GI SPECIAL 4C27:

[Photo: Ward Reilly, Veterans For Peace]
Iraq
Veterans Against The War
Mobile To
New Orleans March 3.06
“A
Publicity Nightmare For The US Military”
An
Ever-Growing Number Of Veterans Of The Iraq Conflict Who Are
Campaigning Against The War:
“Jody Casey
Left The Army Five Days Ago And Came Straight To Join The
Vets”
March 29, 2006 The Guardian
They are a
publicity nightmare for the US military: an ever-growing
number of veterans of the Iraq conflict who are campaigning
against the war.
To mark the third anniversary
of the invasion this month, a group of them marched on
Katrina-ravaged New Orleans. Inigo Gilmore and Teresa Smith
joined them
At a press
conference in a cavernous Alabama warehouse, banners and
posters are rolled out: "Abandon Iraq, not the Gulf coast!"
A tall,
white soldier steps forward in desert fatigues. "I was in
Iraq when Katrina happened and I watched US citizens being
washed ashore in New Orleans," he says.
"War is
oppression: we could be setting up hospitals right here.
America is war-addicted. America is neglecting its poor."
A black reporter from a Fox TV
news affiliate, visibly stunned, whispers: "Wow! That guy's
pretty opinionated." Clearly such talk, even three years
after the Iraq invasion, is still rare.
This, after
all, is the Deep South and this soldier less than a year ago
was proudly serving his nation in Iraq.
The soldier was engaged in no
ordinary protest. Over five days earlier this month, around
200 veterans, military families and survivors of hurricane
Katrina walked 130 miles from Mobile, Alabama, to New
Orleans to mark the third anniversary of the Iraq war.
At its
vanguard, Iraq Veterans Against the War, a group formed less
than two years ago, whose very name has aroused intense
hostility at the highest levels of the US military.
Mobile is a grand old southern
naval town, clinging to the Gulf Coast. The stars and
stripes flutter from almost every balcony as the soldiers
parade through the town, surprising onlookers.
As they
begin their soon-to-be-familiar chants - "Bush lied, many
died!" - some shout "traitor", or hurl less polite terms of
abuse.
Elsewhere,
a black man salutes as a blonde, middle-aged woman, emerging
from a supermarket car park, cries out, "Take it all the way
to the White House!" and offers the peace sign.
Michael Blake is at the front
of the march. The 22-year-old from New York state is not
quite sure how he ended up in the military; the child of "a
feminist mom and hippy dad", he says he signed up thinking
that he would have an adventure, never imagining that he
would find himself in Iraq. He served from April 2003 to
March 2004, some of that time as a Humvee driver. Deeply
disturbed by his experience in Iraq, he filed for
conscientious objector status and has been campaigning
against the war ever since.
He claims that US soldiers
such as him were told little about Iraq, Iraqis or Islam
before serving there; other than a book of Arabic phrases,
"the message was always: 'Islam is evil' and 'They hate
us.' Most of the guys I was with believed it."
Blake says
that the turning point for him came one day when his unit
spent eight hours guarding a group of Iraqi women and
children whose men were being questioned. He recalls: "The
men were taken away and the women were screaming and crying,
and I just remember thinking: this was exactly what Saddam
used to do - and now we're doing it."
Becoming a
peace activist, he says, has been a "cleansing" experience.
"I'll never be normal again.
I'll always have a sense of guilt." He tells us that he
witnessed civilian Iraqis being killed indiscriminately. It
would not be the most startling admission by the soldiers on
the march. "When IEDs would go off by the side of the road,
the instructions were - or the practice was - to basically
shoot up the landscape, anything that moved. And that kind
of thing would happen a lot." So innocent people were
killed? "It happened, yes." (He says he did not carry out
any such killings himself.)
Blake, an activist with IVAW
for the past 12 months, is angry that American people seem
so untouched by the war, by the grim abuses committed by
American soldiers. "The American media doesn't cover it and
they don't care. The American people aren't seeing the real
war - what's really happening there."
We are in a Mexican diner in
Mississippi when Alan Shackleton, a quiet 24-year-old from
Iowa, stuns the table into silence with a story of his own.
He details how he and his comrades in Iraq suffered multiple
casualties, including a close friend who died of his
injuries.
Then he pauses for a moment,
swallows hard and says: "And I ran over a little kid and
killed him ... and that's about it." He has been suffering
from severe insomnia, but later he tells us that he has only
been able to see a counsellor once every six weeks and has
been prescribed sleeping pills.
"We are very, very sorry for
what we did to the Iraqi people," he says the next day,
holding a handwritten poster declaring: "Thou shall not
kill."
As we get closer to New
Orleans, the coastline becomes increasingly ravaged. Joe
Hatcher, always sporting a keffiyeh and punk chains,
reflects on his own time in the military and the hostility
he has met from pro-war activists at home in Colorado
Springs, Colorado, a town with five army bases where he
campaigns against the war at town hall forums.
He
says: "There's this old guy, George, an ex-colonel. He
shows up and talks shit on everybody for being anti-war
because 'it's ruining the morale of the soldier and
encouraging the enemy'.
"I
scraped dead bodies off the pavements with a shovel and
threw them in trash bags and left them there on the side
of the road. And I really don't think the anti-war
movement is what is infuriating people."
When we reach Biloxi,
Mississippi, the police say that there is no permit for the
march and everyone will have to walk on the pavement. This
is tricky because Katrina has left this coastal road looking
like a bomb site.
Jody
Casey left the army five days ago and came straight to
join the vets. The 29-year-old is no pacifist; he still
firmly backs the military but says that he is speaking
out in the hope of correcting many of the mistakes being
made. He served as a scout sniper for a year until last
February, based, like Blake, in the Sunni triangle.
He clearly feels a little ill
at ease with some of the protesters' rhetoric, but
eventually agrees to talk to us. He says that the turning
point for him came after he returned from Iraq and watched
videos that he and other soldiers in his unit shot while out
on raids, including hour after hour of Iraqi soldiers
beating up Iraqi civilians. While reviewing them back home
he decided "it was not right".
What upset him the most about
Iraq? "The total disregard for human life," he says, matter
of factly. "I mean, you do what you do at the time because
you feel like you need to. But then to watch it get kind of
covered up, shoved under a rug ... 'Oh, that did not
happen'."
What kind of abuses did he
witness? "Well, I mean, I have seen innocent people being
killed. IEDs go off and (you) just zap any farmer that is
close to you. You know, those people were out there trying
to make a living, but on the other hand, you get hit by four
or five of those IEDs and you get pretty tired of that,
too."
Casey told us how, from the
top down, there was little regard for the Iraqis, who were
routinely called "hajjis", the Iraq equivalent of "gook".
"They basically jam into your head: 'This is hajji! This is
hajji!' You totally take the human being out of it and make
them into a video game."
It was a
way of dehumanising the Iraqis? "I mean, yeah - if you
start looking at them as humans, and stuff like that, then
how are you going to kill them?"
He says that soldiers who
served in his area before his unit's arrival recommended
them to keep spades on their vehicles so that if they killed
innocent Iraqis, they could throw a spade off them to give
the appearance that the dead Iraqi was digging a hole for a
roadside bomb.
Casey says he didn't
participate in any such killings himself, but claims the
pervasive atmosphere was that "you could basically kill
whoever you wanted - it was that easy. You did not even have
to get off and dig a hole or anything. All you had to do was
have some kind of picture. You're driving down the road at
three in the morning. There's a guy on the side of the
road, you shoot him ... you throw a shovel off."
The IVAW, says Hatcher, "is
becoming our religion, our fight - as in any religion we've
confessed our wrongs, and now it's time to atone."
Just
outside New Orleans, the sudden appearance of a reporter
from al-Jazeera's Washington office electrifies the former
soldiers. It is a chance for the vets to turn confessional
and the reporter is deluged with young former soldiers keen
to be interviewed. "We want the Iraqi people to know that
we stand with them," says Blake, "and that we're sorry, so
sorry. That's why it was so important for us to appear on
al-Jazeera."
A number of Vietnam veterans
also on the march are a welcome presence. For all the
attempts to deny a link between the two conflicts, for both
sets of veterans the parallels are persuasive.
Thomas
Brinson survived the Tet offensive in Vietnam in 1968. "Iraq
is just Arabic for Vietnam, like the poster says - the same
horror, the same tears," he says.
Sitting on a riverbed outside
New Orleans, Blake turns reflective.
"I met an Iraqi at one of the
public meetings I was talking at recently. He came up to me
and told me he was originally from the town where I had been
stationed. And I just went up to this complete stranger and
hugged him and I said, 'I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.' And you
know what? He told me it was OK. And it was beautiful
..." He starts to cry. "That was redemption".

[Photo: Ward Reilly, Veterans For Peace]
Iraq
Veterans Against The War
Mobile To
New Orleans March 3.06
Do you
have a friend or relative in the service? Forward this
E-MAIL along, or send us the address if you wish and
we’ll send it regularly.
Whether in Iraq or stuck on a base in the USA, this is
extra important for your service friend, too often cut
off from access to encouraging news of growing
resistance to the war, at home and inside the armed
services.
Send requests to address up top.
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
Indiana
Staff Sgt. Killed In Habbaniyah:
“He Said He
Had A Bad Feeling”

Staff Sergeant Brock Beery was killed Thursday in
Habbaniyah, Iraq when a bomb blew up near his military
vehicle.
3.25.06 WNDU-TV
Staff Sergeant Brock Beery was
killed Thursday in Habbaniyah, Iraq when a bomb blew up near
his military vehicle.
Brock Beery grew up in
Kosciusko County. In fact, he met his future wife at his
first factory job in Warsaw, soon after he joined the
military at the early age of 18.
The last time Roger & Pam
Beery of Warsaw saw their 30-year-old son, Sergeant Brock
Beery, was in November. He was home from Iraq on military
leave for his grandpa's funeral.
"I’m proud of him, we miss him
a whole lot," said Roger.
"He said he had a bad
feeling. He said he didn't know if he was going to come
back or not. It was a gut feeling, he knew," said Pam.
Thursday night around 8:00PM,
a stranger’s car pulled in to their Kosciusko County
driveway, which caused the Brock’s to feel immediate
concern.
"They were from the U.S.
military from Fort Wayne and they had come to talk to me and
my husband. I more or less cracked outside,” Pam said.
Staff Sergeant Brock Beery,
with the Army National Guard's Second Battalion, had been
fatally injured near Baghdad, where he was stationed.
"Since he's a Sergeant, he's
the lead vehicle, and so the lead vehicle goes first. The
landmine went off in front of the first tank he was riding
in," explained Roger.
"There were four other men
from his unit with him. Two of them were seriously hurt and
are in critical condition and two of them were treated and
released," Pam said.
They say their son died from
his injuries near a tank.
"It’s a Christmas picture of
Brock & his tank, overseas that he sent up around Christmas
time," said Pam.
"He was over there for about
nine months. He was supposed to get out sometime in May.
He had a little girl that loved him with all her heart and
he was a very good provider," Pam said.
"When something like this
happens, there is nothing you can do about it,” said Roger.
Except hold dear to your heart
the good times.
"We’ll cherish those memories
for the rest of our lives," said Pam.
Thirty-year-old Brock and his
wife Sara grew up near Warsaw.
Brock leaves behind his wife
Sara, and their 7-year-old daughter Elissa.
His family relocated to
Tennessee a few years ago.
His father Roger said Brock’s
body will arrive in Tennessee sometime in the next 7 to 10
days, and that's where his funeral service will be held.
They are planning some type of
memorial service locally. However, the date and time has
yet to be announced.
Australian
Resident Killed By Australian Mercenaries
03/29/06 The Daily Telegraph
AN Australian resident has
been shot dead in Iraq. University of Baghdad Professor
Kays Juma, 72, was killed when nervous security guards fired
on his car last Saturday as he drove near a convoy of
four-wheel drives carrying private contractors, News Ltd
newspapers reported today.
Relatives were initially told
an Australian fired the fatal shot, and the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) also suggested it, the
newspaper said.
Prof Juma, whose birthplace
was not disclosed by the paper, was married to an Adelaide
woman and was an Australian permanent resident.
He spent much of each year in
Baghdad teaching PhD agriculture students.
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
Resistance
Attacks Occupation Base:
U.S. And
Canadian Soldiers Killed In Helmund Province;
Four More
Wounded

Private Robert Costall was
killed after Taliban forces attacked coalition troops in the
Helmund province, north of Kandadar on Wednesday March 29,
2006. Forces had been sent to the area after the recent
death of eight Afghan Army soldiers. (AP PHOTO/HO, DND)
March 29, 2006 By Rahim Faiez,
Associated Press
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan: Fierce
fighting following an insurgent attack on a U.S.-led
coalition base in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday killed
32 suspected Taliban militants and two troops, one American
and one Canadian, officials said.
The battle in Helmand
province’s Sangin district also wounded three Canadian
soldiers, Canadian Brig. Gen. David Fraser told reporters at
a base in southern Kandahar city. A U.S. military statement
said an American soldier was also hurt.
Direct
attacks on foreign bases are unusual, and Wednesday’s
assault comes after the Taliban warned of a renewed
offensive this year.
Rebels attacked a police
checkpoint in Kandahar late Tuesday, killing two officers
and wounding four, said police commander Abdul Nazik.
Fraser said
the slain Canadian was Pte. Robert Costall of the 1st
Battalion of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light
Infantry, based in Edmonton.
The wounded soldiers were
rushed for treatment to a base in Kandahar, the main city in
southern Afghanistan.
Resistance
Attacks Kill Mercenary, Guards And More Collaborator Troops
Mar 28, 2006 BBC
A Namibian man and three
Afghans have been killed in a landmine blast in the
south-western Afghan province of Farah, local officials say.
The US firm the Namibian
worked for said he, his Afghan driver and two Afghan guards
had died in the blast.
In a separate attack, a
roadside bomb killed at least six Afghan soldiers in Helmand
province, officials said.
Officials told the BBC the
Taleban were behind the Farah province blast, which occurred
in Dilaram district on the road linking Kandahar with the
western city of Herat.
The
Namibian worked for United States Protection and
Investigations, which provides security for a road building
project in the area.
The firm's Kabul-based deputy
managing director, Bill Dupre', told the Associated Press
news agency that the men's vehicle had taken the "full
brunt" of the blast and they had been killed instantly.
Troops were
on patrol in southern Helmand province when they came under
attack, a senior commander said.
"Today,
late in the afternoon, Afghan National Army and police were
on a joint patrol in Sangin district when a roadside bomb
exploded close to the convoy and killed six Afghan National
Army soldiers," Gen Rahmatullah Raufi told the AFP news
agency.
TROOP NEWS
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOPS HOME:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW

The burial of Marine Staff
Sgt. Kenneth Pospisil, Dec. 23, 2005, in Anoka, Minn.
Pospisil was killed when a bomb went off near Al Ramadi Dec.
14. The Department of Defense told his mother that the
35-year -old was on his way to disarm the bomb when it went
off. Pospisil was the 31st Minnesotan to die in connection
with the Iraq war. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
Grand Forks
Soldier Wounded In Iraq Still Hospitalized
March 29, 2006 The Associated
Press
GRAND FORKS, N.D.
A soldier from this city who
was wounded by a roadside bomb in Iraq remains in a Maryland
hospital.
Marine Lance Cpl. Ben Lunak,
21, was wounded last month when the Humvee in which he was
riding drove over a roadside bomb, said his father, Duane.
Ben Lunak had been stationed near Ramadi, west of Baghdad.
Duane Lunak said his son has
had 13 major surgeries since the explosion.
Ben Lunak is a patient at the
National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.
Duane Lunak, a former Grand
Forks councilman, said his son has lost a leg and his
spleen. He said his son is trying to stay positive, and is
looking forward to therapy outside the hospital.
Ben Lunak was wounded just
four days before he was scheduled to leave Iraq, his father
said.
Ben Lunak had pneumonia
earlier this week but he seems to be getting better every
day, his father said.
General
Peter Pace;
A Monument
To Dishonor;
A Disgrace
To His Uniform
Mar 29 By Omar al-Ibadi,
Reuters & Jonathan Steele and Qais al-Bashir in Baghdad, The
Guardian
Sectarian violence has surged
since the bombing of a Shi'ite shrine in Samarra last month
and tensions were raised further by a joint raid by United
States and Iraqi forces on a Shi'ite Muslim mosque in
Baghdad.
"Just before prayers at 6.15,
we were surprised by US and Iraqi national guards raining
fire on us. Anyone who went out was shot dead," Ihssan
Kamel Ali, who was in the mosque at the time, said
yesterday.
"The national guard came in
first, then the Americans. They had a man with a Lebanese
accent with them. He sneered at us and said what we were
reading was not the Qur'an. I heard sounds of explosions. I
saw between 17 and 20 bodies. What upset me most was that
there was a wounded man. An Iraqi soldier asked an officer
what to do with him. The officer said 'Just finish him
off'."
The U.S.
military defended the raid but said on Tuesday for the first
time that part of the complex could be called a mosque.
The U.S. previously insisted no mosque was
entered or damaged during the operation, despite accusations
by Shi'ite leaders that troops killed worshippers inside the
Mustafa mosque.
A brief US
communique in the first hours after the incident said "no
mosques were entered or damaged".
"When they
got into that compound, they found that there was a building
there that had a small minaret and a prayer room inside of
it," Marine General Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, told reporters in Washington.
"Some people are calling it a mosque."
[Right.
And some people are calling it a turnip, and some people are
calling it a ham sandwich? Just like some people are
calling Pace a general, and some people are calling Pace a
cheap dishonorable lying political whore for Bush.
[Gee, that
“some people” line should be taught to cowards and criminals
(like Pace) everywhere. “Yes, your honor, some people might
call what I did to that little girl rape.”]
FROM
PROTEST TO RESISTANCE
Regional
Student Antiwar Conferences
Sponsored by the Campus
Antiwar Network
http://www.campusantiwar.net/
Recently the US government has
stepped up its bombing campaign in Samara to the highest
level of intensity since the onset of the war.
Even though
public support has turned against the war and active
resistance has begun in many sectors of the country and in
the military, the movement is not at the necessary
organizational levels to attain a complete withdrawal of
American forces from the Middle East.
Meanwhile, large
demonstrations are being planned in cities across the
country in April. This comes at a time when many
politicians, Democrat and Republican, are supporting
policies of “re-deployment” or outright military action
against Iran.
Students are becoming
organized and have been making great strides in fighting
recruitment, fostering debate, and demonstrating for civil
liberties. At this crucial time in the antiwar movement it
is essential that a unified student front emerge to fight
campus repression and to end the war. Real strategies for
active resistance need to be developed to motivate the
overwhelming public support into viable solutions.
Campus Antiwar Network is
establishing regional conferences to develop the true
student power needed to breakdown the military machine that
has relentlessly torn several countries asunder.
Workshops
will look at concrete steps to end the war.
Anyone is
welcome to attend and campuses are encouraged to send as
many people as they can.
With the
spirit of grassroots democratic action, we can truly set in
motion the catalyst to change.
MIDWEST
Chicago, IL
University of Illinois Chicago
April 22
contact:
schwartz2020@gmail.com
NORTHEAST
New York City, NY
April 29 & 30
(to coincide with the April 29
protest in New York City to bring all the troops home now)
contact:
monkeywithsoda@hotmail.com
WEST
Students and Educators to Stop
the War Conference
San Francisco, CA
Mission High School
April 22
contact: tigger482@gmail.com
SOUTH
location and date to be
announced
contact:
originalman777@aol.com
For more information, contact
the people above or visit:
http://www.campusantiwar.net/
“ACTS OF
WAR”
A Festival
of New Plays
ACTS OF WAR
are five one act plays concerning the war in Iraq that were
selected from a national new play search which garnered
seventy two entries from all over the world.
Alan Stolzer, a member of the Military Project and
Veterans For Peace, has written the first play to be
performed of the five, "Issues Of A Sergeant."
The plays will be performed as
part of an overall evening of theatre which will include
live music The writers are from New York, Baltimore,
Cambridge MA and New Jersey and present compelling, thought
provoking plays on the effect of the war on the people here
at home. They are presented in a complete evening of
theatre showing the effect of the war on all of us.
This is a
news release from The South Camden Theatre Company which
will be presenting the plays beginning April 21 and running
through May 6.
Friday and
Saturday evenings at 8 and Saturday and Sunday matinees at
1:30. Tickets are $15 (students and seniors $10) and can be
reserved by calling the theatre at 856-456-2850 or online at
CAMDENTHEATRE@aol.com.
Seating is
limited so please reserve early. The plays will be
performed in the basement of Sacred Heart Church, Broadway
and Ferry Avenue in Camden, NJ. Ample, free parking is
available.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
“We Will
Fight Terrorism, Whether It Is Wahhabi Or American”
“I Am Very
Sure Now They Are Terrorists”
“We Did Not
Fear The Mahdi Army”
"People
always say: The Americans never do these things, but
when I saw them with helicopters and their Humvees and
Bradleys, I am very sure now they are terrorists," says
Mr. Ali, giving a stark opinion increasingly expressed
on Iraqi airwaves following the raid.
03/28/06 By Ellen Knickmeyer,
Washington Post Foreign Service & By Scott Peterson, Staff
writer of The Christian Science Monitor
"We did not
fear the Mahdi Army," Sadoun said, referring to the militia
loyal to Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, "because we've lived
in Sadr City for 20 years, and everyone knows us and knows
how we love the Shiites.
“But the Interior Ministry
commandos arrest any Sunni. They don't just arrest them;
they kill them."
"I need the government that I
voted for to protect us, but they failed," says Souad
Mohammad, the deputy director of a school, whose
second-floor apartment, across the street from the mosque,
is riven with holes from small-caliber US armor-piercing
rounds.
"They came and killed the
young people, and we want the Imam Mahdi Army to protect us,
because they are from us, they are Iraqi people," says Mrs.
Mohammad.
"When the
Mahdi Army is here, it's very quiet, no one is assassinated
in this area, there are no car bombs, and at night there are
checkpoints to protect us."
The US-Iraqi raid "means they
are targeting Shiites, to stop the political process," says
Jassim Mohamad Ali, whose face was scratched by jumping over
a fence in the Mustafa compound, to hide from the raiders.
"The only thing I witness from
the Mahdi Army, they have honor and are loyal to this
country, and they try to keep the Iraqi street clean," he
says.
Haidar al-Abbadi, an adviser
to Jafaari, warned of "death squads working alongside US
troops that execute people without any reason while they are
praying," he told Al-Arabiya television.
"People
always say: The Americans never do these things, but when I
saw them with helicopters and their Humvees and Bradleys, I
am very sure now they are terrorists," says Mr. Ali, giving
a stark opinion increasingly expressed on Iraqi airwaves
following the raid.
"We will
fight terrorism, whether it is Wahhabi or American."
Assorted
Resistance Action
March 29, 2006 VANESSA
ARRINGTON, Associated Press Writer & Aljazeera & Reuters &
(KUNA)
Resistance fighters attacked a
highway police patrol in west Baghdad Wednesday, killing one
policeman and wounding four others, police said.
In south Baghdad, a sniper
killed a policeman on patrol in the Dora neighborhood,
Abdul-Razzaq said.
