|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US antiwar demonstrations mark four years since Iraq invasion
By a WSWS reporting team
19 March 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Tens of thousands of people took part in marches and rallies
in Washington, D.C., and in cities across the country over the
weekend to commemorate the fourth anniversary of the US invasion
of Iraq, demanding an end to the war in Iraq and the withdrawal
of US troops.
In Washington on Saturday, marchers came from as far away as
Maine, Iowa and California, despite the near-freezing temperatures
and snow storms the night before.
Veterans of the Iraq war and family members of soldiers killed
there joined the march from the Lincoln Memorial across the Potomac
River to a rally at the Pentagon. Organizers placed the crowd
at between 20,000 and 30,000, while police, who no longer give
official estimates, said the crowd ranged from 10,000 to 20,000.
A few hundred right-wing counter-demonstrators lined the route
near the Lincoln Memorial, some of them shouting obscenities at
the marchers.

A massive security mobilization greeted the march, with police
on motorcycles, bicycles, and horseback and in vans and patrol
cars lining the route and present at both the assembly point and
rally. Several helicopters circled low over the crowd, making
it difficult for people to hear the speakers.
Arlo Gesner, who came from Cornell College in Iowa, expressed
his frustration with the Democratic Party. I came today
not just for the war, but because the government is not listening
to the people. You can put all the pressure you want on the Democratic
Party, but they are backing this war. Time and time again, it
has been shown that the Democrats support this war.
Jessica Smith, also from Cornell College, said that she came
because her brother is being sent to Afghanistan. I just
found out that he is proud of me coming here, she said.
I had the chance to see him this weekend, but I felt that
I needed to come here and take a stand against this war.
Ann Weisheipi from Maine said she came to the rally because
this war is based on lies. So many people, Iraqis and Americans,
are dying because of lies. All this money could be used for other
things that people need. I feel the Democrats are not much better
than the Republicans, there needs to be new political parties.
The two-party system has failed.
Aimee said, I have two friends that have been sent to
Iraq, one is being sent in July. We have to end this war. It is
an unjust war that is being fought just for oil and power. Now
they are talking about going into Iran, when is this going to
end?
On Friday night, a group of 100 protesters who staged a sit-down
on the sidewalk by the White House were arrested and then released.
This was the second large antiwar rally in Washington so far
this year. On January 27, more then 50,000 took part in a rally
organized by the United for Peace and Justice Coalition. That
rally took on a near-official status with several Democratic members
of Congress, AFL-CIO representatives and Hollywood stars speaking.
Saturdays rally had a somewhat different character: there
were no representatives from the Democratic Party, the AFL-CIO
or Hollywood. However, the political perspective of the rallys
organizers was largely the same. The essential message from the
speakers platform was that those present needed to put more
pressure on the Democratic Party to give it the backbone to stand
up to the Bush Administration and end the war.
The ANSWER coalition (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism),
which organized the March 17 demonstration, is loosely associated
with the Party of Socialism and Liberation, a split-off from the
Workers World party. Despite the seemingly more radical character
of the rallys organizers, none of the speakers addressed
the fundamental source of the eruption of US militarism within
the crisis of American capitalism or the need for an international
mobilization of the working class against the capitalist system.
In the press statement leading up to the protest, Brian Becker,
national coordinator for ANSWER, outlined the groups goal
of building a protest movement. It is obvious that the US
Congress has refused to hold the White House accountable for its
criminal conduct. That is why it is incumbent on the people of
the United States themselves to assume an historic responsibility
and launch a grassroots political movement to bring this carnage
to an end.
What exactly this grassroots movement is to be was outlined
by speaker after speaker at the rally, all of whom called merely
for more and bigger protests with the aim of pressuring the government
to end the war. Many of the speakers criticized the Bush administration
and declared the war illegal, but most were careful to make no
mention of the Democratic Party.
One of the main speakers at the rally was former US Attorney
General under the Johnson administration Ramsey Clark. His speech
centered on the criminal nature of the war in Iraq and the call
for Congress to impeach President Bush and Vice-President Cheney.
Clark ended his remarks urging those in the crowd to send a message
to Congress that you want your representative to impeach
Bush.
Under conditions in which many workers and students are beginning
to draw political lessons about the war and the role of the Democrats,
the role of left protest outfits like ANSWER is to channel such
a movement back into the Democratic Party and confine it to avenues
that pose no challenge to the capitalist system.
In Los Angeles on Saturday, a spirited crowd of about 2,500
people marched through downtown Hollywood. Young peoplehigh
school and college students and workersformed a significant
percentage of the marchers.
A father of two sons currently in the military said he was
hoping to convince [Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy]
Pelosi to listen to the people who voted for the Democrats in
the last election, to change course and accelerate the process
of withdrawal. When asked what people could do if the Democrats
fail to respond, he expressed the view that a third party
would be the way, but it cant seem to work in America, because
money is so important.
Another marcher, a Los Angeles writer of childrens books,
observed that the Democrats are great at helping the Republicans.
Theyre just helping each other get elected as far as Im
concerned. They are doing nothing, really, to stop the war. Im
very disappointed in them. I actually have no candidate to vote
for, and as for Hillary, shes not going to get my vote.
I dont believe in war, but I swear, I sometimes believe
this system is made just for that. Its all about the greed
of the oil corporations, about the utter disregard for life in
the whole region.
In New York City, several thousand demonstrators marched through
the east side of Manhattan on Sunday, ending up in at Dag Hammarskjold
Plaza across from the United Nations building. The march was organized
to pass by the offices of the New Yorks Democratic Senators
Hillary Clinton and Chuck Schumer, and the orientation of the
organizers and speakers there as well was that pressure on the
Democrats to take action in Congress is the route to ending the
war.
Campaigners for the International Students for Social Equality
received a strong response at the demonstrations in all three
cities in campaigning for the emergency conference against the
war that it and the Socialist Equality Party are holding in Ann
Arbor Michigan, March 31 to April 1. The perspective upon which
this conference is being held stands in stark opposition to that
of the protest organizers. It is directed to the building of a
genuine movement against militarism and war based on the international
mobilization of the working class against the capitalist system.
This requires a break with the Democratic Party and the building
of a mass, independent socialist movement.
See Also:
If elected, Hillary Clinton vows to keep
US troops in Iraq
[17 March 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |