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Hundreds of thousands in US protest Iraq invasion plans
By Bill Vann
28 October 2002
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Rallies and marches to oppose the Bush administrations
plan to launch an unprovoked war against Iraq brought hundreds
of thousands of demonstrators into the streets in Washington DC,
San Francisco and several other US cities on October 26.
Simultaneous demonstrations opposing a US invasion of the Arab
country were held in Rome, Berlin, Copenhagen, Tokyo, Mexico City
and San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Attending the Washington demonstration were delegations from
throughout the East Coast, as well as the South and Midwest. The
participants included busloads of college students and high school
youth as well as professionals, Arab- and Palestinian-Americans,
and workers.

Demonstrators carried a wide variety of signs and banners opposing
US militarism. Among the more popular slogans were Drop
Bush, Not Bombs, No Blood for Oil, Regime
Change Begins at Home and War is Bushs Weapon
of Mass Distraction. There were also signs attacking US
Senator Joseph Lieberman and other Democratic Party supporters
of war with Iraq.
Demonstrators gathered near the Vietnam War memorial in the
morning and later marched to and around the White House, returning
to the site where the rally began. The marchers, who at times
stretched shoulder-to-shoulder across the Washington streets,
were so numerous that when the head of the march returned to the
starting point, the last demonstrators were just setting off.
Police kept a relatively low profile and there were only three
reported arrests.
While Washington police acknowledged that the protest in the
US capital was probably the largest antiwar rally since the Vietnam
era, it got scant coverage from a media that daily serves as a
conduit for the Bush administrations war propaganda.
The demonstration provided another illustration of the vast
gulf between official politics and the sentiments of masses of
people who oppose the war. It was largely boycotted by elected
Democratic officials. The marchs organizers, a coalition
of protest groups, had called it as a means of pressuring Congress
and the White House to halt the buildup to war. Weeks before the
demonstration, however, both the House and Senate approved with
little debate resolutions giving Bush unrestricted powers to launch
a war whenever he sees fit.
There was virtually no participation by the trade unions. With
the exception of a relatively small contingent from Hospital Workers
Local 1199 of the Service Employees International Union from New
York City, no official union delegations attended.
One local union president who addressed the crowd claimed that
George Meany, the former AFL-CIO president, had stated after the
Vietnam War that he would have opposed it had he known then
what he knew now. The official then exhorted the crowd to
learn from George Meany. In reality, the present AFL-CIO
bureaucracy is pursuing the same kind of national chauvinist policy
in backing the Bush administrations war plans that Meany
did 30 years ago.
While most march participants expressed anger and disillusionment
with the Democratic Party, the orientation of Act Now to Stop
War and End Racism (ANSWER), the coalition organizing the protest,
was to blunt any opposition to the Democrats. The main speakers
at the rally included former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark,
the Reverend Jesse Jackson, the Reverend Al Sharpton and Democratic
Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney of Georgia.
McKinney, the only elected official to address the protesters,
is a lame duck, having lost the Democratic primary in her district.
While the speakers delivered many denunciations of Bush, they
failed to spell out any perspective upon which to fight against
war. Jackson and others offered the vain hope that through continuing
protests the voices of the people would be heard by
the Bush administration and Congress. There was little or no reference
to the large vote by Democratic Congressmen and Senators, including
the Democratic leadership of both houses of Congress, to authorize
the use of force by Bush in a first strike against Iraq.
The claim of Jackson to oppose war with Iraq is entirely cynical.
Invoking a biblical passage at one point in his address to the
crowd, he said that there is a time to every season under
heaven, including for war. Among the necessary
wars he cited was the Persian Gulf War launched by Bush senior
against Iraq in 1991 that left the country in ruins and led to
punishing sanctions that have claimed some 1.5 million lives.
Jackson has stated, as have virtually all the Democrats who have
voiced reservations about Bushs war policy, that he would
support an attack on Iraq provided it received United Nations
sanction.
A unilateral US attack, Jackson said, would cause the US to
lose all moral authority in promoting its interests
abroad.
The main thrust of Jacksons remarks, and the central
political line coming from the protest platform, was an attempt
to corral the anger of the protesters back behind the Democratic
Party. Its time to vote for change. We need a regime
change in this country, so lets vote, he said. Democracy
will come alive on November 5.
A similar line-up dominated the San Francisco march, where
Congresswoman Barbara Lee was the keynote speaker. She emphasized
the no vote by a section of Congressional Democrats
on the war resolution, while centering her own criticism of Bush
on his denial of the necessity for UN approval of an invasion.

A handful of local officials from the International Longshore
and Warehouse Union participated in the rally, though few if any
rank-and-file dockworkers were brought. Richard Mead, president
of the San Francisco local of the ILWU, attacked Californias
Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein for supporting the use of
the Taft-Hartley Act against the union. He portrayed her position
a stab-in-the-back because of the contributions the union had
made to her re-election campaign.
Other speakers at the Washington rally included actress Susan
Sarandon and Sami-Al-Arian, the Palestinian-born University of
South Florida professor who is being victimized as part of the
Bush administrations witch-hunt against Arab-Americans.
Kadouri Akaysi of the Committee in Support of Iraq spoke from
the platform, detailing the suffering that sanctions have brought
upon the Arab country. What does Bush want in Iraq?
he asked. He wants only oil.
Speaking to the WSWS afterwards, Mr. Akaysi said that he has
talked to many people in Baghdad and that their concerns about
and opposition to a US invasion belie the Bush administrations
claims that US troops would be welcomed as liberators.
For eight or ten years they have had only war, they have
had enough, he said. You can talk to people on the
left and people on the right and they all say that if war comes,
they will unite to defend Iraq and to fight against the US.
The Iraqi American activist dismissed recent small demonstrations
staged by members of the US-backed Iraqi opposition in Washington.
These people are puppets, he said. None of them
has seen Iraq for ten years or more, but they are hungry for power
and hope that the US will give it to them. My view is that if
Iraq is going to change it should be the Iraqi people who change
it, and not the US.
Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) distributed
thousands of leaflets reprinting a statement posted on the World
Socialist Web Site entitled, A
political strategy to oppose war against Iraq.
During and after the Washington demonstration many people stopped
by an SEP and WSWS literature table. There were lively discussions
with march participants about the policies of the SEP, and hundreds
of dollars worth of Marxist literature was sold.
See Also:
US demonstrators speak out against Iraq
war: "A slaughter for oil and private profit"
[28 October 2002]
A political strategy to oppose war against
Iraq
[25 October 2002]
US plan for Iraq: Back to colonialism
[14 October 2002]
The war against Iraq and America's drive
for world domination
[4 October 2002]
Oppose US war against Iraq!
Build an international movement against imperialism!
[9 September 2002]
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