1) Response to Bush
June 28 War Speech
- Bush on Iraq & Nixon on
Vietnam
- Ideology that hates freedom,
rejects tolerance, and despises all dissent
- Freedom in the Middle East?
- Who pays the price for global war?
2) September 24
3) Help Stop Military Recruiting and Fight the Draft
George W. Bush
Defends War, Torture, and Repression
(June 28) Faced with growing resistance in Iraq and growing worldwide
opposition, George W. Bush tonight attempted to rally support for his
failed and brutal policies in Iraq.
This speech comes at a time when his approval ratings are the lowest of
his Presidency, and when every poll indicates that the people are
opposed to the continued occupation of Iraq. A majority in the
U.S.
now say that the war was a mistake, and in a recent Washington Post/ABC
poll, a new high of 57% said the administration deliberately misled the
public with allegations of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
Even
some members of the Democratic Party, which blindly supported the march
to war two years ago, have been forced to question the Bush policies,
while not offering a alternative course.
Bush delivered his speech surrounded by a few hundred hand-picked
Marines at Fort Bragg, a military installation in North Carolina where
he felt certain that he would not receive any hostile questions or
expressions of disagreement. He was thus guaranteed that no one would
ask him about the Downing Street memo, which proves that the Bush
Administration was planning to go to war and was falsifying
intelligence to justify it. He did not have to face any questions
about weapons of mass destruction--no one was there to remind him that
a little over two years ago, he and members of his Administration
testified that the people of Iraq had massive stockpiles of chemical
and biological weapons. He did not have to face any questions
about
the worldwide outrage at revelations of torture and abuse routinely
carried out at the direction of the White House.
Instead, he repeated the same empty rhetoric used all along to justify
the occupation. Behind the talk of "freedom" and "democracy," the
message was clear -- the Bush Administration intends to continue the
colonial occupation of Iraq, no matter the cost in lives, and intends
to move forward with its global military adventures under the guise of
a "war on terror." He also made it clear that he is not concerned
with
world opinion, with growing domestic opposition, or the desire of the
Iraqi people to be free from occupation.
Bush's
'Vietnamization' Speech
In November 3, of 1969, then-President Richard Nixon gave what would
become known as
his "Vietnamization" speech. The parallels with Bush's speech
tonight
are striking and ominous.
Nixon declared that he would not announce a timetable for withdrawal,
saying that it depended on training the South Vietnamese puppet
forces. He was confident in their progress, saying, "The South
Vietnamese have continued to gain in strength. As a result they have
been able to take over combat responsibilities from our American
troops."
He said, "I have not and do not intend to announce the timetable for
our program. And there are obvious reasons for this decision which I am
sure you will understand. As I have indicated on several occasions, the
rate of withdrawal will depend on developments."
He said that the withdrawal of U.S. troops would depend on "the level
of enemy activity and the progress of the training programs of the
South Vietnamese forces. And I am glad to be able to report tonight
progress on both of these fronts has been greater than we anticipated
when we started the program in June for withdrawal."
He also claimed that "Enemy infiltration, infiltration which is essential if they
are to launch a major attack, over the last 3 months is less than 20
percent of what it was over the same period last year."
Nixon's speech completely ignored that fact that the puppet regime in
Saigon had no popular support and that the resistance to U.S.
occupation was growing daily. The people of Vietnam, like the
people
of Iraq, were determined to throw out the occupiers and free their
country.
It was 6 years and tens of thousands of deaths later that the U.S. was
forced to evacuate Saigon, as the people of Vietnam drove out the
occupation and overwhelmed the weak and corrupt U.S.-installed
government.
Bush's Vietnamization speech sounded as if it were written by the same
speech writer--it made the same misrepresentations and laid out the
same disastrous course as Nixon's speech 36 years ago.
Tonight Bush claimed that the training of "Iraqi security
forces" is proceeding well, saying, "The new Iraqi security forces are
proving their courage every day. More than 2,000 members of the Iraqi
security forces have given their lives in the line of duty. Thousands
more have stepped forward and are now in training to serve their
nation. With each engagement, Iraqi soldiers grow more battle-hardened
and their officers grow more experienced."
He likewise ignores the fact that the Iraqi people do not support
occupation, and that the resistance is growing, becoming more
sophisticated, and is widely supported by the people of Iraq.
Last
month there were about 700 reported attacks against U.S. forces using
improvised explosive devices -- the highest number since the war
began. In March, 35 U.S. soldiers died in Iraq, 52 were killed in
April, and 80 died in May.
