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It's Time to Stop the War Ourselves
We need a strategy to end the occupation of Iraq and stop the next invasion, in Iran or elsewhere. One reason it's been hard to mobilize people since the invasion of Iraq is the absence of a clear logic as to where our efforts are headed.
What will another march, continued lobbying, or even a nonviolent direct action add up to? How will we actually stop this war and prevent the next one?
As we approach another presidential election, we have to look soberly at the history of candidates who mobilized anti-war sentiment only to reverse course once elected. Woodrow Wilson was elected on his promise to keep the United States out of World War I and Richard Nixon was elected on his promise to bring troops home from the Vietnam War. Most members of Congress who were elected in 2006 on promises to bring the troops home have done little or worse.
The solution is written in the mountain-road blockades and mass mobilizations in Bolivia that have driven out transnational corporations like Bechtel and Suez, and even the country's president in 2003. It is written in the farm-worker-led Taco Bell boycott victory of 2005, and in the immigration-rights boycotts, walkouts, and mobilizations. It's in our own history of workers' and women's rights, environmental, and civil rights struggles. It's called people power.
It's time to stop the war ourselves. A new strategy is emerging from below to make it happen.
It can be seen in the Pittsburgh Organizing Group's "Troops Home Fast," a month-long, around-the-clock vigil held in September 2007 outside Pittsburgh's Recruitment Center, to call for immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq and an end to military recruitment in Pittsburgh. The counter-recruiting actions have met with attacks by police dogs, electric cattle prods, "tasers," and pepper spray, but their organizing has become contagious. Counter-recruitment is the fastest growing and most hopeful strategy of resistance to war in Iraq.
This strategy can also be seen in last summer's gutsy Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) bus caravan, during which veterans traveled to military bases across the country-at times facing arrest on base-to talk with the active-duty soldiers who will fight (or resist) the war in Iraq. One of the first active-duty IVAW chapters formed at Fort Mead, Maryland, in the wake of the caravan.
Kelly Dougherty, director of IVAW, explained their strategy at a recent workshop: "The U.S. war in Iraq is this unstable upside-down triangle. It's supported by a lot of pillars like the military, public opinion, war profiteers, the school system, media, Congress, the president, and the oil industry. If we can weaken those pillars, that will weaken the war as a whole."
For the vets and active-duty soldiers of IVAW, this strategy has translated into their "Truth in Recruiting" and "GI Resistance" campaigns. IVAW members have been challenging military recruiting, supporting GI resisters, and organizing recent vets and active-duty soldiers.
If we ... identify the pillars that support the war, and choose thoughtful campaigns with creative tactics to remove them, then we will have a viable anti-war strategy.
Pillars of War A group of people in a college classroom are participating in a workshop on "people-power strategy to end the war." They are asked to name "the pillars of support that the U.S. war in Iraq depends on" which, if removed, would "prevent the war and occupation from continuing."
"Troops!" someone shouts out.
That person is asked to step forward and become that pillar by holding up part of a mattress with the words "War and Occupation of Iraq" taped to it.
Another person says, "Corporations, like Halliburton." That person becomes the second pillar holding up the "War and Occupation" mattress.
"Media that persuades people to support the war and misinforms them." The person steps forward, and the mattress has three pillars.
The workshop facilitator asks, "What are some ways we can weaken or remove these pillars of support? Let's start with troops."
"Counter-recruiting, so they can't get enough soldiers."
"Supporting soldiers who refuse," someone else offers.
"Resisting a draft that they might turn to if we are successful at counter-recruiting."
"If we do all these things, will that weaken or remove the pillar of troops?" People agree that it could, and so that pillar is removed and the mattress lurches, held up by just two pillars.
The same exercise is done with the "corporate " and "media" pillars. The "War and Occupation" mattress collapses.
People Power
People power can assert the democratic will of communities and movements to change the things that matter when the established, so-called democratic channels turn out be little more than public relations for elite rule.
