Tue Jun 18 2013
Departments
War

The state of the anti-war movement
by David Swanson
June 14, 2012

A magazine asked me this morning for my thoughts on Iraq and the peace movement. What did this war produce? I replied:
· Over a million human beings killed plus extensive structural and cultural damage amounting to sociocide, which we could have prevented and didn't, which we could regret and make reparations for but instead are largely uninformed about.

· A lesson taught to other nations that nuclear weapons are needed to prevent a U.S. invasion, a lesson also taught by the assault on Libya.

· A lesson taught to other nations that might makes right and aggressive killing and torture are to be used when one can get away with it.

· Entrenchment of a fossil fuel / war industry, environmental damage, economic damage, damage to international relations, and a huge rollback in civil liberties and the right to assemble and protest.

· Enormous enlargement of the war industry, privatization of the military, and a strengthened ability to legally bribe politicians and control them.

In the peace movement, there's good and bad:

· We exposed the lies on which the war was based and educated everyone else, but most still don't grasp that the lies are common to all wars; they think this one was unique.

· We played a role in ending the war. But it was a larger role than we are aware of, so people don't take enough encouragement from it.

· We built international relations among peace activists in numerous nations, building an anti-bases movement and an anti-NATO movement, and building relations with activists in the nations attacked by ours as well.

· We exposed the financial cost and the cost in U.S. military lives. But -- again -- few know about the far greater cost in Iraqi lives. And very few understand that the base military budget dwarfs the war budget and is equally misspent.

· Coming out of that, we have a nation strongly opposed to massive ground wars. But we have a nation willing to accept air and drone wars. And why not? They don't hurt anybody!

· We should have been much stronger. And we should have pushed harder when the Democrats took power by pretending to listen to us. Instead, 3/4 of the U.S. peace movement went to sleep. So, we have to have Republicans in power to have a peace movement -- a severe weakness.

What, I was asked, should be done to mark the 10-year anniversary of the invasion next March?

We should apologize, I said. We should make reparations to Iraq and much of the region, including Afghanistan and Pakistan and Yemen, etc., all of which our troops should immediately leave. We should launch cultural and student exchange programs instead. We should open prosecutions of those responsible, from Bush and Obama on down. We should move funding from the military to green energy. We should shut down all foreign bases. We should announce the dismantling of all nuclear weapons. We should end NATO. We should reaffirm the Kellogg-Briand Pact. We should reform and democratize the UN and the ICC. Or at least those of us willing to have a peace movement, either because Romney is president or because we're willing to confront Obama now that he's a lame duck and really really doesn't give a damn, should move things as far as we can in that direction.

In the meantime, we should build on what was built in Chicago protesting NATO. We should assist in opposing what look like false prosecutions of activists coming out of that event. We should learn the approach being developed by militarized police forces around the country, which includes huge numbers of undercover police and infiltrators, attempts at entrapment and provocation, and public relations scare tactics used to demonize activists and reduce participation. We should learn from what worked in terms of coalition building and turnout, and what arguably could have been done better -- such as a public commitment to nonviolence by the organizers.

We cannot reduce public organizing, education, and pressure to elections. We've just seen how that works in Wisconsin. I had the misfortune to catch a bit of Bill Maher last night, and he was denouncing Occupy Wall Street for not being as smart as the Tea Party, not being as serious, not devoting itself to electing people. As if the tea partiers who opposed bank bailouts have elected representatives. As if the tea partiers who opposed restrictions on civil liberties have elected people. As if tea partiers outraged by the concentration of power and wealth in a corrupt two-tiered system have had their concerns remotely answered. To the extent that the Tea Party has actually changed anything, it has done so primarily by pressuring the government from the outside, including by demanding that the Republicans become even worse than they were or be abandoned. This has produced walking-disasters of officials independent enough to sometimes get things right, as when Senator Rand Paul has blocked pro-war legislation.

Occupy Wall Street has the Net Roots Obamanation and the Take Back the American Dried Up Raisin in the Sun conferences, with their support for war and anything else if its Democratic. It's to the credit of every activist who has avoided falling into that trap. We should be lobbying Congress for good bills and for better bills that don't exist yet. There are bills to end the Authorization to Use Military Force, to ban the sale of weapons to abusive countries (does that include our own?), and to require diplomacy with Iran. There should be bills to begin a process of conversion from a military to a civilian economy. But primarily we should be educating, organizing, and building a movement to resist the bipartisan pro-war consensus. We should not be dumping our energies into lesser-evil electioneering. Here are some upcoming events:

