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Iraq War veterans want the Pentagon
to end combat and non-combat operations in Iraq [EPA]
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On the eve of the the seventh anniversary of the US-led invasion of
Iraq, American anti-war activists are still calling for a real end to a
conflict that has now lasted longer than both world wars and the
American Civil War.
As the anti-war movement gears up for rallies and demonstrations on
the anniversary, many are emphasising long-term organising and
movement-building, rooted in a strategy of GI resistance.
Seth Manzel, a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) and
director of the Tacoma, Washington-based GI Voice, says: "As an Iraq
veteran, it really sickens me to see an eighth year of deployments to
Iraq. People are being torn apart by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and it needs to stop."
The pursuit of war has outlasted the change in the White House.
Barack Obama, the US president, swept into office on an anti-Iraq War
ticket and has recently been claiming that the Iraq War is winding down.
But some critics are sceptical that the pledge to remove "combat troops" by September 1,leaving
about 50,000 troops in "non-combat" roles, will bring about a real end
to the war.
Aaron Hughes, a Chicago-based Iraq veteran and organiser with IVAW,
claims the designation of non-combat status is "a false dichotomy." He
says that "everyone in the military is a combat soldier. Everyone in
Iraq and Kuwait receives combat pay."
"When they say combat soldier, what do they really mean? Creating
this terminology is false and made up. They use it to manipulate the
public," Hughes told Al Jazeera.
Stay in Iraq?
Other veterans are concerned that the Obama administration will find
reasons to push back the September 1 withdrawal deadline, considering
that the president missed his January deadline for closing the
Guantanamo Bay detention facility.
Last month, it was revealed that the US military is developing a
contingency plan to keep "combat" troops in Iraq past the September 1
deadline if necessary.
And last week Ray Odierno - the top general in Iraq – made
international headlines when his official request for the military to
keep a combat unit in the contentious northern city of Kirkuk past next
September was leaked to the media.
"For nearly six years, the American people have been told by our
government that the Iraq War will be coming to an end soon, always 'in
about six months' if everything goes as planned," said Jeff Paterson,
Gulf War resister and project director of Courage to Resist, an
organisation that supports US military personnel who refuse to fight.
Top military brass nevertheless insist the withdrawal is on course
and claims that the March 7 Iraqi elections bode well for the US war
effort, with violence tapering off and more than 62 per cent of
registered voters casting a ballot.
Yet, in a war that many believe has killed over one million Iraqis
and left approximately 8mn people displaced,these
elections fall short of bringing real peace and self-rule to the region.
Furthermore, US military invasions in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
and elsewhere have destabilised the entire region; efforts to
re-stabilise the region could take decades.
Iraq: Business goldmine
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Some US war
veterans believe it is unlikely Washington will really leave Iraq [EPA] |
With foreign companies eyeing Iraq as an investment goldmine, there
are fears that the war could be followed by another type of occupation.
"I believe the Iraq war is winding down. Casualty rates (injuries and
deaths) among Iraqi civilians, Iraqi militants, and "coalition" forces
are all down significantly compared to any other year," says Ryan
Harvey, Baltimore-based organiser with Civilian Soldier Alliance, a
national organisation that focuses on building networks of support for
GI resistance.
"Some believe the occupation is really just now beginning, as the
drop in violence means the realisation of very lucrative contracts for
Western companies operating in Iraq. The big oil give-away has begun,
and the privatisation schemes of Paul Bremer, the head of the now
defunct Coalition Provisional Authority, are now really taking effect in
the economy," Harvey told Al Jazeera.
Every year since the invasion of Iraq, the March 19 anniversary has
been marked by national protests, in what has become a ritual for the
anti-war movement. This year is no exception, although organisers are
expecting demonstrations to be smaller than in previous years, in part
due to public perception that the Iraq War is winding down.
"The Bay Area will have large marches on March 20 to send the message
out that these wars are still waging violently," says Eddie Falcon, a
San Francisco-based veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan and member of IVAW.
"Iraq Veterans Against the War will do a Winter Soldier testimony
hearing at [a local] college to give our perspectives, accounts of
atrocities, and stories of resistance."
Marches and demonstrations
In the past few years, IVAW has grown to 1,700 members - all of whom
are US military personnel who have served since September 11, 2001.
Numerous anti-war organisations throughout the United States are
openly embracing war resistance, with groups like Courage to Resist, the
Civilian Soldier Alliance, and the War Resisters League working to
build networks of support for resisters.
Included within this work is support for those who refuse to fight,
either publicly or quietly, as well as counter-recruitment.
Lily Hughes, a Philadelphia-based organiser with the Civilian-Soldier
Alliance, says that groups with larger political analysis and
awareness are not only working to end the occupation in Iraq, but also
the occupation of Afghanistan and other US military engagements in the
Middle East.
But anti-war organisers recognise that they do face an uphill battle
in influencing domestic and international public opinion.
Harvey of the Civilian Soldier Alliance believes that anti-war
campaigners need to take their efforts to the military bases, the
schools, the communities, and in the occupied-countries themselves.
Hughes of the IAWV understands that the demonstrations and protests
against US military involvement in Iraq are symbolic.
He says: "It is going to take organising around [the issue] of
withdrawing our consent from the power structures that created these
wars to bring them to an end."
Sarah Lazare is an anti-militarist and GI resistance
organiser with Dialogues Against Militarism and Courage to Resist. She
is interested in connecting struggles for justice at home with global
movements against war and empire.
The
views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy. |