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Iraq war veterans, military families hold protest in North
Carolina
By a reporting team
21 March 2005
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Nearly 3,000 antiwar demonstrators, including Iraq war veterans,
families of soldiers killed in the war and high school and college-aged
youth, held a march and rally Saturday in Fayetteville, North
Carolina, to mark the second anniversary of the US invasion of
Iraq and demand an end to the war.
Organizers selected the city of 125,000 because it is home
to Ft. Bragg, the base of the US Armys 82nd Airborne Division
and the US Special Operations Command. Some 10,000 soldiers from
Ft. Bragg have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, and some
80 service personnel with ties to the region or its bases have
been killed since 2002, according to the Fayetteville Observer.

The protest expressed the growing disillusionment and anger
against the Bush administration and the war among military personnel
and their families. An effort by right-wing elements to organize
a counterdemonstration failed to bring out more than a few dozen
pro-war advocates.
Several speakers at the rally argued that the best way to support
the troops was to end the illegal occupation of Iraq and
bring the soldiers safely home. Kara Hollingsworth, the wife of
a soldier serving in Iraq with the 18th Airborne Corps, received
a standing ovation when she told the crowd, I cannot remain
silent ... I cant slap a yellow sticker on my car and call
it supporting my troops. Its time for us to bring our troops
home.
Kelly Dougherty, a young military
police sergeant who served in Nasiriyah, Iraq, denounced the Bush
administration, saying, Soldiers are being abandoned by
the same government that says it supports the troops. Many are
waiting more than a month to get the physical and mental care
they need because of what they did in Iraq.
The violence is escalating but the American people are
not shown the more than 1,500 coffins that are carrying the bodies
of dead US soldiers, or the suffering of the Iraqi people. The
occupation is the problem, not the solution.
Marchers carried mock coffins draped with US flags to commemorate
the US soldiers who have died in the war and embroidered banners
hung around the rally venue in Rowan Park that included the names
and personal profiles of dozens of soldiers from North Carolina,
Florida, Georgia and other Southern states who have been killed.
The protest took place despite heavy police intimidation. Dozens
of Fayetteville police officers, along with cops from across the
state and from South Carolina, encircled Rowan Park and watched
the protest from rooftops and mounted horses. The march was delayed
and backed up for several blocks as police searched every demonstrator
with metal detectors before entering the park.
Speakers at the rally included representatives from Iraq Veterans
Against the War and Military Families Speak Out, as well as the
brother of José Couso, the Spanish TV cameraman killed
in Baghdad when a US tank fired on the Palestine Hotel. In line
with several other demonstrations organized by United for Peace
and Justice, the rally was also addressed by a Democratic Party
politician, California Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey, who said nothing
about her partys support for the war and urged those in
attendance to support her efforts to pass a resolution to replace
US occupation force with UN troops.
Cindy Sheehans son Casey was killed in Sadr City in April
2004. She is a co-founder of the Gold Star Families for Peace.
She said, I didnt lose my son. I know where he is.
He is buried here. He was put in a grave by George Bush and the
neo-conservatives, a government of psychopathic killers.
In 16 days we are going to mark the one year anniversary
of our sons death. He was a bright, sensitive young man,
who needlessly and senselessly died for lies. If Congress gives
Bush the $81 billion he is asking for war their hands will be
soaked in blood, not the purple ink of the sham elections in Iraq.
If Bush believes in the march for democracy why doesnt he
march his two daughters off to Iraq? If not, he should bring our
kids home now.
After the rally several participants
spoke with the WSWS. Shanell Thomas is a 29-year-old soldier who
trained Iraqi policeman in Abu Ghraib right after the invasion.
She said, When Saddam Hussein was captured we thought we
were going home. Privates went up to their sergeants and asked,
Why are we still here? Our lieutenant sat us down
and said, Dont keep asking that question. We dont
know why were here.
I lost a friend, a 19-year-old female soldier just out
of basic training. The day she was killed she had taken over my
place because I sprained my wrist. The officers told me, Just
get over it, this is war.
I never used to watch the news and think about politics.
During the elections soldiers used to debate over Kerry and Bush.
Many said if Kerry was elected wed still be in Iraq, anyway,
so maybe if Bush was elected wed get a raise.
Alex Ryabov is a Marine veteran and cofounder of Iraq Veterans
Against the War who took part in combat operations during the
initial invasion of Iraq in March 2003. He said, I joined
the Marine Corps in 2000 just after a recruiter appeared at our
high school. He used to call me repeatedly to urge me to join
the corps. He gave me the usual sales pitch of how wonderful the
Marine life would be with a chance for traveling all over the
world. In addition I could also get help for college.
In January 2003, we were informed that we would be deployed
to Kuwait for the invasion of Iraq. I was never for the war exactly
but I had to do my duty as a soldier. During the invasion, I saw
an Iraqi military vehicle that was completely incinerated by our
artillery. Normally we fire from miles away and we dont
get to see the destruction immediately. When I saw this vehicle
it not only shocked me but also made me realize what would happen
to me if we were at the receiving end.
My unit came back in May 2003 and already I was sick
of the Marines from what we had done in Iraq. I had to hold myself
from quitting outright, which would have subjected me to sanctions
from the corps. After I got out, I went to a peace rally in June
2004. I was impressed at the fact that the opposition to the war
extended to all age groups. I was already against this war, but
what I saw at the peace rally had a big impact.
After getting out of the Marine Corps I met up with Michael
Hoffman (one of the main founders of Iraq Veterans Against the
War) and discussed about our opposition to the war. I was also
in touch with other veterans and we all then decided to state
our opposition openly. We formed the IVAW and went public with
our opposition during a Veterans Day march in July 2004. Since
then we have attracted scores of members and supporters. We have
visited wounded veterans at Walter Reed Hospital, where I estimate
at least 70 percent are against the war. There is also widespread
opposition among the troops currently deployed in Iraq.
Several others who spoke with the WSWS debunked the claim that
the Bush administration enjoyed widespread support in the so-called
Red States, including North Carolina, which Bush carried
because Kerry offered no solution to the deepening social problems
of the region.
The closing of Good Hope Hospitals psychiatric unit in
Fayetteville was announced the day of the demonstration, for example.
The facility is the only hospital in a two-county area that has
beds for psychiatric patents. Last year, the unit served 500 psychiatric
patients. The local newspaper reported a 90 percent increase last
year in the number of people who had to be committed involuntarily.
One of the marchers, Carolyn Mott, a Fayetteville resident
who is familiar with the psychological problems of returning soldiers,
told the WSWS, Were seeing an overload of the Veterans
Administration system. There are more and more young men who have
seen atrocities and who have carried out atrocities. I dont
think the vets from the first Gulf War saw as many horrible things
as these people have.
There are not really provisions to take care of these
people after they are released from the military. There are fewer
and fewer jobs around here. I have noticed the growth of the homeless
community in Fayetteville. Many of them are younger men, veterans
from the Iraq war.
My feeling is the Democratic Party has gone very far
to the right and I am very disappointed. I think young people
really need to pay attention, to read and learn everything about
what is going on.
See Also:
Thousands in cities across US demand an
end to the Iraq war
[21 March 2005]
Europe: tens of thousands protest on
second anniversary of Iraq war
[21 March 2005]
Canada: protests against US occupation
of Iraq in 40 cities
[21 March 2005]
Rallies in Australia, New Zealand and
Asia demand troops out of Iraq
[21 March 2005]
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