June 17, 2012, New York, N.Y., Protest NYPD Abuse and Targeting of Muslims

June 24, 2012, Washington, D.C., March Against Torture

June 22-26, 2012, everywhere, Actions Against Torture

July 14, 2012, Wisconsin, Peacestock

August 8-12, 2012, Miami, Fla., Veterans for Peace Convention

August 27-30, Tampa, Fla., Protest the RNC

Sept. 1-6. 2012, Charlotte, N.C., Protest the DNC

On Afghanistan, I think we need to insist that staying is not the best way of leaving. We have three-quarters of the United States with us on wanting to end the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan. There is no need to worry about being too radical. There is no need to frame our position so as to appeal to patriotic entrepreneurs, and so forth. Three-quarters of the country agrees with us. Can we get them active? Can we get them talking, writing letters, calling shows, blogging, marching, attending events, pushing their organizations and the media and Congress? Obama wants to keep a large number of troops in Afghanistan for another two and a half years, reducing them at an unspecified rate to an unspecified number, and then keeping them there 10 more years, after which it will be time to step back and consider the situation. The House, but apparently not the Senate, wants to require a minimum of 68,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, but Obama already wants the funding at that level and is committed to considering after the election whether to take the Pentagon's advice and keep 68,000 or defy the Pentagon. Betting on what that actually means largely comes down to whether you imagine that, contrary to all established trends, a politician gets better by becoming a lame duck rather than worse. We need to demand all troops home now, to expose the horror of the war, to amplify the voices of Afghans opposing the occupation, to encourage resistance in the military, to escalate our protests, and to build understanding of the numerous tradeoffs, financial and otherwise.

We need to resist the cries for U.S. war in Syria. There are remarkably few stories in our corporate media about the healthy state of democracy in Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, or anywhere else the United States has built a nation by destroying one. There is little outrage over killing and torture by U.S. allies in Bahrain. Many supporters of war in Syria are open about their motivation of overthrowing a government that is friendlier to Iran than Israel. But Tunisia and Egypt have brighter futures because of the tools of nonviolence. Violence is not quick. When the U.S. armed fighters in Afghanistan in the 1980s, the damage was not easily contained. Pouring gasoline on a fire in Syria could be worse.

We need to expose the lies about Iran and to remind people constantly of the lies that they knew were lies about Iraq. Possessing weapons is not grounds for war. Iran is not working on any nuclear weapons. An Israeli war will be understood by Iran and the world as U.S.-authorized, as of course it will be. Iran has not violated the non-proliferation treaty, while the United States has. War and threats of war are crimes. Sanctions that starve people, not to mention "cyber-war," are properly considered acts of war. Iran has threatened no one and has sought to agree to inspections and control of uranium not required by any law or treaty. But the U.S. President and most Congress members are pretending that the onus is on Iran to cease doing what we know it is not doing.

Meanwhile, Obama, not content with having enlarged the military, its global presence, its budget, its privatization, its power to operate within the United States as a police force, and its capacity to act in secrecy, has given himself the power to murder anyone, anywhere, picking the names of the nominees from his secret kill list. RootsAction.org is launching a petition aimed at banning weaponized drones and undoing the kill-list program. Numerous organizations are taking part, and the petition will be sent to every possible national and international authority. Your organization is invited to sign on.

Part of what drives all of this madness is the money poured into it. The military budget has grown every year that Bush or Obama has been president thus far -- and even more so if one looks at all the departments that get military spending. Obama is proposing to cut Iraq and Afghanistan war spending in the military budget from $88 billion to $44 billion. Quite a halfway measure for wars he claims are over or ending. And the budget control act requires, unless Congress undoes it, that $55 billion more be cut. But it could be cut from veterans care, from non-military diplomacy, or from other non-military areas. Even if it is cut from the military, we're talking about $55 billion out of a budget that is well over $1 trillion. We ought to be insisting on much larger cuts and building a major coalition of groups that want the spending for useful purposes, want their civil liberties, want our natural environment, and want to stop killing people.

---------------------

David Swanson's books include War Is A Lie." He blogs at David Swanson and War is a Crime and works for the online activist organization Roots Action. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswanson and FaceBook.

Link to Article




Recent War Articles

The Larger Question of Chuck Hagel
  December 29, 2012
  Ray McGovern

Doing time for peace
  December 24, 2012
  David Swanson

A day in the sun for Gaza, or more of the same?
  December 2, 2012
  Pam Bailey

Free Bradley Manning now
  December 2, 2012
  Dennis Trainor, Jr.

Veterans For Peace appeals to Israeli soldiers to lay down their arms
  November 20, 2012
  Veterans for Peace

Honor and Rape
  November 16, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Veterans For Peace sues to march in Veterans Day parade
  November 8, 2012
  War is a Crime

Dreaming of Duvets
  October 21, 2012
  David Smith-Ferri

Charges dismissed against nuclear missile launch protesters
  October 17, 2012
  War is a Crime

Nonviolent protester of drone wars sentenced to federal prison
  October 11, 2012
  War is a Crime

Veterans and allies arrested in New York as Afghanistan war enters year 12
  October 9, 2012
  Veterans for Peace

War, Vets, and Moral Injury
  October 5, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

George Bush the murderer: The movie
  October 4, 2012
  David Swanson

US Army reports sharp rise in suicides
  October 1, 2012
  Doctors against Racism

Lies, damn lies, and nuclear lies
  September 28, 2012
  David Swanson

The Buzzing Wasps
  September 27, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Cynthia McKinney raises questions on killings in Libya
  September 19, 2012
  Cynthia McKinney

