gridlore: Doug looking off camera with a grin (Army - Infantry)
Douglas Berry ([personal profile] gridlore) wrote2010-06-23 12:40 pm
Entry tags:

A military note.

I'm following a lot of discussion threads about the resignation of General McChrystal. One of the common complaints is that this somehow violates Gen. McChrystal's freedom of speech.

The military operates under a special set of laws called the Uniform Code of Military Justice. These laws are just like any regular law, passed by Congress as a package and signed by the President, but apply only to members of the US military and to military installations. The relevant code here is Article 88:

“Any commissioned officer who uses contemptuous words against the President, the Vice President, Congress, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of a military department, the Secretary of Transportation, or the Governor or legislature of any State, Territory, Commonwealth, or possession in which he is on duty or present shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.”


There is a separate Article covering enlisted troops.

We live on discipline in the services. We require it. An army depends on mutual lines of respect up and down the chain of command, and that includes the civilian power structure. Especially the President in his role as Commander-in-Chief. We are also trained to be polite to officials, no matter what we think about them. That training served me well when Vice-President Bush shook my hand in Hawaii.

That Gen. McChrystal and his immediate staff were so contemptuous over multiple encounters with a reporter shows that McChrystal had fostered a climate of disrespect for the National Command Authority. That is unforgivable.
seawasp: (Default)

[personal profile] seawasp 2010-06-23 07:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Exactly. You still have freedom of speech -- but you have agreed to specific consequences if you exercise that freedom, predicated on the assumption that there is a very important value to the unified front presented by the military.

There may be times you DO have to exercise that right, just as there are times you may have to choose to disobey direct orders -- if you feel the orders are unjust, or if the President is doing something directly contrary to your understanding of your requirement to defend the USA from all enemies, foreign AND domestic, but in those cases you still accept that you are taking the risk that it will not be viewed that way by anyone else, and you will be court-martialed and subjected to penalties which may be very extreme indeed.

[identity profile] chaotic-nipple.livejournal.com 2010-06-23 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Ditto. Also, is that icon supposed to be John Stewart in an X-Wing flight suit?

[identity profile] cmdr-zoom.livejournal.com 2010-06-23 11:38 pm (UTC)(link)
No, it's a generic figure representing the members of Red Squadron, sourced from a recruiting poster in X-Wing Alliance. (It, and my lj name, derive from when I was a member and CO of an online fan squadron that played that and the other games in the series.)

[identity profile] kevin-standlee.livejournal.com 2010-06-23 08:31 pm (UTC)(link)
What you said. Plenty of people today seem to think that "free speech" means "I can say anything I want to say no matter what the consequences." Well, freedom of speech includes the responsibility for what one says.