Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW editor, sits with David Sole, Red Aaron and Jessica in downtown Detroit on August 25, 2005 at the Camp Casey peace encampment. The Camp Casey Detroit project made a monumental contribution to the anti-war struggle in the city.
Originally uploaded by Pan-African News Wire Photo File.
The Decisive Battle this Spring - The Challenge for the Antiwar Movement
March on Washington
On Jan. 27 and March 17 (the 4th Anniversary of the War)
WE MUST FORCE CONGRESS TO CUT OFF WAR FUNDING
And we can if we move from symbolic protest to mass resistance
Not One More Dollar for War and Occupation!
Bring ALL the Troops Home Now!
Forcing Congress to vote to cut off further war funding is the defining issue for the antiwar movement this spring and it is a struggle that we can win if we are bold enough to take it seriously.
The Troops Out Now Coalition calls on everyone to join the antiwar march on January 27...and come back on March 17...and come ready to STAY in DC!
ON MARCH 17, ASSEMBLE AT THE WHITE HOUSE AND MARCH TO THE U.S. CONGRESS -- AND STAY THERE UNTIL THEY CUT OFF WAR FUNDING
An Appeal for Unity in the Antiwar Movement
Our chance of winning are greater if the antiwar coalitions unite!
A crucial factor in our ability as a movement to rise to this challenge is the willingness for all antiwar forces nationwide--especially the national coalitions--to renew a commitment to work for unity with each other. We appeal to all antiwar forces to take the high road and work together this Spring. The time has come for us to coordinate our efforts, and avoid competing dates and plans.
If we work and plan together--our chances of success will be greater.
More than at any time since the start of war, the antiwar movement is in a position to force congress to vote no on war funding. The people are on our side, the momentum is on our side, the whole world is on our side; the only question is whether we have the conviction and the courage to take our struggle against the war from the level of symbolic protest to real mass resistance.
Some time between now and early February, Bush is going to ask Congress to approve between $130 to $200 billion more dollars to finance the war to add to the close to a half a trillion dollars in war funding Congress has approved in a series of votes over the past three and a half years.
Sometime between February and May 2007, Congress will vote nay or yea to this request. This vote will be the most important war vote in Congress since a majority of both Republican and Democratic Party members of Congress voted to authorize the war.
Clearly, Congress has the authority to cut off spending for the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and effectively make it impossible for the criminal carnage to continue. What makes the next war funding vote different from all the previous ones is that on Nov. 7, people voted to end the war.
As a result of the massive antiwar vote, Democratic Party politicians will take control of both houses of Congress on January 4. When that happens, the authority to either carry out the mandate of the elections to end the war and occupation of Iraq by completely cutting off all war funding or to betray the people by approving more funds to continue it, will shift to the leadership of the Democratic party.
The top Democratic Party leaders in Congress have already indicated that they are preparing to betray the antiwar mandate. Some members of Congress say they will support resolutions introduced in Congress that call for a phased redeployment of troops from Iraq or a time table for withdrawing most troops. But such resolutions are little more than symbolic, half- measures that won’t end the war. However, the real fight is the war funding vote and we must force Congress to vote NO.
In the past, members of Congress who claimed to be opposed to the war have justified their votes for war funding by claiming they had to keep up the funding to “support the troops”. It’s time for us to reject all excuses and rationalizations for voting for war funding. A vote for war funding is a VOTE FOR WAR. Moreover, voting to approve more funds for war will only ensure that more U.S. troops and many more Iraqis will be killed and maimed.
IN MARCH – WE MUST BE READY TO STAY IN WASHINGTON
We will be in Washington on January 27 and we will come back on March 17. And when we come back in March, this time we must be prepared to stay there in the thousands to force Congress to vote NO on more war funding. If Congress tries to rush a vote on war funding before March 17, this time we must be prepared to come to Washington in mass to make sure that the war funding is voted down.
PAY THE PEOPLES’ BILLS - NOT FOR WAR & OCCUPATION; BRING YOUR BILLS WITH YOU TO WASHINGTON
We are asking people to bring their medical, rent, heating and utility bills; student loan bills; credit card bills, and food bills that they can’t afford to pay as well as shut-off notices, mortgage foreclosures, eviction notices to the march on Washington. It must be made clear to Congress that feeding more money to the war while more and more people cannot pay for their basic living expenses is a crime. The cost of the war is not the only reason why we oppose the war. We oppose the war because it is an imperialist war for colonial conquest and plunder. Yet the cost of the war is important because it’s paid for by money stolen from providing social needs. The money that has paid for death and destruction in Iraq could have gone towards reconstruction in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina.
In his famous speech declaring his opposition to the Vietnam war almost 40 years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “It is disgraceful that a Congress that can vote upwards of $35 billion a year for a senseless immoral war in Vietnam cannot vote a weak $2 billion dollars to carry on our all too feeble efforts to bind up the wound of our nation’s 35 million poor. This is nothing short of a Congress engaging in political guerilla warfare against the defenseless poor of our nation…”
MARCH AGAINST THE WAR AT HOME
STOP RACIST POLICE TERROR - STOP THE RAIDS AGAINST IMMIGRANT WORKERS
As we march to end the war abroad, we must also demand an end to the war at home. We must demand an end to the raids on immigrant workers like the recent massive military raid carried out by thousands of Homeland Security/Immigration and Custom Enforcement police on mostly Latin@ workers at six Swift and Co. meat processing plants. We must demand an end to the racist police brutality and terror that recently killed 23 year-old unarmed Sean Bell in New York City and 93 year-old Kathryn Johnston in Atlanta, both of them African American.
Immediate, Unconditional, & Complete Withdrawal from Iraq--Out Now!
End Colonial Occupation & Imperialist Aggression from Africa to Asia, from Iraq to Palestine, to Afghanistan, to Haiti, to the Philippines, to Puerto Rico
No New Wars Against Iran, Syria, North Korea
Hands Off Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, & Lebanon
Solidarity with Immigrant Workers and Katrina Survivors
Stop the War at Home -- Stop Racist Police Terror -- Stop ICE raids--Military Recruiters Out of Our Schools and Communities -- No Draft -- Education, Not War
How You Can Help:
Endorse the call for unity for March 17 - http://www.troopsoutnow.org/mar17endorse.html
Volunteer - http://www.troopsoutnow.org/mar17volunteer.html
Become an Organizing Center - http://troopsoutnow.org/mar17orgcentsignup.html
Donate - http://www.troopsoutnow.org/donate.html
International Action Center
55 W. 17th St. 5th floor, New York, NY 10011
Tel. 212.633.6646
http://www.iacenter.org
A New Year’s message from IAC founder Ramsey Clark
Dear friends:
The year 2006 has seen the Bush administration’s lawlessness and brutality exposed before the world. President Bush has so outraged people everywhere that massive protests appear whenever he or his representatives show up anywhere in the world. The U.S. military has failed to stop the growing Iraqi resistance and civil war. The deaths mount—hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and thousands of U.S. GI’s while more young people from this country and elsewhere are being sought to fight and die in Iraq. And still the U.S. government has no plans to withdraw its troops and end this criminal war.
Millions of people in the U.S. passionately oppose this war. Millions voted against the war in the recent elections, removing Bush cronies from Congress. Massive numbers of people are appalled by this war and the criminal acts called for by the White House, including torture, kidnapping, unlimited detentions without charges, the celebration of prisons like Quantanamo and widespread acts to suppress political dissent of all forms at home. Yet, Bush remains intransigent and will stop at nothing to continue this criminal and immoral war, flouting the will of the people.
Only strong, bold massive protests from the people right here can compel the Bush Administration to withdraw all U.S. forces from Iraq NOW!
What we do in the next few months can make a real difference.
For 16 years the International Action Center (IAC) has been one of the major forces mobilizing opposition to criminal and inhuman U.S. military adventures. It has worked hard and gained worldwide respect for opposing U.S. war, militarism and interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, from Venezuela to Haiti, Colombia and Cuba, from Palestine, the Philippines, Sudan and Lebanon to Yugoslavia and now Iran and Korea.
In 1991, the IAC organized to oppose the U.S.-led Gulf War, which led to the IAC’s founding. The IAC conducted unprecedented war crimes hearings in 21 countries and 16 U.S. states in 1991. That evidence presented to a panel of judges from 17 nations resulted in unanimous verdicts of guilt against U.S. leaders.
Since that time, this principled organization has stood up when others feared demonization and isolation for opposing horrendous U.S. policies, from genocidal economic sanctions to the use of depleted uranium weapons. The IAC was vital in organizing the first major demonstrations against the war of aggression against Iraq in March 2003, and again convened a War Crimes Tribunal in 2004 which found the Bush team guilty for its aggression and atrocities in Iraq.
The IAC has taken on struggles against racism, injustice, and much more—from standing with Hurricane Katrina survivors in their quest for justice, to supporting immigrants’ rights, to opposing the death penalty, and police brutality and challenging military recruitment. IAC meetings, rallies, protests, teach-ins, and other public activities number in the thousands.
Wherever the IAC is needed, it’s there!
The IAC’s many publications are an invaluable contribution to the struggle. They include major books on the Gulf War, the genocidal sanctions against Iraq, Haiti’s slave rebellion and continuing fight for freedom, U.S. corruption of Columbia’s sovereignty, the U.S. and NATO Balkanization of Yugoslavia, War Crimes and the best single volume on the criminal uses of depleted uranium in warfare.
Now, the tide has clearly turned against the war. But we must do more!
Our New Year’s Resolution for 2007 must be to work together in unrelenting efforts to end this criminal war and bring all U.S. troops home from Iraq NOW!
We must pledge to work to end all military interventions abroad, to stop the use of force and economic power to dominate others and to begin new efforts at friendship, cooperation and sharing with the world, with the underpinning of true respect for humankind.
This war will by ended by the people! People of conscience must take action in unprecedented numbers to stop this war. The next war will be prevented only if we demand accountability for the last war and impeachment of President Bush and his remaining advisors, guilty of this “supreme international crime.”
Let’s work everyday on this—and march together in unity and strength on March 17, 2007, in Washington, D.C.—a global day of action on the fourth anniversary of this most criminal war.
Together we can end this war NOW and prevent the next!
Ramsey Clark
No comments:
Post a Comment