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U.S. Majority Demands Troops Out Now!
by Jeff Mackler / October 2005 issue of Socialist Action
newspaper
The reality of the war in Iraq—with its slaughter of innocent people, its toll on American lives (nearly 2000 are dead and 18,000 wounded) and the countless hundreds of billion dollars wasted in pursuit of oil and profit—has broken through the combined efforts of the corporate media and the government to suppress the truth.
That the war was a lie from start to finish,
that there never were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, no links
between the Saddam Hussein government and al-Qaeda, and no link to the 9/11
World Trade Center bombings are today undisputed facts.
Paul Craig Roberts, associate editor of The
Wall Street Journal, former contributing editor to the ultra-right-wing
National Review, and a former Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury,
openly states what has now become common knowledge to hundreds of
millions.
In an article entitled "America Has Fallen
to a Jacobin Coup," reprinted in antiwar.com, Roberts writes,
"The most important casualties of Sept. 11 are respect for truth and
American liberty. Propaganda has replaced deliberation based on objective
assessment of fact. The resurrection of the Star Chamber has made moot
the legal protections of liberty.”
Roberts continues: "The U.S. invasion of
Iraq was based on the deliberate suppression of fact. The invasion was
not the result of mistaken intelligence.
It was based on deliberately concocted ‘intelligence’ designed to
deceive the U.S. Congress, the American public, and the United
Nations."
Today, a Pew poll records the fact that 67
percent of Americans oppose the government's bipartisan war policies and
56 percent support the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops. President
Bush's overall popularity has dipped to a low of 36 percent. Coupled with the massive exposure of
the horrors of racist neglect and the "shoot to kill/zero
tolerance"
mentality revealed during the Hurricane Katrina
catastrophe, the "Big Lie" machine has been dealt some lethal
blows. The hearts of the people of the “red” and “blue” states have gone
out to the victims of the system's brutality.
This is a sea change from just a few months
ago, when President Bush was riding high in the national polls. Notions
of the impenetrable backwardness of the populations of the "red
states" and of the hopelessly reactionary ideologies of the
"religious right" dominated the thinking of many who had hoped
to offer some form of challenge to the prevailing political
moods.
America was portrayed as a land of manipulated
idiots, ready and willing to believe anything and to subordinate their
own best interests to join patriotic mania. The demoralization, fueled by
the government's deepening attacks on virtually every social gain of the
past several decades, deeply affected the antiwar and other progressive
social movements.
For well over a year the energy and attention
of the antiwar movement, with barely an exception, were channeled into
the electoral arena.
The "Anybody But Bush," mantra was
employed to herd the discontented masses into the sinkhole of the
Democratic Party, the central capitalist institution designed to serve as
the graveyard of progressive social struggles.
Today the tide of pessimism has given way once
again to independent and massive mobilizations to fight for the common
good. The truth of Abraham Lincoln's concluding sentence to his famous
aphorism has been borne out once again: "You can't fool all of the
people all of the time."
Sept. 24 saw a huge
turnout
Opponents of the U.S. and British imperialist
war against the people of Iraq mobilized worldwide on Sept. 24 with
renewed energy and dedication. "End the War In Iraq! and Bring the
Troops Home Now! were the
featured and unifying demands of virtually every
demonstration.
In Washington, D.C., according to rally
organizers, 300,000 mobilized. The massive outpouring, the largest since
the war began, surrounded the White House and proceeded through the
streets of the nation's capital. CNN, which televised the rally live,
estimated the
crowd at 600,000.
Some 500 labor activists organized by United
States Labor Against the War assembled a pre-march contingent inside the
national AFL-CIO headquarters in Washington. They were formally greeted
by AFL-CIO Executive Council member Nancy Wohlforth, who aptly
described the meeting as “a historic moment.”
London organizers estimated that 100,000
mobilized there to demand the immediate withdrawal of British troops.
Polls in Britain indicate that 86 percent support immediate withdrawal.
Two thousand protested at the U.S. Consulate in Toronto, and several
hundred
protested in both Vancouver and Ottawa.