Three soldiers were killed by
a roadside bomb in Hawija, 70 km (40 miles) south west of
Kirkuk, police said.
Three Iraqi soldiers were
killed, 12 others wounded, on Wednesday in a number of
blasts in the province of Kirkuk in northern Iraq.
A Kirkuk Police source told
Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) that three Iraqi soldiers were
killed when an explosive device targeted a joint US-Iraqi
military patrol on a road nearby Nasser town west of Kirkuk.
A similar attack took place on
a road between Riyadh and Baiji, wounding six Iraqi
soldiers, including one officer.
Another
bomb went off late Tuesday night, wounding five oil facility
guards in southern Kirkuk.
The police source said another
timed bomb exploded nearby the residence of Chief of Police
Rahim Awah, but no property or life losses were recorded in
the attack.
Meanwhile, a Katyusha rocket
landed in a vacant area nearby the Kirkuk Police Academy in
southern Kirkuk. No property damages were recorded in the
blast.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
“People
Shouldn’t Fear Their Governments”
“Governments Should Fear Their People”
March 31, 2006 Review by Amy
Muldoon, Socialist Worker
V for Vendetta, directed by James McTeigue, starring Natalie
Portman and Huge Weaving.
“PEOPLE
SHOULDN’T fear their governments, governments should fear
their people.”
This
refreshingly revolutionary line is delivered in the climax
of V for Vendetta, the new anarchist fantasy by Matrix
creators Andy and Larry Wachowski.
Mainstream films have
capitalized on the distrust of Corporate America and fury at
President Bush in veiled ways, a la Star Wars: Revenge of
the Sith, or with historical allusions, a la Good Night, and
Good Luck.
But V is
the first to unapologetically demand the overthrow of the
government and condone the use of violence, even terrorism,
as a means to accomplish it.
Originally written as a comic
book by Alan Moore for DC/Vertigo Comics between 1981 and
1988, the movie tells the story of V, a masked rebel who
incites the overthrow of a future totalitarian Britain.
While set
in Britain and drawing on British cultural references (V for
Victory, Guy Fawkes), the film is an action-adventure call
to arms against the current American regime.
In the story, Britain’s
Christian fascist rulers rose to power riding a wave of
xenophobia following a biological attack, for which several
Arabs were convicted and executed. Camps for
undesirables--Arabs, homosexuals and political
activists--have claimed thousands.
The threat of being “black
bagged”--grabbed by the secret police who are known as
“fingermen”--constantly looms. Naked prisoners with black
bags over their head appear and reappear, deliberately
invoking Abu Graib and Guantلnamo.
Popular culture is rife with
racist depictions of Arabs and Muslims. There’s even a
blowhard Bill O’Reilly clone known as “The Voice of London”
who attacks “the former United States” for being “godless.”
V bursts onto the scene
blowing up the Old Bailey (London’s High Court) on Guy
Fawkes Day, the anniversary of a foiled 1605 plot to blow up
the Parliament. On his way to the fireworks, he rescues
Evey Hammond from fingermen who are about to rape her for
being out past curfew.
As chance would have it, when
he breaks into the state TV station the next day to
broadcast his call for an uprising, it’s Evey’s workplace
and she now helps him escape, thereby binding their fates.
But Evey professes doubt about V’s crusade. “Every time
I’ve seen the world change,” she argues, “I’ve seen it
change for the worse.”
As the government becomes more
convinced that V has popular sympathy through phone taps and
surveillance of ordinary people, High Chancellor Sutler
tells his various propaganda and spy minions to “remind
people why they need us.” Immediately, we see Fox-worthy
news reports about foreign terrorists, food riots and the
avian flu.
Through the investigations of
Detective Finch, we learn the intertwined stories of
government corruption, medical malfeasance and profit-hungry
pharmaceutical companies that are the truth behind the
fascists’ rise to power and V’s origins.
This is the story of a ruling
group so callous and brutal they sacrifice thousands of
lives for power and profit--a thinly veiled suggestion about
what disasters our own government might have engineered.
While V scolds the population
for not rising up against the fascists, it’s clear that fear
is the main obstacle to dissent.
The turning point of the movie
is Evey’s personal transformation while in detention.
Reading the notes of a fellow prisoner who refuses to
renounce her lesbianism and chooses death over betrayal,
Evey decides she would rather die than inform on V and
destroy any hope of change.
While Evey
achieves a sort of personal liberation, this movie (unlike
The Matrix) makes it clear that it takes more than “freeing
your mind” to change the world. The institutions that
govern and oppress us must be torn down and replaced with a
society based on democracy.
V is the
archetypal anarchist martyr who sparks revolution, but the
movie makes clear he could have been anybody (an idea more
fully developed by the comic book ending). And the movie
makes the point that, as V tells Evey early on, “Ideas, when
they move masses of people, have great power.”
