Is that ohms or volts? Sorry I should have been more clear in my last post. Let's try again.
Before measuring between black/white and white/green we need to make sure that black/white is actually connected to ground. If it is not or has a high resistance that could confuse the computer in the wiper motor assembly and lead to confusing behavior.
With the ignition off, disconnect the wire going to the rear window motor. Set the multimeter to ohms and stick one probe on the black/white wire and stick the other probe on ground. Ideally some spot on the body (these wires run back to the D pillar for chassis ground). For now we can use the black/gray wire as it is also ground. Doing it this way doesn't 100% rule out a problem with the harness, but it can give us some level of confidence. This should measure no more than 5 ohms. If it is more than that it means a bad connection or a break in the wire.
Assuming that is good, with the glass closed you can stick one probe on the black/white and the other probe on the white/green. This should measure as an open circuit (overload) or at least 10k ohms. If that isn't true it means the wiper motor is being told the window is open when it is really closed. That could be caused by an issue with the ajar switch or the wire between the ajar switch and the motor.
Best way to check that is to disconnect the glass latch and then repeat the measurement between black/white and white/green. If it is now an open circuit that means the ajar switch inside the latch is defective and the latch should be replaced. If it is still less than 10k ohms there is a short somewhere in the harness or connector