Analysis: Pardon of Draft Evaders
The topic of "Pardon of Draft Evaders" revolves around the significant political and social responses to the Vietnam War draft in the United States. From 1940 to 1973, the Selective Service Administration managed the draft, which led many young men to face the dilemma of enlisting in a highly controversial war or seeking alternatives. Some avoided the draft through legal deferments, while many chose to flee to Canada, where they could escape the draft due to more lenient immigration policies. This situation was compounded by a growing anti-war sentiment, with notable figures and organizations forming in support of those resisting the draft.
In 1974, President Gerald Ford implemented a "conditional amnesty" for draft evaders, allowing for re-entry to the U.S. under specific conditions. This was followed by President Jimmy Carter's broader pardon in 1977, which aimed to heal the nation’s wounds from a divisive war, though it notably excluded military deserters. The complex legacy of these pardons continues to evoke discussions about justice, accountability, and the societal attitudes toward war resistance and patriotism during one of America's most tumultuous periods.
Analysis: Pardon of Draft Evaders
Date: January 21, 1977
Author: Jimmy Carter
Genre: law
Summary Overview
Between 1940 and 1973 the Selective Service Administration oversaw the draft in the United States. During the Vietnam War, draft calls escalated dramatically, forcing numerous American males between the ages of 18 and 26 to confront the choice of going to war or finding a way out of the draft. Many middle-class men were able to avoid the draft through a variety of deferrals or by attaining a position in the National Guard. Several thousand draft resisters chose prison over going to Vietnam. Tens of thousands of those drafted chose exile. The most common destination was Canada, which had fairly liberal immigration policies and neighbored the United States. Canada has historically served as a refuge for those fleeing repression in the United States. These include about 100,000 Loyalists after the American Revolution, fugitive slaves, and Sitting Bull and his Lakota people. After the end of US military involvement in the Vietnam War, the tens of thousands of young men in exile remained one of the unresolved and controversial issues of the war. On Sept. 16, 1974, President Gerald R. Ford issued a “conditional amnesty” for draft evaders and military deserters, which featured “earned re-entry” in exchange for two years of alternative service. On January 21, 1977, President Jimmy Carter issued a broader “pardon” for all draft evaders, but not military deserters.
Defining Moment
Opposition to the draft during the Vietnam War grew dramatically as the war expanded and became more unpopular. Refusing induction carried a penalty of five years in prison and up to a $10,000 fine. Many Americans sought legal deferments or a place in the National Guard to avoid going to Vietnam, and several thousand chose to go to prison as an act of protest. But for many, the draft meant facing one of two stark choices: go to Vietnam or flee the country. Due to its geographical proximity and liberal immigration laws, the majority of those choosing flight crossed the border to Canada.
Estimates vary as to how many Americans fled to Canada, but conservative estimates are at least 50,000 and perhaps many more. Another large contingent of Americans going into Canadian exile were young women, often the wives or girlfriends of male draft evaders. Among the male exiles were several thousand military deserters, who faced even more severe punishment. Approximately 1,000 Americans chose to flee to Sweden; the majority of these were military deserters.
While some Americans sought legal “landed status” in Canada, which would entitle them to work permits, health care, and welfare benefits, others simply moved to Canada without making their American origins known. The three most common Canadian destinations were Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal. However, due to Vancouver's stringent union work requirements and French being Montreal's official language, Toronto became the largest destination for American exiles.
Americans made up a relatively small percentage of Canada's immigrant population, but they received a great deal of attention. Many Canadians initially were hostile to these Americans, and until 1969, Canada conducted a covert policy of turning back US military deserters at the border. Many Canadians, however, felt strongly about national sovereignty and were reluctant to become policemen for the US government. Antiwar Canadians, meanwhile, formed organizations like Amex and the Toronto Anti-Draft Program to advocate for American draft evaders and help them settle into Canadian life. As the Vietnam War became more unpopular among Canadians in the late 1960s, Canada's role as a sanctuary became a point of national pride, although American draft evaders were never given any considerations not afforded to all immigrants.
Critics of draft evaders came not only from veterans and traditional Americans, but from some on the left. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) felt the exodus to Canada deprived them of potential recruits for revolution in America, and the pacifist folk singer Joan Baez, whose husband David was in a US prison for draft resistance, told American draft evaders in the audience at a Toronto concert, “How dare you be here while my David is suffering in jail” (Hagen 27).
After US involvement in the Vietnam War ended in January 1973, tens of thousands of draft evaders remained in Canadian exile. Exiles and their supporters formed the National Coalition for Universal and Unconditional Amnesty (NCUUA) to lobby for the return of all draft evaders and military deserters. Weeks into his presidency, President Gerald Ford issued an unconditional pardon to the recently resigned President Richard Nixon for all crimes associated with the Watergate scandal. This raised the question of a pardon for draft evaders, and a week later, on September 16, 1974, Ford issued a “conditional amnesty” for draft evaders and military deserters, in which they could apply for re-entry to the United States and have charges dropped if they agreed to two years of alternative service as determined by the Selective Service Administration. The window for Ford's pardon lasted until the following spring. The majority of those choosing to participate in Ford's conditional amnesty were military deserters already serving time in US prisons.
During his campaign for the presidency, Jimmy Carter promised to issue an unconditional pardon for draft evaders, telling Newsweek he preferred pardon to amnesty because “Amnesty means what you did was right; pardon means what you did is forgiven” (Dickerson 159). Carter officially announced his pardon pledge before approximately 5,000 American Legion members in Seattle on August 24, 1976. Carter's announcement was met with five minutes of booing, but nationally, Carter received credit for his courage in making the announcement before a hostile audience.
On his first day in office, Carter issued a pardon for all Vietnam draft evaders. Conservative Arizona senator Barry Goldwater denounced the pardon as “the most disgraceful thing a president has ever done” (Dickerson 162). Some on the left criticized Carter for not going further and pardoning military deserters. Passions soon subsided, however, and Carter's pardon was welcomed as a step toward healing the wounds of a deeply divisive war.
Author Biography
James Earl Carter, Jr. was born on October 1, 1929 in Plains, Georgia where he grew up. In 1943, Carter entered the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, and in 1946 married his wife Rosalynn. Carter served on submarines and, beginning in 1952, assisted Admiral Hyman Rickover in developing America's nuclear submarine force. After his service, Carter worked as a farmer and in 1962 was elected as a Democrat to the Georgia State Senate. In 1966, he lost a race for governor to segregationist Lester Maddox, but won the governorship in 1970. Carter was elected the thirty-ninth president of the United States in 1976 over incumbent Gerald Ford, but he lost his bid for re-election to Ronald Reagan in 1980. Carter's post-presidency life has involved work with Habitat for Humanity and the Carter Center, which has supported community health programs around the world. In 2002, Carter was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Document Analysis
President Carter's Proclamation 4483 begins by noting the presidential power of the pardon granted in Article II, Section 2 of the United States Constitution, which is absolute. Carter's proclamation outlines the dates covered by the pardon, corresponding to the beginning of US escalation of the war after the Gulf of Tonkin Incident in August 1964, and running through the 1973 Paris Peace Accords and the expiration of the draft.
Carter declares “full, complete and unconditional pardon” to all persons in violation of the Selective Service Act. Carter excludes from his pardon anyone whose violation of the act involved “force or violence” and individuals were who “agents, officers or employees of the Military Selective Service system.” At the conclusion of the document, Carter also includes anyone offered “conditional amnesty” under President Ford's executive order who meets the conditions of his pardon.
Although it is not mentioned, Carter's pardon does not cover military deserters (estimated to have reached a half million individuals) or others who broke the law resisting the war while in uniform. The Executive Order 11967, also reprinted here, simply outlines how the pardon shall be carried out, primarily by the US Attorney General, dismissing all indictments covered by the pardon.
Bibliography and Additional Readings
Bourne, Peter G. Jimmy Carter: A Comprehensive Biography from Plains to Post-Presidency. New York: Scribner, 1997. Print.
Dickerson, James. North to Canada: Men and Women against the Vietnam War. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1999. Print.
Hagen, John. Northern Passage: American Vietnam War Resisters and Canada. Cambridge, MA and London, UK: Harvard UP, 2001. Print.