opportunity for a service member to express his opinion about the conflict was as close as the nearest computer or embedded reporter. The embedded media during the Iraq interviewed service members about longings for home and loved ones. These are the stories U.S. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld anticipated when he initiated the Embedded Media Program in early 2003.[5] But other service members made statements that, at times, were critical of U.S. policies surrounding the conflict; some even spoke about ground operations sensitive to the mission. In addition to the civilian statutory and common laws, service members abide by an additional set of government regulations known as the Uniform Code of Military Justice (U.C.M.J.). The U.C.M.J. contains specific regulations restricting speech for service members in specified circumstances.[6] A comparison of the protections provided by the Constitution and the restrictions imposed by military regulation reveals a legal paradox for Americans serving in the Armed Forces. At a time when technology facilitates the global communication of ideas and opinions and when the media has been granted uncensored access to the battlefield, service members are literally teased with opportunities to speak about their war-time experiences. Nonetheless, they are restrained, in part, by the very Constitution they swear to defend.[7] The pertinent question is how the two media developments that surfaced during the Iraq War- service members access to communication technology for personal use and the Embedded Media program – influence the free-speech debate. The combined presence of both media and technology during the Iraq War resulted in obvious changes in the style and efficacy in which the media covered U.S. military operations abroad. That, however, is beyond the scope of this article. Less apparent, but worth examination, is the effect that access to technology and media access to troops has on the legal argument for regulating the speech of service members. The Iraq War was the first time that the low-ranking private, just like the four-star general, could address the world directly from his gun turret, command center, or hospital bed. Take, for example, a July, 2004 Knight-Ridder newspaper story that quoted Army Staff Sergeant A.J. Dean while he patrolled outside Ramadi, Iraq. [8] I don't have any idea of what we're trying to do out here. I don't know what the [goal] is, and I don't think our commanders do either. I feel deceived personally. I don't trust anything [Secretary of Defense Donald] Rumsfeld says, and I think [Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul] Wolfowitz is even dirtier.[9]
Dean received minimal unit-level punishment for his insubordinate speech.[10] In conflicts previous to the Iraqi War, though, other service members who made critical statements similar in nature were punished under the criminal codes of the military justice system. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld military decisions that punished insubordinate speech, but these decisions were made in an environment and time devoid of the communications technologies and media presence that are characteristic of current combat operations in which Dean served. This article will examine how increased access to communication technology and the development of the Embedded Media program challenge military regulations on free speech. The article is organized into three parts. Part II provides the historical background of court decisions dealing with military speech. Section A describes the structure of the military system of justice, including its similarities to and differences from the civilian judiciary. This section explains the source for the government's authority to regulate service members' speech. Also explained are the avenues of appeal available to service members charged with violations of these regulations. Evidence is presented to support a critical argument for skepticism about the fairness of adjudication in the military courts. Section B examines the courts' balance of free speech and national security. Schenk v. United States,[11] is the seminal case that established the "clear and present danger" precedent that would characterize decades of rulings on service members' speech. Subsequent cases are discussed and establish the evolution of the "clear and present danger" test. Cases where the Supreme Court dealt specifically with members of the Armed Forces are examined in the context of the "clear and present danger" precedent. Section C provides evidence of the internal disparity within the U.S. Constitution in regard to free speech. When compared to the principles in the Bill of Rights, contradictions are revealed that complicate the argument surrounding speech in the military. The complexities of the free speech debate are rooted in the actual design of the military system. Part III has two main sections that frame the communications in combat paradigm for the media and the service member. Section A discusses the Embedded Media Program as a radical change from military-media relations of the twentieth century. It explains the advantage today's war correspondents have over those who operated under more restrictive Department of Defense (DOD) press policies and how advanced communications technology has revolutionized he role the media plays in the free speech debate. Section B discusses the communications paradigm from the service member's perspective. It provides a selected review of incidents since the 1992 Persian Gulf War involving American military service members whose speech was critical of U.S. military policies, the government, and its leaders. This review also includes the stories of service members who spoke about their wartime experiences from a personal perspective. While the content of all these incidents could be considered as violations of the U.C.M.J. restrictions against speech in various degrees, some were prosecuted by the military, while others were not. The rationale behind the selective punishment is not apparent, only that prosecution of insubordinate speech has become less frequent since the Iraq War began. The author proposes that the military is taking a less aggressive stance toward questionable speech because of the prevalence of communication technology and the intrusive nature of the Embedded Media Program. Part IV discusses the contradictions that exist between the theory of military supremacy over individual rights and the practice of actually regulating service members' speech. The author compares legal precedent in military regulation of speech and the most recent and relevant incidents that have occurred. The author concludes in this section with the finding that adjudication of military violations – or the lack there of – suggest that burgeoning influences of the Digital Age and Embedded Media program are changing the free-speech debate for military service members.
Part I- Historical background of court decisions on military speech
A. The independent military judiciary Control of the military is directed specifically in the U.S. Constitution to be a function of the executive branch and the Congress. Article I of the Constitution grants Congress the power "To declare War…To raise and support Armies…To provide and maintain a Navy; To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces."[12] Article II appoints the President the Commander in Chief of the Army and the Navy.[13] While the legislative and executive branches are each distinctly named with oversight on the military, the role of the judiciary is absent, thus allowing the military to operate an independent court system. An independent military judiciary has existed since colonists founded the United States as a sovereign nation.[14] Within the criminal code designed to govern the members of the military, known as the Articles of War, the unit commander had the authority to use courts-martial proceedings at his discretion as a means by which to discipline his troops. This system of military justice prevailed until World War II (WWII) during which a greater number of Americans were members of the Armed Forces than at any time previously in the U.S. Subsequently, the number of courts-martial also rose to a higher number than ever before. This aberration was followed by a backlash from the American public, a reaction to what was considered an arbitrary military system of justice. Congress reacted by replacing the obsolete Articles of War with a Uniform Code of Military Justice (U.C.M.J). The new regulations attempted to streamline military law. The goal was to create a parallel system similar to the civilian judiciary. Despite efforts to revise the military courts into a more objective system than what the Articles of War offered, an arbitrary method of justice prevails today in the U.C.M.J. The authoritarian structure of the chain of command makes it the responsibility of the commander to apply the laws and regulations of the U.C.M.J. according to his own best judgement. Within this separate justice system, service members abide by additional regulations beyond what is provided by civilian law. This article will specifically discuss military regulations that curtail expression.[15] Though service members are subject to the regulations like these, they are nonetheless still afforded other protections by the Bill of Rights. Herein lays the internal disparity of the U.S. Constitution. The Articles of the Constitution provide the authority for a separate military judiciary, and indirectly the U.C.M.J., which restricts the speech of service members. Simultaneously, the First Amendment contained in the Bill of Rights provides for the protection of speech. For example, the U.C.M.J. specifically restricts expression – be it in the form of speech, press, assembly or petition - that is harmful to the viability of the Armed Forces, disrespectful to the Commander in Chief and the chain of command, or a threat to national security.[16] Within the same document, the First Amendment provides, in part, that "Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble."[17] The internal contradiction found within the Constitution is the crux of the conflict that has resulted in U.S. Supreme Court intervention in several cases involving protected speech for members of the military. A review of the cases, which is provided in later sections of this article, reveals the ambiguous language used when the Court first attempted to define free speech standards for military personnel in the 1950s. Subsequent decisions on the same issue disclose the lack of assertiveness on the part of the Court to dictate strict standards of application for the military when it attempts to restrict the speech of its service members. The formal guidance for commanders on the subject of free speech is limited. One example is a 1969 DOD directive that ordered commanders to preserve free speech "to the maximum extent possible."[18] The directive offered no further test or standard by which this goal was to be met thereby exacting the personal tolerance of the commander as the litmus test for what speech was acceptable. The military system has a two-tiered system of adjudication with an option for courts-martial and judicial punishment or the option of non-judicial punishment for lesser offenses.[19] Either way, the application of the system is subject to the commander's opinion of what is appropriate. There is a system of appeals which eventually leads the service member into a civilian court, but it is preceded by the Court of Military Review, which is manned by military judge advocates. Only the highest court in the military justice system, the United States Court of Military Appeals is considered a civilian court, and its sole authority rests in the review of errors of law in courts-martial proceedings.[20] It was not until the 1950s that the U.S. Supreme Court began significant review of military court decisions with alleged constitutional violations.[21] Critics of the military system of Courts-Martial are skeptical of the subjective authority commanders are empowered to employ in order to maintain the good order and discipline necessary to support a viable military force.
B. U.S. Supreme Court balances free speech and national security: From Schenk to Priest Just as there are restrictions on speech in the military, limits on the speech of civilians also exist. In the 1919 case of Schenck v. United States, Justice Oliver Wendell Homes stated, "The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater, and causing a panic."[22] The Court ruled in Schenk that the right to exercise free speech must be examined in the context of its circumstances. The effect of that speech, not necessarily the content, is at question. Justice Holmes stated that: The question in every case is whether the words are used in such circumstances and are of such nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has the right to prevent.[23]