Navy vet responds to "Navy Week" Public Relations
  September 14, 2012
  Mike Ferner

The method to the post 9/11 madness
  September 10, 2012
  David Swanson

We are at war
  September 10, 2012
  Johnny Barber

Get Ready for a Catastrophic War: Israel Likely to Strike Iran Before November Elections
  August 25, 2012
  Ray McGovern

More costs of war: Suicides and mental trauma of military family members
  August 24, 2012
  Ann Wright

Batten down the hatches: Israel likely to strike Iran before November
  August 13, 2012
  Ray McGovern

America spends $49 million in Vietnam to remove Agent Orange
  August 10, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Sanctions: Diplomacy’s weapon of mass murder
  August 6, 2012
  Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich

The drone and the bomb
  July 28, 2012
  Ed Kinane

Guess what % of Americans know military spending is increasing
  July 28, 2012
  David Swanson

Abolishing war: One last step -- Remarks delivered at Peacestock 2012
  July 21, 2012
  David Swanson

U.N. Committee questions U.S. recruitment of children
  July 5, 2012
  Pat Elder

Declaration of Independence from a war economy
  July 5, 2012
  Mark Haim, Mid-Missouri Peaceworks

Syria: No to intervention, no to illusions
  June 27, 2012
  Phyllis Bennis

How small abused nations could end war
  June 25, 2012
  David Swanson

Klepetromilitatorship
  June 20, 2012
  David Swanson

What happens when you talk to the public about drones
  June 14, 2012
  Nick Mottern

The state of the anti-war movement
  June 14, 2012
  David Swanson

Israeli attack on Gaza, June 3-4, 2012
  June 5, 2012
  Rosa Schiano

The grim reaper
  June 5, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Operation Enduring Freedom: A civilian’s view
  June 5, 2012
  Ian Pounds

Missile-Defense: Is it working?
  May 28, 2012
  Bruce Gagnon

The special loophole in hell for war lawyers
  May 28, 2012
  David Swanson

The "NoNATO" demonstrations in pictures
  May 28, 2012
  Christopher Coston

The Pits of Hell
  May 24, 2012
  Robert C, Koehler

Chicago: Peace Town
  May 21, 2012
  David Swanson

Is peace getting in the way of our war plans?
  May 15, 2012
  David Swanson

Colin Powell's tangled web
  May 10, 2012
  David Swanson

"We Did Not Choose This War" and other hypocrisies
  May 3, 2012
  Leah Bolger and David Swanson

Complaint against Interrogation techniques at Gitmo
  April 25, 2012
  Trudy Bond

Chemical warfare
  April 13, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

20-year veteran pleads guilty to act of civil disobedience, President of Veterans For Peace disrupted Congressional "Super Committee"
  April 12, 2012
  David Swanson

Why we should outgrow "diversity of tactics" before protesting NATO
  April 8, 2012
  David Swanson

The Shifting Strategies of Empire
  April 1, 2012
  David Swanson

FINDING THE WISDOM WE NEED TO SURVIVE
  April 1, 2012
   ROBERT C. KOEHLER

Obama declares war on Iraq an honorable success 2 weeks early for April Fool's Day
  March 31, 2012
  David Swanson

No Justice Without Peace
  March 29, 2012
  David Swanson

The Bad Apple
  March 29, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

Nine years later: More shocked, less awed
  March 20, 2012
  David Swanson, Remarks at the Left Forum

DEATH AND PUBLIC RELATIONS
  March 17, 2012
  ROBERT C. KOEHLER

Kandahar 'killing-spree' militarism: A call for U.S. and Afghan citizens to question the U.S./Afghan Strategic Partnership Agreement
  March 13, 2012
  Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers

The 10 Most Excellent Reasons to Attack Iran
  March 7, 2012
  David Swanson

Saying no to militarism
  February 26, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler

My life as a post 9/11 Iraqi immigrant
  February 16, 2012
  Alan Karam

A One Percenter Puts Over $200 Million into the Peace Movement
  February 15, 2012
  David Swanson

Lucid derangement
  January 28, 2012
  David Swanson

"Snowed in in Seattle": A plea for peace to the White House
  January 23, 2012
  Cynthia McKinney

Book just published surveys current state of the military industrial complex
  January 16, 2012
  David Swanson

Thailand's Islamist war could become Yemen or Afghanistan, diplomats warn
  January 16, 2012
  Richard S. Ehrlich

A moment of cynicism
  January 16, 2012
  Robert C. Koehler




Read War Articles by Year:
2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000



FREE PRESS EMAIL UPDATE


Donate to the Free Press Election Protection Fund to help us investigate and monitor election fraud in this year's election.


Donate to The Free Press The Free Press Store

FOLLOW US ON
twitter
facebook


SEARCH THE FREEPRESS




1021 E. Broad St. Columbus, OH 43205 | 614.253.2571 | truth@freepress.org
All content © 1970-2012 The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer