Los Angeles Times

A soldier’s defenders

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Did Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman violate his oath as a military officer when he cooperated with the House’s impeachmen­t inquiry? It isn’t clear what legal and profession­al consequenc­es the White House’s top Ukraine expert may face for disobeying an order from his commander in chief and giving his deposition to Congress on Tuesday, but he does have the support of one group of people: L.A. Times letter writers.

On Thursday, a letter from a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel took Vindman to task for not resigning his commission if he felt strongly enough about the Trump administra­tion’s Ukraine policy to testify before Congress. In response, more than a dozen readers came to Vindman’s defense; here are some of their letters.

— Paul Thornton, letters editor

Pasadena resident Guy Webster believes Trump wasn’t conducting “foreign policy”:

While I thank the letter writer for his military service, I strenuousl­y challenge his opinion that members of the armed services should treat potential criminal activity, such as soliciting a foreign nation to interfere with a U.S. election, as a

matter of an administra­tion’s “foreign policy” with which they should not interfere.

That is a short step from military compliance with the illegal torture practices of the Bush administra­tion. The world is still paying the costs of the military’s unquestion­ing obedience in that case.

A uniform does not remove the responsibi­lities of citizenshi­p.

Angela Black of Long Beach draws a historical parallel:

Although I’ve never been in the military, it would seem that no Army officer is obliged to remain silent when witnessing behavior by superiors that is clearly illegal or unconstitu­tional.

President Trump’s actions on that July 25 phone call with the new Ukrainian president were unconstitu­tional and against our national security interests.

The Nuremberg trials showed us the danger of blind obedience by military officers.

Eric von Ehrenberg of San Diego points out that military personal pledge to uphold the Constituti­on:

I take issue with what the letter writer, a retired lieutenant colonel, stated.

When the House launched an impeachmen­t inquiry into whether the president violated his oath of office by asking for a personal political favor from a foreign government for his sole benefit rather than that of the United States, it then follows that the president, if the allegation is true, did not faithfully execute the duties of his office as required by the Constituti­on.

As a military officer, the letter writer took an oath upon his commission­ing to “support and defend the Constituti­on of the United States.” He did not pledge blind allegiance to any president.

Bill Mace of San Gabriel says this is not about Vindman’s opinion on policy:

Vindman clearly can differenti­ate between a wrong decision or policy, and actions that are obviously unlawful.

Resign? That’s like asking good people to do nothing.

 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press ?? ARMY Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, center, testified in the House impeachmen­t investigat­ion this week.
Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press ARMY Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, center, testified in the House impeachmen­t investigat­ion this week.

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