This rationale became known as the "clear and present danger test" and would remain the precedent for adjudication of First Amendment challenges –both civilian and military- until the late 1960s. The adoption of a secondary standard for speech challenges was rooted in the 1951 case of Dennis v. United States.[24] The dissenting opinion of Justice William O. Douglas argued that it was not enough for speech to merely advocate actions that could be dangerous to national security, as the Holmes doctrine had purported. Douglas said that immediate injury to society must be a likely result of the speech in question. Almost two decades later in 1969 the dicta of Justice Douglas was adopted in Brandenburg v. Ohio.[25] In Brandenburg the Court established a new rule of law in which punishable speech must "incit[e] or produc[e] imminent lawless action."[26] Neither the Schenk nor the Brandenburg decisions defined rules of application for these standards to the military. Regardless, both standards were continually cited as precedent in subsequent cases involving the speech of military personnel. This test would become the benchmark standard by which future military cases involving the speech of military personnel would be judged. Safeguarding national security would become the de facto affirmative defense for the military when it attempted to restrict the speech of a service member. This difficult-to-define term "national security" favored the silencer over the silenced. Senior officials in the nation's military and civilian leadership agreed on a loose definition of the term describing it as the military's ability to maintain its combat readiness for a decisive, immediate, and coordinated response to any threat to the national interest.[27] The 1953 adjudication of Burns v. Wilson by the U.S. Supreme Court was the first decision that recognized individual rights, as represented in the Bill of Rights, for military service personnel[28]. Although these rights were not considered absolute, this case served to distinguish a service member's right to eventually access civilian judicial review of military cases. It did not, however, address the five tenets of the First Amendment– speech, religion, assembly, petition, and press- specifically. In the 1954 case of United States v. Voorhees,[29] Judge George W. Latimer stated in a separate opinion: Undoubtedly, we should not deny to servicemen any right that can be given reasonably. But, in measuring reasonableness, we should bear in mind that military units have one purpose justifying their existence: to prepare themselves for war and to wage it successfully. That purpose must never be overlooked.[30]
Judge Latimer's reasoning is indicative of the kind of credence given to the military's system of order and discipline, especially in the regulation of subversive speech. It is not disputed that the military maintains command and control through an authoritarian structure. Hypothetically, then, unrestricted speech within the military, an approach at one extreme of the spectrum, would be counter-productive to order and discipline. Acknowledging this does not automatically condone, however, a line of reasoning at the other end of the extreme that would stifle any expressive speech what so ever. This camp would posit the idea that unrestricted speech in the military is automatically analogous to insubordination that poses a threat to national security. The responsibility goes to the courts to decide where the medium between these two extremes lies. The U.S. Supreme Court made its willingness to subvert individual rights for the sake of national security clear beginning with the Schenk decision. Later Courts followed suit with the opinions in Dennis and Brandenburg, which addressed civilian speech, and later with Voorhees. The medium between these two extremes, the Court ruled, was not based the service member's right to expression, pursuit of self-fulfillment, or position in the market place of ideas. It was a matter of military viability. With these Supreme Court decisions, the military retained its authority to restrict –in its subjective system of military justice- a service member's speech. Nearly 20 years later in 1974, the issue of First Amendment rights in particular was argued in the U.S. Supreme Court in Parker v. Levy.[31] It was the first case to address service member's First Amendment rights specifically and thus remains a significant case in this area of constitutional law.[32] Captain Levy was a military officer and doctor responsible for training medical personnel who were preparing for deployment to the Vietnam War. Levy was an outspoken critic of the war and made overt actions to ensure his students were aware of his views. Although he completed his teaching duties and trained the majority of his military students, he refused to train Special Forces personnel. As a result of his insubordinate actions and refusal follow orders, Levy was court-martialed by the Army for "conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman"[33] and "disorder and neglects to the prejudice of good order and discipline in the armed forces."[34] Levy argued that the two articles of the U.C.M.J., by which he was charged, were vague and overbroad according to the strict scrutiny test, and therefore in violation of the First Amendment. In the final appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court held that Levy's conduct "was unprotected under the most expansive notions of the First Amendment."[35] The Court found that the war-time context of Levy's speech was crucial in their decision to determine that the military had a compelling state interest, which was to sustain the good order and discipline of the military, and that it was sufficient to suppress Levy's speech. A clear disparity in the adjudication of Parker was the Court's unwillingness to allow Levy to provide arguments from the perspectives of other possible challengers to the statute. This practice is often used in challenges to overbreadth and vagueness[36] and is used to determine whether or not the statute would be unconstitutional if applied to someone other than the defendant.[37] The standards that the military was expected to meet to show a compelling interest were far more lenient than what was necessary in a civilian court. Additionally, the Court did not apply strict scrutiny in its analysis of the U.C.M.J. to determine whether or not the articles with which Levy was charged were narrowly crafted in a manner that was not overbroad and vague.[38] Had the Court applied the traditional standards used in prior civilian First Amendment challenges, perhaps it would have found Levy's speech was indeed protected by the First Amendment. The Court stated in its opinion that: [w]hile the members of the military are not excluded from the protection granted by the first amendment, the different character of the military community and of the military mission required a different application of those protections.[39] This was only partial clarification to the First Amendment question. According to the Court's ruling in Parker, the commander's discretion remained the standard by which to establish a compelling interest and neither the degree of overbreadth nor vagueness of the military code were examined.[40] The Court's decision has been criticized as being overly restrictive of service member's individual rights.[41] Nonetheless, subsequent rulings continued to rely on the precedent established in Parker as justification for suppressing service members' First Amendment rights to free speech.
C. Self-contradiction in the U.S. Constitution A particular case in 1967 highlights the strict application of speech restrictions on military personnel. In United States v. Howe, 17 U.C.M.A. 165, 37 C.M.R. 429 (1967), an Army second lieutenant was convicted in a courts-martial of violating articles 88 and 133 of the U.C.M.J. These articles prohibited the use of contemptuous words against the President and conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentlemen. While stationed at Fort Bliss, Texas, he participated in a peaceable demonstration in El Paso. Military police present at the protest observed him carrying a sign that read: "Let's have more than a choice between petty ignorant fascists in 1968." The reverse side of the sign read: "End Johnson's fascist aggression in Vietnam." Second Lieutenant Howe appealed his conviction to the Court of Military Appeals. In his argument, he claimed that the charges against him violated his First Amendment rights.[42] The military high court affirmed the conviction citing something related to the "clear and present danger" precedent. It cited a precedent that asserted the need for civilian control over the military. Restrictions on the free speech of military service members, especially contemptuous speech toward the nation's civilian and military leadership, are regarded as threatening to national security since they are directed at inciting a coup against the civilian government, the standard produced in Brandenburg. This relationship between the civilian government and the military is rooted in the 1775 Articles of War.[43] An opinion in a later case, United States v. Priest, 21 U.S.C.M.A. 564, 16 C.M.R. 338 (1972), succinctly ties together the themes upon which the courts have upheld the constitutionality of speech restrictions on military personnel. In the armed forces some restrictions exist for reasons that have no counterpart in the civilian community…In military life, however, other considerations must be weighed. The armed forces depend on a command structure that at times must commit men to combat…speech that is protected in the civil population may nonetheless undermine the effectiveness of response to command. If it does, it is constitutionally unprotected.[44]
There is one generality that can be made about the case law reviewed thus far. The speech under scrutiny was not a product an environment equal to that found in the Digital Age of the 21st Century. Keeping the Supreme Court precedents in mind, critically evaluate the scenarios to be reviewed in the Part IV.
Part III- Whose War is it? A. The Media In addition to increased access to communication technology, the second focus of this article, the Embedded Media program, presents other nuances to the free speech debate for service members. There were more than 700 officially embedded media personnel covering U.S. forces in Iraq at the onset of the war in March, 2003.[45] Embedded reporters, or "embeds," remained a fixture there almost two years after major combat operations in Iraq ceased and the reconstruction phase of the operation began.[46] The media has not always had a cooperative relationship with the military. Throughout the twentieth century, the media had access to the troops, logistical support and freedom from censorship, but never all at the same time. A brief review of the evolution of military-media relations will reveal just how radical the Embedded Media Program is. During the first half of the twentieth century, the media had wide ranging access to troops on the battlefield. War correspondents, like Ernie Pyle in World War II became iconic media figures. Their reports were free of government censorship. Uncensored wartime press coverage reached even greater audiences during the Vietnam War with the advent of television. During Vietnam, the media's critical slant of government actions was compounded by the visual coverage of the war's casualties. This became the catalyst that turned social sentiment against the war effort. It was personified in the massive anti-war demonstrations of the 1960s. In response to the media's influence over public opinion, the government became increasingly distrustful of the press and made policies that extremely limited its future access to U.S. troops in combat, beginning with the 1983 U.S. invasion of Grenada. This antagonistic relationship between the media and the military would endure for forty years. The Iraqi War marked a significant reversal in government policy toward the media. The creation of the Embedded Media Program reintroduced elements of the unrestricted reporting that was present during the Vietnam era. The difference, according to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, was that the program would forge a cooperative relationship between the military and the media, an allusion to the combative relationship that spawned from the Vietnam experience. [47] War correspondents in the Iraq War have two distinct advantages that have never before been present on the battlefield simultaneously, making this war an unprecedented event for the media. The first is the advanced satellite systems that allow for an instantaneous global feed of information. The second is the absence of government review of media content, a standard procedure during military operations in the anti-media environment that marked the early twentieth century period and followed the Vietnam War. The media has both technology and the military on its side for the first time during the Iraq War. Embedded journalists were once again able to cover the Iraq War in the manner of Vietnam correspondents who hitched helicopters into the nearest firefight. The Vietnam War was the only military conflict that came close to providing the freedoms that journalists now have with the military. Forty years later the technology of satellite telephony and television made it possible to file reports "live from the battlefield". [48] In military conflicts since the Vietnam War up until Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, limited technology and government censorship were the filters between the battlefield and the American public. In the Iraq War, however, access to improved methods of communication and the Embedded Media program give members of the military unfiltered access to the public. Two revolutions in media have made this possible: personal communication devices, such as satellite telephones and Internet services, and the Embedded Media program, which placed journalists and broadcasters on the battlefield reporting live and uncensored during combat operations. The result is a breeding ground for new First Amendment battles.
B. The Service Member In cases where service members challenged the military's authority that squelched their speech, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that First Amendment protections are subordinate to the nation's compelling interest to maintain security and the good order and discipline of military forces. But the Digital Age presents a new set of circumstances and redefines the paradigm in which the Court makes decisions. For example, the incident Army Staff Sergeant A.J. Dean's contemptuous speech about his senior military leadership[49] is a scenario in which the Digital Age influenced free speech for service members. The following scenarios all occurred since the 1992 Persian Gulf War and were as recent as the current Iraq War. Considering what has already been discussed – Supreme Court precedents, the U.C.M.J., and civilian superiority to the military – each of the following scenarios contains elements that are of interest to the First Amendment scholar, the journalist, the soldier and the citizen. The following examples come from the front lines of the most recent First Amendment battles for the speech of service members. These are not all inclusive of every situation where involving the speech of U.S. service members, however they are representative of the degree to which communications technology and embedded media have influenced the debate.
1. The Battle over Blogs An example of one such circumstance that the Court did not have to consider in previous rulings about First Amendment rights of service members is "blog" technology.[50] Blogs, a shorthand term for web logs, consist of online postings by individual Internet users. The messages are presented in a diary-like format and available for other Internet users to view. Many blog sites allow readers to post reply messages. The result is an online record of messages from various users. During the War on Terror, some military service members used the blog format to chronicle their wartime experiences, a venture inconceivable just ten years earlier during the Desert Storm and Desert Shield operations when personal Internet use was not readily available to the average service member.[51] Army Specialist Colby Bizzel "blogged" his daily accounts of the Iraqi War while stationed in the Middle East for several months in 2004. He called his blog "My War." In it he described the daily routine and experiences of life in his infantry unit. Bizzel's superior officers, who at first encouraged the endeavor, quickly ordered him to cease operation of the blog when postings evolved from accounts of daily life to more sensitive information about operational maneuvers. Bizzel received a verbal reprimand and was prohibited from participating in unit operations for four days following the censure of his blog. His senior leaders defended their actions arguing that Bizzel's speech posed a threat to his unit's operational security.[52]
2. A Sergeant Speaks the Hard Truth Army Reservist, Sergeant Al Lorentz, was deployed to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and is a specialist in civilian affairs for the military. An article he authored, entitled "A Sergeant Speaks the Hard Truth," was posted on the Internet site of Soldiers For The Truth in September, 2004.[53] In his article, Lorentz describes the reasons why he believes the U.S. cannot win the war in Iraq. Lorentz's laments were featured by syndicated columnist and decorated Vietnam Veteran David H. Hackworth. In an October 2004 article on the Internet site, Military.com.[54] Hackworth reported that Sgt Lorentz "now faces disciplinary action for 'disloyalty' and 'insubordination'" as a result of his article. Hackworth was the only source to report that Lorentz could receive up to 20 years in confinement if convicted.[55] "I have come to the conclusion that we cannot win here…Instead of addressing the reasons why the locals are becoming angry and disconnected, we allow politicians in Washington D.C. to give us pat and convenient reasons that are devoid of any semblance of reality …Because the current administration is more concerned with its image than it is with reality, it prefers symbolism to substance: soldiers are dying here and being maimed and crippled for life. It is tragic, indeed criminal that our elected public servants would so willingly sacrifice our nation's prestige and honor as well as the blood and treasure to pursue an agenda that is ahistoric and un-Constitutional."
A basic Internet search of Lorentz's article reveals that it has been re-posted on at least a dozen other web sites, including blog sites that invite other members of the military to comment on his article.[56] The example of Army Staff Sergeant A.J. Dean, who criticized the military leaders in an interview with the media, but was not punished, reflects the subjectivity prevalent in the military justice system.[57] He was quoted in a Knight-Ridder article questioning the competence of his commanders and the trustworthiness of the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Defense, the members of his chain of command. Dean's chain of command had the authority to punish him if, in their opinion, his speech was detrimental to the good order and discipline of his unit or a threat to national security.[58] There is no military record explaining the rationale for why no disciplinary action was taken against him.
3. Abu Graib prison scandal results in gag order for service members Army Sergeant Samuel Provance deployed to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and served as a prison guard at the infamous Abu Graib prison in northern Iraq during 2004. [59] An embarrassing prisoner abuse scandal involving numerous U.S. Army soldiers took place at Abu Graib in 2003 and 2004. American service members allegedly used cruel interrogation tactics and fostered a prison environment of mistreatment toward Iraqi prisoners of war. Provance worked at the jail during the time of the alleged abuses, but was not named in the party of accused military personnel. When the scandal first surfaced and in the month that followed, the media in Iraq focused intensely on the prison and the Americans who manned it. Provance and other soldiers were advised by their chain of command not to discuss the scandal with the media. He disregarded this and made statements to the press about what he said he heard while working at the Abu Graib prison. In response to his insubordination, Provance's commanders suspended his security clearance and reassigned him to work in a warehouse despite his special skills as an intelligence analyst. His commanders admitted that they "weren't sure he broke any rules, but they told him they thought he was a threat to the unit's mission"[60] and therefore could not continue to work in the prison.