The San Francisco component of the U.S.
mobilizations drew some 35,000-40,000, as did the associated mobilization
in Los Angeles. Two thousand participated in Seattle and hundreds in cities
across the country. Three hundred hearty demonstrators rallied in
Duluth/Superior in a punishing downpour.
A roaring ovation greeted featured speaker
Cindy Sheehan at the Washington, D.C., demonstration, which was jointly
sponsored by the United for Peace and Justice and ANSWER coalitions. Just
weeks before the march, both coalitions had backed off from their
original plans to organize two separate and
competing demonstrations. The unity achieved was central to the size and
scope of the Sept. 24 outpouring.
Sheehan’s August vigil at the Texas ranch of
President Bush, demanding to speak with Bush about why her soldier son
Casey lost his life for oil and power, sparked solidarity actions in 50
states that involved 100,000 people. To build support for the Sept. 24
actions, Sheehan toured the country to address, whistle-stop style,
enthusiastic antiwar crowds, who enthusiastically welcomed her
"Bring the Troops Home Now!" message.
Sheehan took great pleasure in her Sept. 24
address to respond to White House adviser Karl Rove, who had publicly
attacked her while declaring that the antiwar movement was
"non-existent." Her speech began, “I wonder if the hundreds of
thousands of people who showed up today to protest this war and George's
failed policies know that they don't exist."
She continued, "It is also so incredible
to me that Karl thinks that he can wish us away by saying we aren't real.
Well, Karl and Co., we are real, we do exist, and we are not going away
until this illegal and immoral occupation of Iraq is over and you are
sent back to the depths of whatever slimy, dark, and loathsome place you
came from.”
Katrina and the war
Antiwar organizers and activists went to great
lengths to make the connection between the Iraq War and the government's
horrendous and racist default in regard to Hurricane Katrina.
The demand "Money for Human Needs, Not
War" was given concrete content when it was revealed that Congress
had transferred hundreds of millions of dollars away from repairing and
improving Louisiana’s deteriorating and inadequate levee infrastructure,
and put it into the war budget.
Even the ruling class’s newspaper of record,
The New York Times editorialized in mid-September against the Bush
administration’s obscene Katrina efforts on the grounds that the
administration aimed to extend its $1.8 trillion tax cuts to the rich
while raising the money to pay for Katrina expenditures by borrowing from
Asia and Europe, thereby swelling the already
dangerous and unprecedented national debt.
Who will pay for Katrina? Certainly not the
corporate elite, says the embarrassed Times. Capitalism's default and its
responsibility for the disaster, from the global warming that intensified
the hurricane to the greed that led to the withdrawal of funds to reinforce
and rebuild the levees, will be taken out of the hides of American
working people.
Today, the once all-powerful industrial giants
like General Motors Corporation, in the face of saturated world markets
and competition from the major auto producers everywhere, have been
reduced to near bankruptcy and often below-zero rates of profit.
The hundreds of billions allocated to the
Katrina hurricane disaster, as with the billions for the war in Iraq,
will be employed to boost the
profit rates of otherwise failing enterprises or to bloat the
revenues of the mega-corporations, like Halliburton, owned by the cronies
of government officials. The
massive turnout for Sept. 24 in the United States punctured the myth of a
docile America easily manipulated by liars and demagogues. There is
growing
recognition on the part of millions that the
policies of war and racism promoted by both Democrats and Republicans are
inherent in the capitalist profit system.
Hard lessons are being learned by working people
and youth who experience in their every day lives that this system has no
solution to their problems other than war, repression, massive cutbacks,
and lies. The U.S. antiwar movement has taken a giant step forward. But
is far from reaching its full potential to force an end to the current
imperialist venture. In the months ahead the need to qualitatively
broaden the struggle and discover democratic forms to include the full
range of emerging activists and organizations will be central to the work
of the most dedicated antiwar activists.
A massive democratic national
conference to plan future antiwar actions, open to everyone, and aimed at
the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops and the reallocation of the
trillions spent on war to fund human needs must be high on the movement’s
agenda.
Support for all of
these men is critical if human rights and human dignity are to be upheld,
and if the tide of anti-Muslim hysteria and racial profiling is to be
stopped and reversed. End secret trials and detention on the basis of
'security certificates'! Release
the remaining victims now!
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