Bush claims that "when the Iraqi's stand up, we will stand down", and
that the U.S. is working toward "an Iraq that can defend itself, defeat
its enemies, and secure its freedom." But the real enemies of freedom
in iraq are the armies of occupation. It is important to
understand
that the resistance is a response to 12 years of sanctions, a war that
has killed 100,000 people, and a brutal colonial occupation. Oppression
and occupation inevitably bring violence. The Iraqi people have
the
absolute right to defend
their country from foreign invaders, and we fully support their right
to do so.
We cannot allow the destruction of Iraq and its people to drag on -
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld said Sunday that the occupation could
last as long as 12 years. We must take action now to end the war.
"Ideology
that hates freedom, rejects tolerance and despises all dissent"
President Bush repeatedly referred to the people of Iraq as "ruthless
killers" and "terrorists," playing once again to anti-Arab and
anti-Muslim bigotry. He referred to the tragic events of
September
11, 2001 at least six times in his speech to justify the ongoing war
and occupation, even though he knows that the people of Iraq had
nothing to do with the attacks on that day.
He claimed that the resistance fighters in Iraq are motivated by an
"ideology that hates freedom, rejects tolerance and despises all
dissent." To most of the world, this phrase describes, not the
women
and men struggling to free their country from occupation, but the Bush
Administration itself. The neocons in the White House have lied
in
order to justify a war of conquest. They have practiced and
justified
torture and abuse of prisoners. They have waged war on basic
rights
with the Patriot Act and the creation of the Department of Homeland
Security.
Bush claims to be fighting under the banner of "the great ideal of
human freedom". Yet no President has done more to curtail free speech
or to control the "free" press. And no President has done more to apply
the law selectively, to further his own political agenda, or to pack
the courts with right wing extremists.
Freedom in the Middle East?
President Bush claimed that the occupation was bringing freedom
throughout the Middle East. He repeatedly asserts that America is
giving Iraq its sovereignty. Iraq was sovereign until March 20,
2003,
when the U.S., in violation of the U.N. Charter and
international law, invaded and occupied that sovereign country. That
sovereignty can only be restored when the U.S. leaves.
The grisly photos and testimony of torture and abuse in Abu Ghraib,
Guantanamo, and other U.S. prison camps make it clear who the real
terrorists are, and that they have no intention of bringing democracy
to Iraq.
The U.S. government has never demonstrated any interest in bringing
democracy to the Middle East. Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger outlined U.S. policy in the region when he said, "Middle East
oil is too important to be left to hands of the Arabs." The U.S. has
made no effort to bring democracy in any of the nations in the region
where it has maintained troops-the people of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and
the United Arab Emirates all live under feudal monarchies, without free
elections, civil liberties, civil rights, union rights, or rights for
women.
The U.S. continues to fund, arm, and support the occupation of
Palestine, supporting a rogue colonial state that routinely engages in
violations of basic human rights, a brutal regime that is in violation
of 65 U.N. Resolutions.
Who pays the price for global war?
Since the invasion of Iraq, Johns Hopkins University estimates more
than 100,000 Iraqis have been killed, most of them women and
children.
Thousands are being held in U.S. prison camps, subject to torture and
abuse.
As of yesterday, 1,734 U.S. military personnel have died in Iraq
since
the March 2003 invasion and more than 13,000 have been wounded,
according to Defense Department figures. The young people who are
killed, injured, and permanently disabled are not the children of Wall
Street. They are children from the poorest and most oppressed
communities, forced into the military because of the lack of options.
Many of them are returning home to find that there are no jobs, that
housing prices have skyrocketed, and that healthcare is not
available.
Hundreds of returning veterans are now homeless.
Meanwhile, working people in the U.S. are finding it harder to make
ends meet, as billions of tax dollars have been spent on the war
instead of jobs, education, and health care. Cities are forced to
slash their budgets, laying off workers and cutting essential
services. Schools are overcrowded, understaffed, and
underfunded.
Healthcare is a luxury.
This is not just a war against the people of Iraq. Under the
pretense
of waging a "war on terror," Bush is waging a war of terror against
working people everywhere. We must organize to fight back.
Only a
people's
movement will stop the war
September 24, Washington DC
It is clear that the Bush Administration intends to conitnue the war
and occupation of Iraq, in defiance of interantional law. It is
also
clear that coporate-owned politicians will not and cannot stop the war.
Only a massive peoples' resistance can stop the war. We must do
everything within our power to build a united front to bring the troops
home now. On September 24, tens of thousands of activists
will
take to the streets of Washington DC to demand "Troops Out Now!"
