wsuffa
Touchdown! Greaser!
Greebo said:I heard that was West Virginia...
No, it was in College Station, Texas. A group of Aggies went searching for survivors and found over 1000 bodies....
Greebo said:I heard that was West Virginia...
It depends. In actual combat, enlisted are required to obey all orders -- see the legal fallout from My Lai. Officers are responsible for refusing to obey unlawful orders. If nobody's shooting at you, everyone is required to refuse an unlawful order. However, an order from the National Command Authorities to shoot down a plane in the FRZ that didn't respond to commands would be lawful, and would have to be obeyed. Only the person issuing that order would be responsible for its consequences.Frank Browne said:I have never served in the military, but I thought that unlawful or immoral orders didn't have to be followed.
Ron Levy said:It depends. In actual combat, enlisted are required to obey all orders -- snip.
Henning said:The destructive force of a 150 is often underestimated. Look at the 150 that crashed in the cemetey in Poland, they dug up 730 victims in the crash zone.
wsuffa said:No, it was in College Station, Texas. A group of Aggies went searching for survivors and found over 1000 bodies....
Ron Levy said:It depends. In actual combat, enlisted are required to obey all orders -- see the legal fallout from My Lai. Officers are responsible for refusing to obey unlawful orders. If nobody's shooting at you, everyone is required to refuse an unlawful order. However, an order from the National Command Authorities to shoot down a plane in the FRZ that didn't respond to commands would be lawful, and would have to be obeyed. Only the person issuing that order would be responsible for its consequences.
That's the key point though, isn't it?Ron Levy said:The authority to shoot down aircraft identified as hostile
sere said:Spoken like a UT Gratuate. LOL
tom. said:Has anyone considered where the pieces of a "hostile" aircraft would go after a shootdown? What if it was an airliner or transport? Over a downtown area or subdivision?
Maybe so, but every single enlisted man at My Lai who went to court-martial was acquitted on the basis of an order given in combat by a commissioned officer, while Lt Calley was convicted of giving the order, and the court found that whether or not Capt Medina gave such an order to Calley was irrelevant due to Calley's status as a commissioned officer. Note that the only thing that saved Medina was the fact that the only other officer present at the time Calley alleged Medina gave the order had been KIA shortly thereafter, and so the prosecution was unable to prove beyond reasonable doubt that Medina was lying when he said he did not give the order. Had that other officer been alive to testify that Medina had ordered the killings, Medina would have swung from the gibbet right with Calley.Joe Williams said:This directly contradicts the training I received my entire time in service. We were trained to NEVER obey an unlawful order. I got that same training from two different branches of the service.
First, at least in Maryland, you are NOT permitted to shoot a burglar at 3 am. In this state, deadly force may be used ONLY to protect life, not property. In fact, if you can escape (say, out the back door), you are required to do so rather than shoot.Greebo said:That's the key point though, isn't it?
Identified as hostile.
Yeah if you can identify it as hostile, shoot it down, by ALL means. Same reason you shoot a burglar at 3am.
But short of seeing someone in the cockpit pointing at the nuclear device in the back seat and waving a sign saying, "DIE USA", how do you identify a C172 as hostile?