With the civil liberties of persons of Arab ancestry under attack in the wake of Sept. 11, this book could not have been published at a better time. Professor Muller has written a rare book, carefully researched and thoroughly readable, judicious and balanced without shying away from tough criticism. Free to Die for Their Country is an engaging story artfully told, and I highly recommend it.
One of the most interesting themes running throughout the book is the tension between the law and justice. Reading this book, I was reminded of a Thoreau quotation that I read before I went to law school: "It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right. The only obligation which I have a right to assume, is to do at any time what I think right." As Muller explains, the legal position of the draft resisters was tenuous, while their moral position was compelling. In such a situation, what is a good citizen to do? And what is a good judge to do, faced with citizens accused of breaking the law? These are important questions, and this book offers an interesting new lens through which to consider them.
I have only two criticisms. First, Muller's judgment of Judge Blake Kennedy (one of the trial judges who convicted the resisters for draft evasion) as an 'anti-Semite, a racist, and a xenophobe' struck me as unduly harsh in light of the rather thin evidence Muller presented. Second, Muller's efforts early in the book to paint the resisters as loyal Americans seemed more a reflection of his thesis than a conclusion drawn from his research.
But these are quibbles. Free to Die for Their Country is a wonderful book that I have found myself rolling around in my mind long after I finished it.