The International Action Center is part of the Troops Out Now
Coalition, which is working to build a massive united presence on
September 24. Now is a critical time--military recruiting is
down,
Bush's approval ratings are plummeting, and opposition to the war is
growing. What we do now can make a difference, and we have a
responsibility to build a massive united demostration.
The Troops Out Now Coalition
Statement on September 24 raises the following critical points:
- The vital
importance of building a united front against the war.
Our emphasis needs to be on building a large, militant antiwar movement
that is capable of stopping the war. TONC renews its appeal to the
small but influential forces in the antiwar movement who refused to
work together for the fall and beyond to reverse their positions and
help unleash the full mass potential of the struggle to shut the war
down.
- That building a united movement means including, not excluding
the struggles of oppressed people. Support
for the Right of all Palestinian refugees and their descendants to
return to their original homes and property in all of historic
Palestine is not negotiable.
- That unity means much more than organizational unity. It
means, more importantly, that the antiwar movement reaches out to and
embraces the struggles of oppressed people here and internationally.
It means solidarity with the struggle of communities of color, with
LGBT communities, with immigrants, and with struggles against racism,
sexism, and all forms of oppression. It means solidarity with the
people of Iraq, Palestine, Haiti, the Philippines, and everywhere that
people are struggling against U.S. colonial occupation.
- That the antiwar movement needs to look to new and more effective
tactics to stop the war. Activists raised the slogan "Troops Home
Now, or We'll Shut It Down!"
and discussed the idea of declaring a moratorium against the war,
including walkouts, civil disobedience, and other direct actions to
bring the cities to a stop until the war is ended.
- That the
struggle to end the war will be won by mobilizing a massive movement in
the streets. Counting on elections and pro-war politicians to end
the
war is, at best, a misdirection of time, energy, and resources. Only
the people will stop the war. To that end, it is important to
immediately begin planning and mobilizing now for the September 24
March in Washington DC, the Millions More Movement events
on the
weekend of October 14-16, and the Moratorium
Against the War
We need your help to build a massive, united demonstration:
Organize
transportation from your area.
Donate to help
bring thousands of activists to Washington DC on September 24.
Endorse the
Troops Out Now Unity Call.
We Won't Go
Help Shutdown Military Recruiting and Resist the Draft
One of the most effective ways to stop the war is to cut off the supply
of fresh troops.
Across the U.S., parents, youth, and activists are
realizing that if we can stop the flow of troops, we can stop the
war.
The movement against military recruiting is having an impact
far beyond what is reported by the corporate media. Recruiters
are
being driven off campus or challenged by activists who present opposing
information. Groups of parents, educators, youth, and activists
are
meeting across the country to discuss strategies to defend our young
people against the predators in uniform.
No Draft No Way launched its website in June of last year - www.NoDraftNoWay.org.
This
site includes updated information about the draft and military
recruiting, strategies and tactics for challenging the militariazation
of our schools, and downloadable leaflets, petitions, and fact sheets.
Since the launch of the site, thousands have signed the online petition
against the draft and the No Draft No Way network has grown to
include hundreds of activists all across the country. It is
vitally important that we provide these local organizers with
information and tools.
In order to meet this urgent need, the Youth and the Military
Education Project is publishing We Won't Go - A Guide to
Counter-Recruiting and Draft
Resistance. This 120-page book will present, in a brief
and
accesible format: the truth behind military recruiters' lies; students'
rights on campus; information about the draft and alternatives; how to
organize an opt-out campaign to keep students' personal information out
of the hands of recruiters; and how to organize a local protest,
including publicity, legal issues, making placards, and working with
the media. This small, easy-to-read book, written by
counter-recruiting activists, current and former members of the
military, and youth, will be available in bulk at discounted prices for
community and youth organizations, classrooms, and libraries. It
will
be sent to clergy, educators, parent associations, and community
leaders across the country.
We are rushing to get We Won't Go - A Guide to
Counter-Recruiting
and Draft Resistance to publication so that thousands of
activists can use this material a part of a national campaign to
educate and mobilize youth against militarism and the war. This
book
must be at the printers by July 15 in order for us to have it ready for
the start of the new school year.
Can you help us with this urgent effort to publish We Won't Go -
A Guide to Counter-Recruiting and Draft Resistance? We
will
include a special acknowledgement section in the book, showing
appreciation for those who make a contribution to this effort.
Your
name can be listed there, or you can donate anonymously.
Donate online at: http://nodraftnoway.org/donate-new.shtml