Go see V
for Vendetta and cheer the downfall of a fictional regime,
and get inspired to organize against this one.
I Just Saw
"Sir, No Sir" And It Moved Me.
From: C
To: GI Special
Sent: March 29, 2006
I just saw
"Sir, No Sir" and it moved me.
Not only
have I now reached a higher level of certainty that the vast
majority of 'mystery' atrocities in Iraq are being
perpetrated by invasion forces but, I also have a higher
level of confidence that among our veterans, there are many
men of honor and courage; and that America will be in safe
hands in the event they are ever called upon to protect our
deepest understandings of morality.
When I was like twelve years
old or so, I remember seeing a Kenny Rogers' movie on TV
called, "The Coward of the County". I just tried to rent it
at three different video stores out here in northern
Minnesota, but none of them had it.
I was able to find the movie
in a one of their catalogs though, so I also know that it
was released in 1981.
I haven't seen this particular
film now for twenty years or so but, I remember it fairly
well. If you can find it, I really think it would be a good
movie to watch with military, and pacifist friends. I'm
sure it would spark some very interesting conversation about
the nature of aggression, and how to deal with it.
Solidarity,
C

Open To
Interpretation

Parked car in Portland, Oregon. Open to interpretation.
From: Richard Hastie
To: GI Special
Sent: March 28, 2006
Photo
and caption from the I-R-A-Q (I Remember Another
Quagmire) portfolio of Mike Hastie, US Army Medic,
Vietnam 1970-71. (For more of his outstanding work,
contact at: (hastiemike@earthlink.net)
T)
One day
while I was in a bunker in Vietnam, a sniper round went
over my head. The person who fired that weapon was not
a terrorist, a rebel, an extremist, or a so-called
insurgent. The Vietnamese individual who tried to kill
me was a citizen of Vietnam, who did not want me in his
country. This truth escapes millions.
Mike Hastie
U.S. Army Medic
Vietnam 1970-71
OCCUPATION
REPORT
So Much For That “Sovereignty” Bullshit:
Bush
Military Dictatorship Tells Iraqis To Get Rid Of
Collaborator Prime Minister
28 March 2006 BBC & QASSIM
ABDUL-ZAHRA, Forbes
The US
ambassador to Iraq has told Shia leaders that the US
government does not want Ibrahim Jaafari to remain prime
minister, senior Shia politicians say.
The US ambassador to Iraq has
told Shia leaders that the US government does not want
Ibrahim Jaafari to remain prime minister, senior Shia
politicians say.
Zalmay
Khalilzad said President George W Bush "doesn't want,
doesn't support, doesn't accept" the retention of Mr
Jaafari, Rida Jawad al-Takki said.
Mr Takki said the US
ambassador had passed on his government's dissatisfaction
with Mr Jaafari at a meeting with the leader of the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, Abd al-Aziz
al-Hakim, on Saturday.
"How can they do this?" Haidar
al-Ubaidi asked.
"An
ambassador telling a sovereign country what to do is
unacceptable," he added.
[How
fortunate that has nothing to do with Iraq, which is no more
a “sovereign” country than Poland was under German military
occupation during World War II.]
Ali al-Adeeb, a lawmaker with
close ties to al-Jaafari and a member of his Dawa party,
confirmed that he heard about Khalilzad's message but
refused to say how.
"The U.S.
ambassador's position on al-Jaafari's nomination is
negative. They want him (the prime minister) to be under
their control," al-Adeeb said.
NEED SOME
TRUTH? CHECK OUT TRAVELING SOLDIER
Telling
the truth - about the occupation or the criminals
running the government in Washington - is the first
reason for Traveling Soldier. But we want to do more
than tell the truth; we want to report on the resistance
- whether it's in the streets of Baghdad, New York, or
inside the armed forces. Our goal is for Traveling
Soldier to become the thread that ties working-class
people inside the armed services together. We want this
newsletter to be a weapon to help you organize
resistance within the armed forces. If you like what
you've read, we hope that you'll join with us in
building a network of active duty organizers.
http://www.traveling-soldier.org/
And join
with Iraq War vets in the call to end the occupation and
bring our troops home now! (www.ivaw.net)
2003:
SOWING THE WIND
2006:
REAPING THE WHIRLWIND

Iraqi citizens are searched by
foreign fighters from the U.S. at the entrance of a police
station as they wait for new identity cards to be issued in
al Awja, a village outside Tikrit, November 1, 2003. The
U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division (Task Force Ironhorse)
continued for the second day stepping up security in the
village of al Awja, setting up check points, patrolling with
members of Iraqi Civil Defense Corps (ICDC), limiting
movement with razor wire and issuing identity cards to
adults that will allow them to move in and out of the
village. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
“In the
States, if police burst into your house, kicking down
doors and swearing at you, you would call your lawyer
and file a lawsuit,” said Wood, 42, from Iowa, who did
not accompany Halladay’s Charlie Company, from his
battalion, on Thursday’s raid. “Here, there are no
lawyers. Their resources are limited, so they plant
IEDs (improvised explosive devices) instead.”
OCCUPATION ISN’T LIBERATION
BRING
ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
DANGER:
POLITICIANS AT WORK
BUSH ORDERS
‘PLAN FOR VICTORY’ SIGN THE SIZE OF IRAQ:
Gigantic
Placard to Hover Over War-torn Nation

Bush announces the plan at
Capitol Music Hall in Wheeling, W.Va., March 22, 2006. (AP
Photo/Charles Dharapak)
March 27, 2006 The Borowitz
Report
President
George W. Bush, who has given speeches in recent weeks
accompanied by larger and larger placards with the slogan
"Plan For Victory" on them, said today that he had
authorized the construction of a "Plan For Victory" sign as
big as the entire land mass of Iraq.
Mr. Bush
explained the thought process behind the enormous sign,
which will be built by the Halliburton Company at a cost of
$13.8 billion.
"I have been speaking in front
of bigger and bigger 'Plan for Victory' signs, but those
signs weren't getting it done," Mr. Bush told reporters.
"This sign should show the people of Iraq once and for all
that when I say I have a plan for victory I mean it."
The gigantic "Plan for
Victory" sign, believed to be the largest slogan placard in
human history, will be flown over the nation of Iraq by U.S.
Air Force cargo planes and will hover over the country until
victory is secured, the president said.
While some experts warn that
the gigantic sign could pose a danger to the Iraqi people,
blotting out the sun or possibly falling from the sky and
crushing the entire population, the President vowed to "stay
the course" with his enormous placard.
"If that 'Plan for Victory'
sign crushes the entire Iraqi people, that'll put an end to
all this talk of civil war," Mr. Bush said.
Woman
Fights $100 Fine For 'Bushit' Bumper Sticker:
“This Is
All About Free Speech”
March 28, 2006 Filed by RAW
STORY
"It was 9:30 on a recent
Friday night when Denise Grier saw blue lights in her
rearview mirror," the Atlanta Journal-Constitution begins in
Thursday editions. Excerpts:
She pulled over on
Chamblee-Tucker Road, unaware of her infraction.
"The
officer asked if I knew I had a lewd decal on my car and I
thought, 'Oh gosh, what did my kids put on my car?' "
As it turns
out, the decal was an anti-Bush bumper sticker Grier slapped
on her 2001 Chrysler Sebring last summer. The bumper
sticker, "I'm Tired Of All The BUSH—," contains an
expletive.
The officer "said DeKalb had
an ordinance about lewd decals and wrote me a ticket" for
$100, said Grier, an oncology nurse at Emory University
Hospital who lives in Athens.
"This is
all about free speech," Grier said in a telephone interview
Monday.
"The
officer pulled me over because he didn't agree with my
politics. That's what this is about, not whether I support
Bush, not because of the war in Iraq, but about my right to
free speech."
What do you think?
Comments from service men and women, and veterans, are
especially welcome. Send to
thomasfbarton@earthlink.net. Name, I.D., address
withheld unless publication requested. Replies
confidential.
CLASS WAR
REPORTS
Death
Squads Butchering Venezuelan Peasants:
“Our
Machetes Are Humbly Ready At The Service Of Those Who
Continue The Fight Of Bolivar”
Mar 28, 2006 EL NUEVO TOPO (by
way of Tom Condit tomcondit@igc.org)
The peasant movement led by
the Frente Nacional Campesino Ezequiel Zamora blocked
yesterday (March 27) Urdeneta Avenue in front of the
building of the Vice-Presidency demanding that the
agreements made during the previous march "Zamora Marches on
Caracas" on July 11, 2005 be fulfilled.
Also still to be fulfilled
were the agreement made during the Workshop on Peasant
Security on July 17th, called by the President of the
Republic, implemented by the Vice-President, at which was
present attending were the Military Commandantes from
diverse operational commands, governors, ministers of the
cabinet, and members of the Frente Nacional Francisco
Zamora.
Eight
months later no agreement has been fulfilled; those peasants
murdered by death squads has gone from 135 to 168.
The Frente Campesino Ezequiel
Zamora, given its mandate by the ranks, cannot permit more
abuse and failure to carry out agreements and that peasant
companeros continue to fall from the bullets of death
squads.
They are now in the streets
demanding their rights.
No one will
be able to block our way. The streets belong to the people
and we don't negotiate with any second class functionary who
does not even know the agreements we have made.
If they do not want to receive
us, then only by struggle will we be free. <