Story Published:
Aug 25, 2006 at 4:14 AM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 7:36 AM PST
FORT LEWIS - An Army officer is recommending that a
lieutenant who refused to serve in Iraq because he believes the war
is illegal face trial, a Fort Lewis spokesman said.
1st Lt. Ehren Watada, 28, of Honolulu, has been charged with
missing troop movement, conduct unbecoming an officer and contempt
toward officials. He refused to deploy to Iraq on June 22 with his
Fort Lewis-based unit.
A report by the investigating officer, Lt. Col. Mark Keith,
"does recommend that the case be tried by general court-martial,"
J.C. Mathews, a civilian spokesman at the Army base south of
Seattle, said late Thursday
Keith's report was expected to be released Friday.
The Army laid out its case against Watada at a hearing last
week, showing video footage of the lieutenant calling the war
illegal.
Keith could recommend anything from dismissal of the charges to
a general court-martial.
His recommendation goes to Watada's brigade commander, Col.
Cynthia Murphy, and to Lt. Gen. James Dubik, Fort Lewis' commander,
who has the final say on whether Watada should stand trial, Mathews
said.
If convicted, Watada could face seven years in prison and
dishonorable discharge.
Mathews said there is no timetable for Dubik's decision.
Watada's lawyer, Eric Seitz, said he was not surprised by the
recommendation.
"We always believed that when they went so far as to convene an
Article 32 hearing that they had already made a decision to
proceed," he said in a telephone interview. An Article 32 hearing
is similar to a grand jury proceeding.
Seitz, who has seen Keith's report, said he expects to learn
Dubik's decision in 10 to 14 days.
Watada could not immediately be reached for comment.