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After September 24 protest: What way forward in the struggle
against war?
By Bill Van Auken
28 September 2005
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The massive march in Washington on September 24 for the immediate
withdrawal of US troops from Iraq was followed two days later
by a smaller civil disobedience protest in front of the White
House where scores were arrested.
The first of the 370 taken into police custody Monday was Cindy
Sheehan, the mother of a fallen US soldier who gained national
attention last month by camping out near Bushs Texas ranch
to call for an end to the war and demand the president explain
to her why her son was killed.
Sheehan played a prominent role in the weekends demonstrations,
in large part because she embodies the sentiments shared by the
hundreds of thousands who marched. Her tragedythe sudden,
violent death of her son Caseyis as profound as her anger
against those responsible for sending him to Iraq to die.
The demonstration was the largest seen in the US capital since
the war began two-and-a-half years ago. But beyond sheer numbers,
a somewhat changed political mood among the marchers was evident.
While many were participating for the first time in such a
protest, there seemed a more sober approach than in the past,
less willingness to accept facile explanations attributing the
war to a conspiracy on the part of George Bush and a handful of
neo-cons, a greater recognition that the tragedy inflicted
upon the peoples of both Iraq and the US is the product of deep-going
social and political contradictions.
This is due in part to the protracted character of the warwith
US fatalities now pushing toward the 2,000 mark and the Iraqi
dead numbering at least 50 times that. It is also bound up with
the failure of the anybody-but-Bush perspective advanced by much
of the antiwar movement before the 2004 election, and the undeniable
complicity of the Democratic Party in continuing the war.
Without question, the demonstration was also deeply affected
by the Hurricane Katrina disaster and its stunning exposure of
the rotten foundations of the entire social and political systemthe
vast inequality and stark class divisions, the incompetence, corruption
and indifference of the ruling elite. The sense that the war is
a product of a crisis-ridden social system poses difficult political
questions that find no ready answers in the politics of protest.
While a changed mood may have been perceptible among the marchers,
there was little to distinguish the message that came from the
speakers platforms from those offered in previous protests.
While Hurricane Katrina was referred to by many speakers, it was
almost invariably from the standpoint of linking it
to the war issue in order to better promote a perspective of pressuring
Congress and supporting the Democratic Party against Bush.
That not a single prominent Democratic office-holder or official
would even send a message of support to the march, much less participate,
did not faze its organizers and such speakers as Jesse Jackson,
Al Sharpton, Ralph Nader and Ramsey Clark. They either openly
advocated a vote for the Democrats in the coming 2006 and 2008
electionsas in Jacksons caseor called for Bushs
impeachment, a political perspective that promotes the conception
that the Democrats in Congress will wage a struggle against the
very policy they have supported.
It was not without political significance that the bulk of
the marchers appeared to bypass the rallies called to open and
close the protest and simply took to the streets to express their
outrage. Yet this sense that the speakers had no real answers
coexists with persistent political illusions.
Alongside the civil disobedience in front of the White House,
the protests organizers coordinated a lobbying effort targeting
primarily Democrats on Capitol Hill.
This raises a fundamental political issue that cannot be evaded
by those seeking to end the war in Iraq and the ever more virulent
growth of US militarism. There can be no viable antiwar movement
so long as it remains in the thrall of the Democratic Party.
Historically, subordination to the Democratic Party, and thereby
to the American two-party system, has been the political graveyard
of every mass movement against war and for social progress, democratic
rights and equality. This was the case with the Populist agrarian
revolt at the end of the 19th century, the mass upsurge for industrial
unions in the 1930s, the civil rights movement of the 1950s and
1960s, and the antiwar movement of the 1960s and early 1970s.
A political orientation to pressuring the Democratic Party
is incompatible with the development of a strategy to defend the
independent interests of the working class, because the Democratic
Party, whatever its tactical differences with the Republicans,
is a party of American big business and defends the same fundamental
economic and social interests as the Republican Party. They are
two parties of American capitalism, and both the Iraq war and
the Katrina disaster have exposed, in different ways, the failure
of the capitalist system itself.
Cindy Sheehan and Hillary Clinton
This political truth was demonstrated in Cindy Sheehans
meetings with Senate Democratic Minority Leader Harry Reid of
Nevada and Senator Hillary Clinton of New York, considered a likely
contender for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008.
Both voted to authorize the use of military force against Iraq
in 2002 and both have repeatedly voted to fund the continuing
war.
According to an account published by the New York weekly the
Village Voice, Sheehan came out of the meetings and declared,
I know their offices are going to be working with us; all
we have to do is keep up the pressure on them.
This is, however, a combination of wishful thinking and political
naivete. As the report spelled out, Clinton had gone out of her
way to schedule a meeting earlier the same day with 20 members
of American Gold Star Mothers, a group that has sharply criticized
Sheehan and other families of slain soldiers seeking an end to
the war. Clinton stressed that these mothers held different
positions on Iraq.
Her statement echoed the attempts of the White House and the
media to equate the mass demonstration Saturday against the war
with the rally held by a group of right-wing Bush supporters Sunday
that attracted only a few hundred people. Speaking to the Voice,
Clinton made it clear that she supported the wars continuation
and that the principal lesson she drew from the death of Cindy
Sheehans son was that even more working class youth in uniform
should be sent to their deaths.
My bottom line is that I dont want their sons to
die in vain, she said, adding, I dont believe
its smart to set a date for withdrawal... I dont think
its the right time to withdraw. She went on to describe
the Iraq war as a noble cause. Asked if she still
supported sending even more US troops to Iraq, she responded,
Well see.
In a moving speech at the September 24 demonstration, Sheehan
directly indicted the US Congress. How many more of other
peoples children are you willing to sacrifice for the lies?
she asked. Shame on you for giving [Bush] the authority
to invade Iraq.
There is plenty of shame to go around in the US Congress, but
those like Clinton and other leading Democrats will not be shamed
by their records nor pressured by protest to abandon their support
for the war. This support is firmly rooted in definite social
interests.
The Democrats support for the war, along with the medias
echoing of the administrations lies (and its virtual silence
on the massive demonstration demanding immediate US withdrawal)
demonstrate that the war in Iraq is not merely an aberration foisted
on the American people by a handful of right-wingers who hijacked
the White House. Nor is the Democrats collaboration a matter
of a political mistake or cowardice.
The war is a policy supported by and conducted in the interests
of a ruling oligarchy that both major parties represent and defend.
The US ruling elite has turned to war because it has no other
answers either to the decline of the US position on the world
market or the social and economic crises that are tearing apart
American society.
The social gulf separating this financial elite from the broad
mass of working people is without precedent in American history.
Yet this stark class divide finds no expression in official politics.
Sheehans protest struck such a powerful chord precisely
because it voiced the sentiments of millionsaccording to
one recent poll fully 52 percent back a withdrawal as soon
as possible, regardless of whether stability has been established
in Iraqthat finds no representation either in Congress or
in the media.
Moreover, it exposed the criminal sacrifice of young working
class lives in Iraq by a government that holds those without great
wealth in contempta political reality underscored by the
criminal abandonment of Katrinas victims in New Orleans.
The struggle against war can be waged only on the basis of
a program that proceeds from these underlying social contradictions,
which are themselves the fundamental source of war.
This means mobilizing the working population, whose interests
are in direct contradiction to the profit system and are suffering
the effects of its crisisfrom falling living standards,
to unemployment, social cutbacks, attacks on democratic rights
and the steady rise in the number of sons and daughters killed
and maimed while serving as soldiers in Iraq.
Opposition to the war must be joined with a program that speaks
to all of the burning questions of living standards, jobs, health
care, education, housing, the defense of democratic rights and
the struggle for social equality. Such a program can emerge only
out of a wholly new movement based on a complete and irrevocable
break with the Democratic Party and the independent political
mobilization of working people in their own interests.
A new mass socialist party must be built. That is the perspective
fought for by the Socialist Equality Party and the World Socialist
Web Site.
See Also:
In the wake of Katrina and Rita
Bush administration to expand military powers, attack social programs
[27 September 2005]
Massive Washington march demands end
to war in Iraq
[26 September 2005]
Katrina, the Iraq war and the struggle
for socialism
[23 September 2005]
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