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Military Evangelism Deeper, Wider Than First Thought
by Jason Leopold The Military Religious Freedom Foundation says the two photos
show how the infiltration of fundamentalist Christianity in the US
military is starting to mirror Islamic fundamentalism.
Soldiers at Fort Jackson Army Base pose with their rifles and Bibles.
For US Army soldiers entering basic training at Fort Jackson Army base in Columbia, South Carolina, accepting Jesus Christ as their personal savior appears to be as much a part of the nine-week regimen as the vigorous physical and mental exercises the troops must endure.
That's the message directed at Fort Jackson soldiers, some of
whom appear in photographs in government issued fatigues, holding
rifles in one hand, and Bibles in their other hand.
Frank
Bussey, director of Military Ministry at Fort Jackson, has been telling
soldiers at Fort Jackson that "government authorities, police and the
military = God's Ministers,"
Bussey's teachings from the
"God's Basic Training" Bible study guide he authored says US troops
have "two primary responsibilities": "to praise those who do right" and
"to punish those who do evil - "God's servant, an angel of wrath."
Bussey's teachings directed at Fort Jackson soldiers were housed on the
Military Ministry at Fort Jackson web site. Late Wednesday, the web
site was taken down without explanation. Bussey did not return calls
for comment. The web site text, however, can still be viewed in an
archived format.
The Christian right has been successful
in spreading its fundamentalist agenda at US military installations
around the world for decades. But the movement's meteoric rise in the
US military came in large part after 9/11 and immediately after the US
invaded Iraq in March of 2003.
At a time when the United States is
encouraging greater religious freedom in Muslim nations, soldiers on
the battlefield have told disturbing stories of being force-fed
fundamentalist Christianity by highly controversial, apocalyptic "End
Times" evangelists, who have infiltrated US military installations
throughout the world with the blessing of high-level officials at the
Pentagon. Proselytizing among military personnel has been conducted
openly, in violation of the basic tenets of the United States
Constitution.
Perhaps no other fundamentalist Christian
group is more influential than Military Ministry, a national
organization and a subsidiary of the controversial fundamentalist
Christian organization Campus Crusade for Christ. Military Ministry's
national web site boasts it has successfully "targeted" basic training
installations, or "gateways," and has successfully converted thousands
of soldiers to evangelical Christianity.
Military Ministry
says its staffers are responsible for "working with Chaplains and
Military personnel to bring lost soldiers closer to Christ, build them
in their faith and send them out into the world as Government paid
missionaries" - which appears to be a clear-cut violation of federal
law governing the separation of church and state.
"Young
recruits are under great pressure as they enter the military at their
initial training gateways," the group has stated on its web site. "The
demands of drill instructors push recruits and new cadets to the edge.
This is why they are most open to the 'good news.' We target specific
locations, like Lackland AFB [Air Force base] and Fort Jackson, where
large numbers of military members transition early in their career.
These sites are excellent locations to pursue our strategic goals."
Mikey Weinstein, the founder and president of the government watchdog
organization the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, whose group has
been closely tracking Military Ministry's activities at Fort Jackson
and other military bases around the country, said in an interview that
using "the machinery of the state" to promote any form of religion is
"not only unconstitutional and un-American but it also creates a
national security threat of the first order."
A six-month
investigation by MRFF has found Military Ministry's staff has
successfully targeted US soldiers entering basic training at Lackland
Air Force Base and Fort Sam Houston, with the approval of the Army
base's top commanders.
"I've said it before and I will say
it again," Weinstein said. "We are in the process of creating a
fundamentalist Christian Taliban and somebody has to do something to
stop it now."
Weinstein points out that on Fort Jackson's
Military Ministry web site, the basic training battalion commander, Lt.
Col. David Snodgrass, and the battalion's chaplain, Maj. Scott Bullock,
who appear in uniform in a photograph with Bussey, is a clear-cut
violation of Military rules. MRFF contacted Bussey via email on
Wednesday to request information about the "similar programs" he
claimed Fort Jackson has for soldiers of other faiths.
Bussey,
responding to MRFF via email, did not provide an answer to the watchdog
group's question, but, instead, he fired back a query of his own asking
MRFF Senior Research Director Chris Rodda to direct him to the place in
the Constitution where it states there is a "separation of church and
state."
Clause 3, Article VI of the Constitution forbids a
religion test for any position in the federal government, and the
Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights says
Congress shall make no law regarding an establishment of religion.
A spokesperson for the Fort Jackson Army base did not return calls for
comment. Earlier this week, after MRFF exposed the potential
constitutional violations between Military Ministry and the Fort
Jackson Army base, Bussey added language to Military Ministry at Fort
Jackson web site in the form of a "notice to MRFF and ACLU types" in
bold red letters that says the Bible study classes are strictly
voluntary, not command directed in any way, allows soldiers to exercise
for themselves the right of freedom of religion ... and similar
programs exist on Fort Jackson for Soldiers of all faiths."
In July, the Pentagon's inspector general (IG) responded to a complaint
filed a year earlier by MRFF that accused Pentagon officials of
violating the federal law governing the separation of church and state.
The IG did not address the church/state issue, but he issued a 45-page
report admonishing several high-level Pentagon officials for
participating, while in uniform and on active duty, in a promotional
video sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ's Christian Embassy group.
The IG report quoted one high-ranking military official as saying he
believed his participation in the video was acceptable because Campus
Crusade for Christ had become so embedded in the Pentagon's day-to-day
operations that he viewed the organization as a "quasi federal entity."
The IG report recommended the military officials who
appeared in the video be disciplined, but the Pentagon would not say
whether it has in fact punished the military officers who appeared in
the video.
MRFF uncovered another recent Campus Crusade
for Christ promotional video filmed at the Air Force Academy in
Colorado Springs that would appear to violate the same military rules
detailed in the IG report. Cadets and academy officials appear in
uniform discussing how Campus Crusade for Christ helped strengthen
their bonds with Jesus.
Scot Blom, the Campus Crusade for
Christ director assigned to work at the Air Force Academy, says in the
video the organization "has always been very intentional about going
after the leaders or the future leaders" and that's why Campus Crusade
for Christ picked the Air Force Academy to spread its fundamentalist
Christian message. Every week, according to the video, cadets are
encouraged to participate in a Bible study class called "cru" short for
"crusade."
"Our purpose for Campus Crusade for Christ at
the Air Force Academy is to make Jesus Christ the issue at the Air
Force Academy and around the world," Blom says in the video. "They're
government paid missionaries when they leave here."
Weinstein said the recent promotional video for Campus Crusade for
Christ, and the photograph of US soldiers holding Bibles in one hand
and rifles in the other posted on the Fort Jackson Military Ministry
web site, gives the impression the Pentagon endorses the fundamentalist
Christian organization and underscores that the occupation of Iraq and
the war in Afghanistan appears to be more of a modern-day
fundamentalist Christian crusade. That message, Weinstein said, could
lead to more "jihads" against the United States.
Indeed.
Weinstein, a former White House counsel during the Reagan
administration, former general counsel to Texas billionaire and
two-time presidential candidate H. Ross Perot and a former Air Force
Judge Advocate General, said he had an "unexpected" telephone
conversation with several senior Bush administration intelligence
officials this week who encouraged him "to continue to fight for the
separation of church and state in the US military" because, these
senior administration intelligence officials told Weinstein, US troops
are being put in harms way.
Weinstein said the senior
administration intelligence officials told him they too have been
tracking Islamic web sites where people have been discussing on message
boards the fundamental Christianity issues Weinstein has raised within
the US military. The intelligence officials told Weinstein they are
concerned the fundamentalist Christian agenda surfacing in the military
could lead to attacks against US soldiers. Weinstein said he could not
identify the senior Bush intelligence administration officials he spoke
with because they contacted him with the understanding they would not
be named.
Fundamental Christianity's Influence on the Bush Administration
While Weinstein has worked tirelessly the past four years exposing the
Christian Right's power grab within the military, he says the White
House continues to thumb its nose at the constitutional provision
mandating the separation of church and state.
Indeed. This
week a US District Court judge ruled the White House must disclose its
visitor logs showing White House visits by nine fundamentalist
Christian leaders.
The ruling was issued in response to a
lawsuit filed by the government watchdog group, Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), and could very well
show how much influence fundamental Christian leaders such as James
Dobson of Focus on the Family, Family Research Council president Tony
Perkins, Gary Bauer and Moral Majority co-founder Jerry Falwell have
had on the Bush's administration.
"We think that these
conservative Christian leaders have had a very big impact," said
Melanie Sloan, executive director of CREW. "The White House doesn't
want to talk about how much influence these leaders have, and we want
to talk about how much they do have."
Bush has been vocal
about his fundamentalist Christian beliefs and how God has helped him
during his presidency. A couple of weeks ago, the White House sent out
Christmas cards signed by President Bush and his wife Laura that
contained a Biblical passage from the Old Testament:
"You alone
are the LORD. You made the heavens, even the highest heavens, and all
their starry host, the earth and all that is on it, the seas and all
that is in them. You give life to everything, and the multitudes of
heaven worship you."
The inclusion of the Biblical passage
caught the attention of longtime broadcaster Barbara Walters, who was a
recipient of the presidential Christmas card.
Walters said
she doesn't recall receiving "religious" holiday cards from past
presidents and she wondered how non-Christians would receive such an
overtly religious greeting.
"Usually in the past when I
have received a Christmas card, it's been 'Happy Holidays' and so on,"
said Walters. "Don't you think it's a little interesting that the
president of all the people is sending out a religious Christmas card?
Does this also go to agnostics, and atheists, and Muslims?"
The Biblical passage inside the Christmas card did not amount to a
constitutional violation because it was paid for by the Republican
National Committee, but Weinstein said it's intolerable, nonetheless,
because military officials believe they have the approval of the White
House to allow fundamentalist Christian organizations and their leaders
to proselytize in the military.
Recently, Bush nominated
Brig. Gen. Cecil R. Richardson, the deputy Air Force Chief of
Chaplains, to replace the outgoing Air Force Chief of Chaplains, and is
in line to be promoted to Major General. Richardson was quoted in a
front-page, July 12, 2005, New York Times story saying the Air Force
reserves the right "to evangelize the unchurched."
The distinction,
Richardson said at the time, "is that proselytizing is trying to
convert someone in an aggressive way, while evangelizing is more gently
sharing the gospel."
Weinstein filed a federal lawsuit
against the Air Force in October 2005 after Richardson's comments were
published alleging "severe, systemic and pervasive" religious
discrimination within the Air Force. Weinstein is a 1977 graduate of
the Academy. His sons and a daughter in law are also academy graduates.
Weinstein's book, "With God On Our Side: One Man's War Against An
Evangelical Coup in America's Military," details the virulent
anti-Semitism he was subjected to while he attended the academy and the
religious intolerance that has permeated throughout the halls over the
past several years.
The federal lawsuit Weinstein filed
was dismissed, but the Air Force agreed to withdraw a document that
authorized chaplains to evangelize members of the military. Still,
Weinstein said MRFF would lobby senators to oppose Richardson's
nomination because of his past statements Richardson has refused to
retract.
"The Military Religious Freedom Foundation will
do everything in our power to convince the United States Senate to
reject the nomination of Brig. Gen. Cecil R. Richardson to become the
chief of Air Force chaplains and his promotion to the rank of major
general," Weinstein said in an interview. "We view Richardson as the
prototypical poster child of the type of constitutional rapist we are
trying to eradicate from existence within the US military."
In September, MRFF filed a lawsuit in federal court against Secretary
of Defense Robert Gates and US Army Maj. Freddy Welborn, on behalf of
an Army soldier stationed in Iraq. The complaint filed in US District
Court in Kansas City alleges that Jeremy Hall's an Army specialist
currently on active duty in Combat Operations Base Speicher, Iraq,
First Amendment rights were violated when Welborn threatened to
retaliate against Hall and block his reenlistment in the Army because
of Hall's atheist beliefs.
"When You Join the Military, Then You Are Also in the Ministry"
The executive director of Military Ministry, retired US Army Major
General Bob Dees, wrote in the organization's October 2005 "Life and
Leadership" newsletter, "We must pursue our particular means for
transforming the nation - through the military. And the military may
well be the most influential way to affect that spiritual
superstructure. Militaries exercise, generally speaking, the most
intensive and purposeful indoctrination program of citizens...."
Moreover, Military Ministry's parent organization, Campus Crusade for
Christ, has been re-distributing to military chaplains a DVD produced a
decade ago where Tommy Nelson, a pastor at the Denton Bible Church in
Denton, Texas, tells an audience of Texas A&M cadets and military
officers when they join the military "then you are also in the
ministry."
"I, a number of years ago, was speaking at the
University of North Texas - it happens to be my alma mater, up in
Denton, Texas - and I was speaking to an ROTC group up there, and when
I stepped in I said, "It's good to be speaking to all you men and women
who are in the ministry," and they all kind of looked at me, and I
think they wondered if maybe I had found the wrong room, or if they
were in the wrong room, and I assured them that I was speaking to men
and women in the ministry, these that were going to be future
officers," Nelson says in the DVD.
Jason Leopold is senior
editor and reporter for Truthout. He received a Project Censored award
in 2007 for his story on Halliburton's work in Iran.