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Thu Aug 28 2008
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Columns
Alexander Cockburn
No! In thunder
February 19, 2003
A simultaneous global protest! Collectively these mid-February rallies against war on Iraq have been the largest such demonstrations in history and, individually, the largest turnouts in the history of the United Kingdom, Italy, Australia and maybe Spain.
This thunderous, popular "No!" has emboldened, at least for now, France and Germany, and undercut the UK's Tony Blair. Nor can a man with as keen an eye for the political temparature as UN Arms Inspector Hans Blix have been oblivious to the emotions of Old Europe.
Here in the United States, city after city reported turnouts far in excess of what organizers had hoped for. We're thinking of towns like Flagstaff, Ariz., which had a peace rally of 1,500 in downtown, as big an event for Flagstaff as was the 200,000 in San Francisco. The block-by-block pens imposed by New York's Mayor Bloomberg managed to paralyze the East Side far more dramatically than would the rally and march originally requested by the organizers and shamefully denied by the NYPD and then by the federal courts.
The numbers here and overseas overwhelmed the studious indifference of the mainstream press, which had previously thought it safe to use the word "thousands" about rallies of a quarter of a million. Efforts to stigmatize the rallies as the work of tiny Marxist sects failed miserably. Organizers such as Leslie Cagan in United for Peace and Justice, and the ANSWER crowd drew on years of organizing experience to manage tremendous events.
The protests got under the skin of Bush and Blair regimes. After the weekend, the Washington Post ran an inside-dopester item reporting that the White House was beginning to regard Defense Secretary Rumsfeld as a political liability.
So we have a mass citizens' movement, bursting up from below, without any major presence by organized labor or the mainstream environmental movement, a reassertion of the vigor of the early rallies against the WTO, starting in Seattle, except here there was no "black bloc" of anarchists, no violence, for the press to seize upon and demonize.
Where is this peace movement expressing itself politically? In the U.S. House of Representatives there are 30 co-sponsors to a toughly worded antiwar resolution put forward by Pete DiFazio of Oregon, a Democrat, and Ron Paul of Texas, a Republican. In the U.S. Senate, Robert Byrd of West Virginia and Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts stand almost alone in their vehement opposition.
In other words, the U.S. Congress is deeply intimidated. The week before the rallies, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a full-throated endorsement of Israel 411-2, with only two voting against (Ron Paul, plus Nick Rahall of West Virginia, a Democrat). Three voted Present, and eighteen were Absent.)
Among the candidates for the Democratic nomination, Dennis Kucinich and Howard Dean are edging (more rapidly after the big weekend) toward the outright opposition to war of Al Sharpton, armor-plating themselves with heavy emphasis on the need for continued inspections and UN endorsement. Very few mainstream politicians dare state the obvious: that Bush, Powell and Rumsfeld have definitively failed to make their case.
A lot of Democrats are sitting on their hands with their mouths shut because they think time is on their side. If there is a war, they calculate that by mid-2004, the political payoff for the 43rd president will have had as short a lifespan as it did for the 41st president back in 1994. And that's assuming a rapid installation of a new U.S.-backed tyrant in Baghdad, without too many U.S. casualties.
If, against the odds and by dint of continuing protests, there isn't a war, Bush's political capital will dwindle even more rapidly, undermined anyway by anxieties about the economy and his overall competence.
In the end, an antiwar movement has to head somewhere beyond the basic "No," flesh out political platforms, and get into "divisive" issues. And if Bush starts the war, it will all get much tougher. But for now, let's savor one of history's great weekends.
Alexander Cockburn is coeditor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking
newsletter CounterPunch. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Alexander Cockburn
"Count our blessings" December 31, 2003
"Down with "Happy Holidays!"" December 23, 2003
"How to kill Saddam" December 17, 2003
"Dean's Dilemma" December 13, 2003
"It should be late, it was never great" December 5, 2003
"London and Miami: Cops in two cities" November 28, 2003
"The London trip of a global tyrant" November 19, 2003
"Where's the next meal coming from? 31 million Americans don't know" November 12, 2003
"From Bill to George: How many dimes worth of difference?" November 5, 2003
"Krugman's world" October 28, 2003
"GM seeds and virgins, wise and foolish" October 21, 2003
"David Kelly" October 16, 2003
"Paradise in Cookham" October 7, 2003
"Bush and Blair's chickens: but no poultry for the press?" September 30, 2003
"Edward Said dead at 66" September 28, 2003
"Alan Dershowitz, plagiarist" September 24, 2003
"Lighten up, America!" September 17, 2003
"Neocons and Democrats" September 10, 2003
"Tunnel! LIghts! Action!" September 4, 2003
"Kofi Annan, De Mello and the U.H." August 27, 2003
"Labor Day Blues" August 27, 2003
"Empire's good and bad days" August 20, 2003
"That "Anti-Semite!" slur" August 13, 2003
"If not Camejo, then Flynt! The death of the lesser of two evils" August 5, 2003
"Want to meet the real WMD fabricator? Yup, a mild-mannered Swede" July 30, 2003
"Green Party taking the plunge in 2004" July 25, 2003
"Goodbye, Uday and Quesay: Why the news is bad for Bush and Blair" July 23, 2003
"Alfred Kroeber" July 17, 2003
"Judy Miller's war" July 10, 2003
"Ending world hunger in Sacramento" June 26, 2003
"Anyone But Bush? Watch out, Dems!" June 25, 2003
"My life as a rabbi" June 18, 2003
"Why do Africans get AIDS?" June 10, 2003
"The terrible truth (part MMCCXVIII): it's a stacked deck" June 4, 2003
"David Horowitz gets it all wrong" June 4, 2003
"The Road Map hoax" May 28, 2003
"The rebellion and its martyers: Ed Rosenthal faces the music" May 21, 2003
"What's the big deal about Jayson Blair?" May 14, 2003
"Those damned six-breast martinis" May 7, 2003
"Vowing to vote Democrat next time?" April 30, 2003
"The decline and fall of American journalism" April 23, 2003
"The Remington of our time" April 20, 2003
"We said it would be a nightmare, and, yes, that's what it is" April 8, 2003
"Chickens in a darkening sky" March 27, 2003
"What next for the peace movement?" March 19, 2003
"What will the U.S. find if it invades Iraq?" March 11, 2003
"E2 and the Towers" February 26, 2003
"No! In thunder" February 19, 2003
"The great "intelligence" fraud" February 12, 2003
"One Angry Jury" February 5, 2003
"Yes, that really was the President of the United States" January 29, 2003
"Rave On, Walt Whitman" January 28, 2003
"Big Brother’s been around a long time" January 26, 2003
"Cops, dogs and death" January 22, 2003
""NO TO WAR!" Is anyone listening?" January 15, 2003
"The right not to be in pain: the Feds vs Ed Rosenthal" January 15, 2003
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