March-Lobby Congress Jan. 27-29
The Bush administrations call to escalate the war in Iraq has been met with a resounding No! Twenty-four hours after Bushs announcement about sending 21,500 more troops, emergency protest actions were organized in nearly 1,000 neighborhoods and town squares.
Bush and the right wing are trying to undermine the 2006 election referendum on the war, sidetrack the peace majority and fragment international support for a political solution. Now they are starting a new push to provoke a war with Iran. Bush and his narrow circle of neoconservatives are willing to take this insane and desperate step to protect their strategic interests in the region against the groundswell of opposition.
The so-called surge has no support among the U.S. or Iraqi people. A cross-section of Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, have joined in expressing outrage. Some in Congress have called it one of the biggest mistakes in U.S. foreign policy since the Vietnam war.
The political pundits say the drive to escalate the conflict is the Bush administrations last chance to salvage a war based on lies. The peace movement is calling for mass action to stop the escalation and bring the troops home.
As they push the country toward a constitutional crisis, Bush and his narrow circle of neo-conservative advisors stand nearly alone in believing there is a military solution to the crisis in Iraq. The four previous military escalations during the four years of occupation have brought a spiral of casualties among U.S. troops and Iraqi civilians, undermined the elected Iraqi government and fed sectarian violence.
The only way forward is a political solution — one in which Iraqs national security is achieved through an Iraqi-led reconciliation process with international support, not U.S. control or threats. Reconstituting the military and police must be done under Iraqi control, not U.S. manipulation.
Bush says Iraq will slide into chaos if U.S. troops withdraw. But Iraqi parliamentarians, trade unions and civil society have peace plans the U.S. has sidelined. Iraqi leaders and organizations, including the Iraqi Communist Party, say the U.S. presence aggravates and drives the sectarian divisions. In repeated polls, most Iraqis want the troops to leave.
Responding to Bushs call for new military deployments, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney called for bringing the troops home, adding, As our generals on the ground in Iraq have said, there is no military solution to the civil strife that now wracks that country. Only a political solution effected by the Iraqis themselves can resolve what has become an internal struggle among Iraqis themselves.
In an attempt to attain the neo-conservative administrations strategic goal in the region, Bush is coupling escalating the war with economic development plans including privatizing government-run enterprises among them the oil industry — which together employ half a million people. This amounts to an intensified attack on civil society including the trade unions, as they organize to meet the daily needs of the people, who now face 30 to 60 percent unemployment.
The administration also proposes new steps to consolidate U.S. military and political control through monies allocated for community development. While U.S. corporate war profiteering continues unabated, this is a another scheme to divide Iraqis.
Bush says critics must offer an alternative. Most people want Congress to act to end the war. New legislation is being introduced this week to stop the surge, cut the funding and begin troop withdrawal.
The U.S. peace movement is challenged to organize political pressure to push back the neo-conservative drive, strengthen bipartisan resistance in Congress and advocate for a political solution protecting Iraqi sovereignty. New and urgent action must link ending the occupation with blocking new provocations against Iran, which could engulf the entire region in war. The nuclear danger is the cloud that hangs over this struggle.
March on Jan 27 in Washington, DC.
Congress will vote in the next days on the administrations escalation plan. We urge the peace movement to reach out to its natural allies in labor, faith, communities of color and immigrants to build a massive march in Washington on Saturday, Jan. 27, staying to flood the halls of Congress on Monday, Jan. 29.
This is the first of many Congressional standoffs with the Bush administration. The fight to stop the escalation is the first step toward Congressional action to bring the troops home. It is also linked to the coming struggles to fund community services, veterans programs and healthcare. It is critical to blocking a war on Iran.
The war has claimed $450 billion. Now its time to redirect funding to bring the troops home, take care of them when they return, and roll back years of destruction done by rightwing Republican control of Congress.
For more information on how to join the Jan. 27-29 peace actions, go to https://www.cpusa.org.
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