4. Major General Forced Into Retirement for Slandering President Air Force Major General Harold Campbell, who served as the head of the Air Force Materiel Command in 1993, publicly denounced during a military banquet the then-President Clinton as a "gay-loving," "pot-smoking," "womanizing," and "draft-dogging" commander in chief. Campbell received a reprimand and was forced into an early retirement.[61]
5. David and Goliath: A Sergeant takes on the Secretary of Defense Army Sergeant Felipe Vega, a soldier who served in the 3rd Infantry Division in Iraq during 2003, was one of a group of soldiers interviewed by a national news network embedded in Iraq with U.S. military forces. He said, on camera, that he felt "'slapped in the face' and 'kicked in the gut' because his unit's tour in Iraq was extended."[62] Another soldier, who was part of the same interview, said on camera that he would like to ask for Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's resignation. Although, the U.C.M.J. clearly prohibits "using contemptuous speech against …senior government officials", Sergeant Vega and the other soldiers involved in the interview were not punished for their insubordinate and critical speech about their chain of command.[63]
6. Air Force Isn't Laughing at Lieutenant Colonel's "Joke" The Monterey County Herald in northern California published a letter to the editor in 2002 from Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Stephen L. Butler in which Butler ridiculed President Bush, calling him a "joke." Butler accused the President of "failing to act to prevent the September 11th terrorist attacks"[64] The letter was riddled with expletives including "sleazy" and "contemptible." As a result, Butler was fired and reassigned from his prestigious position as the vice chancellor for student affairs at the Defense Language Institute. Additionally, reports of the incident said that the Air Force contemplated, but never initiated, charges that would have resulted in courts-martial proceedings.[65]
7. Be careful what you ask for In 2004 and 2005, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) sponsored a nation-wide campaign, called "Operation Homecoming," to compile writings from military service members who served during Operations Enduring and Iraqi Freedom and their family members. The goal of the program, according to the NEA, is to ensure that the personal experiences of the War on Terror are not lost. All submissions are entered into the Library of Congress and a selected number of the submissions are being compiled into an anthology for publication in late 2005. A spokesperson for the program said the only materials that would not be published were those that contained sensitive or confidential material that would endanger future military operations.[66]
8. Fahrenheit 9/11 puts Marine Reservist in spotlight Marine Lance Corporal Abdul Henderson, who is a decorated war veteran from the initial phase of Operation Iraqi Freedom, was interviewed in the 2003 Michael Moore documentary Fahrenheit 9/11. The now infamous interview took place on the steps of the U.S. Capitol with Henderson in his uniform stating that he would not return to Iraq if his unit redeployed. The film received worldwide acclaim, putting the spotlight on Henderson as the personification of anti-war sentiment among U.S. military ranks. After the film's release, Henderson was interviewed numerous times and restated his firm opinion that he disagreed with the U.S. invasion of Iraq. The Marine Corps opened a preliminary legal inquiry to investigate whether his speech violated the regulations in the U.C.M.J, but Henderson was never charged with any violations.[67]
IV. Conclusion It is excessive to assume that taking the military oath is an automatic abrogation of one's individual rights. Likewise, it is impractical to expect that the U.S. military, which remains the most powerful in the world today, can retain its stability if its members are given free reign to comment and act in an insubordinate manner. The medium between these two extremes, much like the middle ground found in many First Amendment arguments, cannot be an absolutist interpretation of the First Amendment. Nor can it mean relinquishing all authority to the military. Indeed, the Constitution itself provides evidence for both these arguments, thereby making it impossible to use one alone. Ensuring a balance of military structure and individual freedoms is even more important now in a time of military conflict and rapidly changing technological advances, as was demonstrated previously with the examples of contentious speech by service members. The key is balancing the military mission with the principles of the First Amendment. Part II of this article reviewed the foundation, structure, and nature of the military justice system. It explained the Supreme Court rationale behind precedents that favor restrictive approaches to the speech of service members. It reviewed the seminal case and subsequent rulings where the Court's reasoning is prevalent. It also discussed the criticisms of the judiciary's hands-off approach to oversight of the military system. Part III, section A discussed the influence of Embedded Media on the battlefield to the free speech debate. While the role of the embedded correspondent as it pertains to access and privilege is beyond the scope of this paper, it is important to note, for the sake of this argument, that journalists facilitate speech for service members in far off combat zones. Section B offered examples of recent incidents when service members expressed themselves about military and government policy, their own military experiences, and their opinions of government and military leaders. The content of their speech possibly violated the regulations within the U.C.M.J. The purpose was not to highlight the indiscretions of service members, but to reveal the subjectivity of the military justice system, which has not consistently regulated speech. These incidents were possible because of access to technology and a greater media presence on the battlefield. The authority for the executive and legislative branches to regulate the Armed Forces is found in the U.S. Constitution, including the power to create a military system of justice. Within the U.C.M.J there exist specific