|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Military families speak out against Iraq war at Pittsburgh
rally
By Alden Long
7 August 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The daughter of Staff Sergeant Charles Pollard, who is stationed
in Iraq, and her mother spoke out against the Iraq war and called
for US troops to be brought home at a noon-time press conference
Wednesday, July 30, outside the federal building in downtown Pittsburgh.
Robin and DeShauna Ponton also took part, along with some other
military families, in a 200-strong protest against George W. Bushs
appearance at the Urban League convention held July 26-30 in this
Pennsylvania city.
Staff Sergeant Pollard is a 43-year-old reservist from Pittsburgh.
He was called up and sent to Iraq with the 307th Military Police
Company. He is a 22-year military veteran and has been in Iraq
since May 24. Pollard was featured along with other soldiers in
a July 2 Washington Post story in which he and other US
troops spoke out against the war. U.S. officials need to
get our asses out of here, he told the Post. I
say that seriously. We have no business being here. We will not
change the culture they have in Iraq, in Baghdad.... All we are
here is potential people to be killed and sitting ducks.
When asked how soon he thought the US should pull out of Iraq,
his reply was, As soon as we can get the hell out of here.
He added, The President needs to know it is in his hands,
and we all need to recognize this isnt our home, America
is, and we just pray that he does something about it.
At last Wednesdays rally, Tim Vining from the Thomas
Merton Center, a Catholic charitable group that organized the
antiwar demonstrations in Pittsburgh and the protest against Bushs
appearance at the Urban League, introduced the speakers. He said,
We are gathering here today to lend our support to Charles
Pollard, a US soldier who spoke out and was featured in the July
1 Washington Post article on low troop morale. We are here
to give voice to soldiers who are asking hard questions of our
officials.
DeShauna Ponton, Robins mother, was first to speak. DeShauna
is from Perry Hilltop in Pittsburgh and is a child nutrition advocate
with the Just Harvest organization. President Bush has been
lying about the weapons of mass destruction that have caused our
soldiers to be in Iraq. I think it is time to bring the troops
home. President Bush says he is looking for the weapons of mass
destruction. He should look in the mirror. He is not only killing
many Iraqis, but he is killing people from here. They should bring
the troops home.
Robin Ponton, Sergeant Pollards daughter, is a 13-year-old
eighth grade student at Frick International Studies Academy in
the Oakland section of Pittsburgh. Speaking tearfully, she said,
I want my Dad home. I dont want him to be in Iraq.
I dont want him to die. I want them to bring my Dad home.
Sanford Kelson, a local attorney and Vietnam War veteran opposed
to the occupation of Iraq, also spoke. He said, Like so
many wars, we are finding out that people are being sent to war
to die for lies. Three-and-one-half-million Vietnamese died in
Vietnam. How many Iraqis have died? Bring the troops home now.
DeShauna and Robin Ponton spoke with the World Socialist
Web Site after the rally. DeSahuna explained, I came
here because I support my daughter in speaking up about what has
happened to her father. When we are out together, and if we hear
on the news or hear someone talking about another soldier having
been killed, Robin begins to worry that it is her dad until the
name is made known.
Robin and her father were born on the same day. She was
born on his 30th birthday. On her birthday, he sent her a card
that was signed by everyone in his unit. Bush does not see the
human side of this war. Each letter her father writes to Robin,
he writes as though it is his last. We are proud of him; we are
proud that he went to fight and proud that he is strong enough
to speak out about the war.
I feel we have been lied to. We were told that basically
Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. We were told we
had diagrams, we knew where they were. They have not been found.
Where do you think Saddam Hussein is hiding them? In his back
pocket? We have been lied to and the troops are over there being
shot at. They should be brought home now.
I am glad the lies are coming out, but Bush is not sending
the troops home. There are many reasons for this war. Bush wants
to control a country and control the oil. It is also like the
movie Wag the Dog. Bushs popularity was going down
so he started this war. The point is that people like Robins
father are over there fighting and being killed, not for the reason
we were told, but for other reasons.
The money they are using for this war could be used to
feed people. A lot of people are hungry and children need to get
the right nutrition. This war money could be used to feed the
hungry, for education and for housing. There are a lot better
ways to use this money than waging this war in Iraq. They attacked
Clinton for lying about an affair. As far as I am concerned that
is no business of mine. That is between Hillary and him. But these
lies, they involve American soldiers and people are getting killed
because of his lies.
I cant say that Charles has been used. He signed
up on his own and knew what he was getting into. He went to Iraq
to do his duty, but now we have found out that Bush lied. It is
now time to bring them home. There are people in the military
and in military families who are against the war. They are not
being represented in the press. We are proud of him that he went
over and we are proud of him that he spoke up. We have not heard
from him since he spoke out and was quoted in the Post
at the beginning of July. We expect to hear from him soon.
I support my daughter speaking up. I have always taught
her to look beyond herself, to look at the needs of other people
who may not have food or parents. I have always taught her to
see that many people are not as fortunate as her and to speak
up about injustices.
Robin Ponton also elaborated on her feelings, Those against
the war are not being represented. All of the people want to come
home. It is too hot over there, and they dont like what
they are there for. My friends are against the war. One of my
friends, her cousins father is also in the war and she told
me she knows how worried I am. Bush lied. Bush said that the troops
would be brought back, but they probably wont be coming
home soon. Every time I call my grandmother, the conversation
is about my dad. Everybody misses him. All my family backs me
up. My father had planned a vacation with me. He was going to
retire soon and we were going to travel together. Now all of those
plans have been messed up because of the war.
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz attempted to quiet
the soldiers and smooth over the crisis in his recent trip to
Iraq. After his return, Wolfowitz reported on the July 27 Sunday
morning talk shows that the soldiers were not opposed to their
assignment in Iraq; they just wanted to know a firm date for when
their tours of duty would end. Wolfowitz reiterated that plans
to build up an Iraqi police force were a top priority, as were
efforts to bring in military forces from other countries to relieve
the US contingents.
The day after Uday and Qusay Hussein were killed in a US military
operation in Mosul, the Army announced a plan for rotating fresh
troops into Iraq and bringing home the troops who have been stationed
there the longest. Soldiers from the 3rd Infantry Division, who
were sent to Kuwait last September and have twice had their orders
to return home rescinded, are to be replaced under the plan by
a Stryker brigade, elements of the 82nd Airborne Division and
additional National Guard units.
However, a day after announcing the plan for rotating the troops,
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld qualified it. Speaking to reporters
at the Pentagon, Rumsfeld declared, There are a whole series
of unknowables that are buried in there. And I think what will
determine what actually happens will be several things. One is
the number of international forces that we are able to bring in.
A second will be how the security environment evolves over a period
of time. And it is those things that will determine the actual
number of US forces that will be needed.
ABC News quoted one unidentified 3rd Infantry Division soldier
the week before saying, If Donald Rumsfeld were here, I
would ask him for his resignation.
See Also:
Are American soldiers in Iraq dying due
to depleted uranium?
[4 August 2003]
Americas maimed come
home from Iraq
[30 July 2003]
US troops voice anger at Pentagon
[21 July 2003]
Mounting casualties, Iraqi
resistance take toll on US troops
[11 July 2003]
Supporting the troops:
a crisis of perspective
[18 April 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |