Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
July
22, 2004
Code of
Conduct guided POWs in Iraq
Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON —
A former Army prisoner of war who spent 21 days captive in Iraq before
his rescue said the Code of Conduct provided the moral compass he and
his fellow prisoners needed to get them through the ordeal.
Army Chief Warrant Officer 2 Dave Williams, whose AH-64D Longbow Apache
helicopter was shot down over Iraq in March 2003, said knowledge of
the code helped him keep faith through loneliness — which he said
“damned near killed me” — and provide leadership for
six other U.S. prisoners of war.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower introduced the Code of Conduct in 1955,
partly in response to the North Koreans’ use of prisoners for
political propaganda during the Korean War.
Service members who have been captured in the almost 50 years since
its introduction have cited the code as the foundation that helped them
through the toughest times in their military careers.
“It’s a guide to live by if you find yourself in the unthinkable,”
Williams told the American Forces Press Service.
The code is based on enduring concepts and traditions, Col. Mark Bracich,
director of policy, doctrine and training for the Joint Personnel Recovery
Agency at Fort Belvoir, Va., told the American Forces Press Service.
Bracich said the code’s six articles outline the obligations and
responsibilities of U.S. service members in harm’s way:
• To defend the United States and its way of life,
• To avoid surrender and to evade capture at any cost short of
death,
• To reject favors from the enemy,
• To help fellow prisoners stay alive,
• To avoid collaborating with the enemy,
• To avoid statements or writing that discredit the United States
or its allies,
• To maintain personal responsibility for all actions, and
• To trust the U.S. government to care for your loved ones and
work toward your release.
These principles, taught to all service members during their basic military
training, “ensure that they know what’s expected of them”
in situations where they risk capture or are taken prisoner, Bracich
said.
Williams said the Code of Conduct helped him through “the dark
days” during his captivity and gave him strength that he shared
with his fellow prisoners.
Recognizing that he was the senior-ranking officer among the prisoners,
he established a chain of command. “I recognized that it was my
mission to help these guys through their captivity,” he said.
Williams said he constantly reminded his fellow soldiers — as
well as himself — that fellow service members were looking for
them. “We knew that they had a war to fight, but we knew it was
also a top priority for them to help us,” he said.
Even as coalition weapons rained on Baghdad’s Al Rashid prison,
where the Iraqis were holding the U.S. prisoners, Williams said he never
doubted that his fellow Americans would come to their rescue.
“We as Americans look out for our own,” he said. “You
can never lose hope.”