restrictions against the type of speech that is deemed harmful to good order and discipline and national security. But just as service members are subject to the regulations of the U.C.M.J., they are simultaneously afforded the protections of the Bill of Rights. The latter provides protections for speech and expression that contradict some U.C.M.J. regulations. In the review of the Constitutional provisions that assign authority to the executive and legislative branches, the necessity of a separate military justice system is obvious. There is, however, a void when one examines how judiciously this independent system of regulations, courts and judges settles First Amendment challenges. The unique community that comprises the U.S. military remains more conservative and restrictive than its civilian counterpart does. This tension between the discipline of the Armed Forces and the democratic market place of ideas that is unique to the U.S. system of government is facing new challenges. Access to technology and the media's direct access to troops create an environment that challenges the tenets of past Supreme Court decisions on military speech. As the battlefield becomes more sophisticated, so do its soldiers who have available to them personal communication devices like cellular phones and wireless Internet. Likewise, they are surrounded by a media whose job it is to report the war, a task that undoubtedly means talking to the troops who are fighting it. The compounded effect of service members' gaining access to communication devices and the media regaining access to the battlefield redefined the free-speech battle for service members. The future of this debate can be influenced positively by education of both the journalists covering war and the service members fighting it. The rights and responsibilities of both the soldier and the journalist should become an integral portion of basic training for enlisted service members and a critical component of officer training. These principles should saturate the ranks so service members understand the limits by which they are bound, the reasons supporting the regulations, and the rights they can still exercise. Otherwise, a military devoid of education on this issue is akin to a blind, but passionate soldier unaware of the battle surrounding him. Likewise, journalists must understand the boundaries by which they report and gather information. Getting the scoop from a soldier at the expense of that service member's career or the national security serves no other purpose but that day's deadline. A loss of trust in the media could easily turn access into restriction in the manner that military-media relations soured after Vietnam. The press must weigh its duties carefully, but the issue at hand is clear. The modern battlefield of the Digital Age offers a dynamic that can only ignored at the expense of long-range, symbiotic military-media relations. In the end, education is the solution. After all, both serve the same master: the U.S. Constitution. [1] Brian McNair, The Iraq War as Seen in Britain: UK Satellite Coverage, TRANSNATIONAL BROADCASTING STUDIES JOURNAL 10, (2003), available at http://www.tbsjournal.com/Archives/Spring03/nair.html (last visited Dec 8, 2004). [2] PUBLIC AFFAIRS GUIDANCE (PAG) ON EMBEDDING MEDIA DURING POSSIBLE FUTURE OPERATIONS/DEPLOYMENTS IN THE U.S. CENTRAL COMMANDS (CENTCOM) AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY (AOR), Feb 10, 2003. available at www.findlaw.com (last visited Dec 9, 2004). [3] DAVID S. WESTOVER, JR. INTERPRETING THE EMBEDDED MEDIA EXPERIENCE: A QUALITATIVE STUDY OF MILITARY-MEDIA RELATIONS DURING THE WAR IN IRAQ 27-40 (2004) (unpublished manuscript, on file with the University of Florida). [4] Id. [5] Supra note 2. "The Department of Defense (DOD) policy on media coverage of future military operations is that media will have long-term, minimally restrictive access to U.S. Air, Ground, and Naval forces through embedding… We need to tell the factual story – good or bad- before others seed the media with disinformation and distortions, as they most certainly will continue to do. Our people in the field need to tell our story – only commanders can ensure the media get to the story alongside the troops. We must facilitate access of national and international media to our forces, including those forces engaged in ground operations, with the goal of doing so right from the start. To accomplish this, we will embed media with our units. These embedded media will live, work and travel as part of the units with which they are embedded to facilitate maximum, in-depth coverage of U.S. forces in combat and related operations. Commanders and Public Affairs officers must work together to balance the need to media access with the need for operational security."
[6] Uniformed Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C.A. [7] United States Military Oath. "I (state your name) do solemnly swear to support and defend the Constitution of the United States of America against all enemies foreign and domestic, and to obey all orders of the President of the United States and those officers appointed over me, and that I will follow the regulations of the Uniformed Code of Military Justice, so help me God." [8] Tom Lasseter, Among Troops, Growing Doubts About Mission, Leaders Who Sent Them, Knight-Ridder, July 21, 2004 available at http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0721-01.htm (last visited on Dec 10, 2004). [9] Id. [10] Id. [11] Schenk v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919). [12] U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, cls. 11-13. [13] Id. art. II, § 2, cl. 1. [14] The colonists who founded the United States adopted the British Articles of War without alteration. Six significant revisions were made between 1776 and 1920. E. Byrne, Military Law 8 (3d ed. 1981). [15] There are seven articles in the Uniform Code of Military Justice that specifically restrict speech. The following are prohibited: 1) Commissioned officers from using contemptuous words against the President and other senior civilian government officials; 2) Any person from behaving with disrespect toward a superior commissioned officer; 3) Insubordinate conduct (speech) toward a warrant officer, noncommissioned officer or petty officer; 4) Willful disobedience of an order or regulation; 5) Persons from making provoking or reproachful speeches or gestures towards other persons subject to the UCMJ; 6) Conduct unbecoming an officer; 7) Conduct prejudicial to the good order and discipline of the armed forces, or that will bring discredit upon the service. See 10 U.S.C., para 801-904 (1970), Articles 88, 89, 91, 92, 117, 133, and 134, respectively. [16] Id. [17] U.S. Const. Art I. [18] Department of Defense Directive 1325.6 par. II (Sept. 12, 1969). Reprinted in Conscience and Command 283 (J. Finn ed. 1971). [19] Unlike the court-martial system, non-judicial punishment is not carried out in the military courts system, but is rather a unit-centered authority. Punishments given at NJP are limited by the U.C.M.J. and do not hold any criminal applicability in the civilian judicial system the way a court-martial conviction would. See U.C.M.J. 10 U.S.C. [20] U.C.M.J. art. 67, 10 U.S.C. § 867 (1982). [21] Burns v. Wilson, 346 U.S. 137 (1953). [22] Schenk v. United States, 249 U.S. 47, 52 (1919). [23] Id. [24] Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494 [25] Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444 (1969). [26] Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444, (1969), 447. [27] Homer E. Moyer, Justice and the Military (Washington, D.C.: Public Law Education Institute, 1972) at 791. [28] Burns v. Wilson, 346 U.S. 137 (1953). 37In the 30 years since Parker, the Court's reasoning has been cited in the majority of subsequent cases and secondary materials involving First Amendment rights for military personnel. [29] United States v. Voorhees, 4 U.S.C.M.A. 509. [30] United States v Voorhees, 4 U.S.M.A 509, C.M.R. 83 at 105 (1954). [31] Parker v. Levy, 417 U.S. 733 (1974). [32] [33] U.C.M.J. art. 133, 10 U.S.C. § 933 (1982). [34] Id. art 134, 10 U.S.C. § 934 (1984). [35] Parker, at 761. [36] See Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U.S. 589 (1967). [37] Parker at 759. [38] KENT R. MIDDLETON, WILLIAM E. LEE, BILL F. CHAMBERLIN. THE LAW OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATION 37-38 (Pearson 2005). [39] Parker at 758. [40] Challenges to constitutionality of a law require an analysis of strict scrutiny examining the potential for overbreadth and vagueness. In order to be deemed constitutional against the overbreadth standard, a statute must meet the conventional application of strict scrutiny. The statute must be tailored in such a specific and narrow manner that is does not create a chilling effect on expression. See Shelton v. Tucker, 364 U.S. 479 (1960). In establishing whether or not a statute is overly vague, clear guidelines are required for law enforcement personnel. See Smith v. Goguen, 415 U.S. 566, 573 (1974). [41] Parker at 758. [42] United States v. Howe, 17 U.S.C.M.A. 165, 37 C.M.R. 429 (1967). [43] Articles of War, 1775. For further information on how the rule of civilian supremacy was applied see Howe, 17 U.S.C.M.A. 165, 37 C.M.R. 429 (1967). [44] United States v. Priest, 21 U.S.C.M.A. 564, 16 C.M.R. 338, 343 (1972).
[45] Brian McNair, The Iraq War as Seen in Britain: UK Satellite Coverage, TRANSNATIONAL BROADCASTING STUDIES JOURNAL 10, (2003), available at http://www.tbsjournal.com/Archives/Spring03/nair.html (last visited Dec 9, 2004). [46] Embedded Reporters: What Are Americans Getting? (A report by the Project For Excellence in Journalism) available at http://www.journalism.org/resources/research/reports/war/embed/numbers.asp (last visited Dec 9, 2004). [47] Supra note 2. [48] Id. [49] See supra note 13. [50] Other Internet blogs about the war in Iraq as of Dec 10, 2004: CBFTW's 'My War' Blog ; Army Capt. Eric Magnell's 'Dagger Jag' Blog ; A Line in the Sand ; Iraq the Model ; Live From Iraq ; The Questing Cat ; Iraq & Iraqis ; Iraq Calling ; The Green Side ; Doc in the Box ; Hard Deck ; American Soldier ; The Mesopotamian ; Baghdad Burning ; Road of a Nation ; Kurdo's World ; Hammorabi ; Healing Iraq. [51] Eric Niller, Soldiers Iraq Blogs face Military Scrutiny (National Public Radio broadcast, Aug 24, 2004) available at http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=3867981 (last visited Dec 9, 2004). [52] Id. [53] Sgt Al Lorentz, A Sergeant Speaks the Hard Truth, Soldiers For the Truth, September 30, 2004 available at http://www.sftt.org/cgi-bin/csNews/csNews.cgi?database=Special+Reports.db&command=viewone&op=t&id=312&rnd=170.60198714347413 (last checked on Dec 10, 2004). [54] David H. Hackworth, Hackworth: Muzzling Soldiers Is Nothing New, Military.com, October 12, 2004 available at http://www.military.com/Opinions/0,,Hackworth_101204,00.html?ESRC=dod.nl (last checked on Dec 8, 2004). [55] Several attempts were made to contact Sgt Lorentz via an email address he listed in his article, but those attempts were unsuccessful. As of Dec 12, 2004 there is no current military judicial record of Lorentz pending a courts-martial offense of any kind. [56] A Google search of the World Web on Dec 10, 2004 found 13 different web sites that have posted Sgt Al Lorentz's article A Sergeant Speaks the Hard Truth. [57] Tom Lasseter, Among Troops, Growing Doubts About Mission, Leaders Who Sent Them, Knight-Ridder, July 21, 2004 available at http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0721-01.htm (last visited on Dec 10, 2004). [58] See U.C.M.J., 10 U.S.C. [59] Army's Freedom of Speech is Different From Civilians, Army Times July 26, 2004. [60] Army's Freedom of Speech is Different From Civilians, Army Times July 26, 2004. [61] No Court-Martial, The Army Times, July 24, 2002. [62] Id. [63] Id. [64] Id. [65] Two years after the incident there is no record of Lt. Col Butler receiving a court-martial as a result of the incident. Any non-judicial punishment he may have received was not available in the public record. Id. [66] Seth Hettena, Writings Reveal War Through Troops Eyes, Associated Press, Dec 11, 2004 available at http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20041211/ap_on_re_us/operation_homecoming (last checked on Dec 11, 2004). [67] Gary Strauss, Fahrenheit soldier in hot water?, USA Today July 28, 2004 available at http://www.usa.today.com/life/mois/news/2004-07-28-fahrenheit-marine_x.htm (last checked on Dec 9, 2004).
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