Every successful movement in the United States-from the workers' and civil rights movement to victories in anti-corporate campaigns today-and every successful effort to topple a dictator in recent history has relied on people-power methods.
The term was popularized by the 1986 Philippine uprising against the U.S.-backed dictator Ferdinand Marcos; military resistance and mass direct action mobilizations were central to his ouster.
If we, as a movement of movements, adopt a people-power strategic framework, identify the pillars that support the war, and choose thoughtful campaigns with creative tactics to remove them, then we will have a viable anti-war strategy.
It's clear that we are not all going to agree on any one (or two or three) campaigns, but it is possible for us to consciously adopt and promote a people-power strategy that makes our various efforts complementary and cumulative. We think of it as a massive umbrella under which we can-whether we are a national organization, a local group or a decentralized network-make our efforts add up.
The Battle of the Story A final key ingredient for a successful strategy is our ability to frame our own struggles, or to tell our own story. If we act defensively within the framework of the United States government and their "war on terror" story, we will always be on the defensive. If we allow them to define reality, we will always lose. If we limit ourselves to defensively arguing that there were no nuclear weapons in Iraq, or that there are none in Iran, for example, without challenging the legitimacy and cost of the United States being an empire, then we are operating in a reality defined by those in power. We have to be able to understand, fight, and win the "battle of the story."
The courage of young people in the military, on the campuses and in the streets is showing us how to assert our people power. It's clear that more and more folks in the United States and around the world have the courage to resist. Can we find what lies at the root of the word courage-le coeur, or heart-to assert our power as communities, as movements, and as people to reverse the policies of empire and build a better world?
David Solnit and Aimee Allison wrote this article for YES! Magazine's Winter 2008 issue Liberate Your Space. Solnit, anti-war, global justice, and arts organizer, was a key organizer in the WTO shutdown in Seattle in 1999 and in the shutdown of San Francisco the day after Iraq was invaded in 2003. He is the editor of Globalize Liberation: How to Uproot the System and Build a Better World. Allison is an Army veteran and conscientious objector. She leads counter-recruitment activities and actively supports veterans who are healing from their war experiences. She is a contributor to 10 Excellent Reasons Not to Join the Military.
© 2004-07 YES!
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22 Comments so far
Show AllI wish you progress with your plan.
But, until its decided by the masses to simply go and peacefully surround the White House & Capitol, and refuse to leave until these criminals are taken away, you'll have to count me out on further "strategies" like this one.
Bullies need to be confronted, not appeased or avoided.
Exactly. Please don't get sucked into flushing our precious resources down another election campaign toilet again. Please remember all "politics" is not confined to polling booths and legislative chambers.
DIY -- Do It Yourself.
Wow, six years into an antiwar resistance, and someone finally figures out 'we need a strategy.'
The big problem we have is that the fools who've proclaimed themselves the 'leaders of the antiwar movement' are in no way accountable to the movement for their results ... or their complete lack of results.
That someone could be 6 years into a campaign and saying 'wow, we need a strategy' is just mind-boggling about how badly the 'leaders' of this antiwar movement have performed.
Since the leaders are basically self-proclaimed (we never had an 'election' of the antiwar movement where members of the movement could select the 'leaders'), then the only thing I can think of is that we should just ignore these fools and start doing what we see as best.
Surely one pillar that keeps the war going is the discomfort many "middle Americans" feel with conventional antiwar expressions--marches, street theater, and the like. We know the war is vastly unpopular, but that hasn't translated into effective action in part because in this country there isn't a robust tradition of broad, vigorous citizen activism. Thus those of us who are out there are perceived as...out there, and many ordinary citizens are reluctant to join us. (And let's face it, the opposition also works hard to marginalize us, and make sure we are seen as radical fringe elements.) So it seems to me one clear need is to work on breaking down those barriers and communicating far more effectively with nonpoliticized folks.
...and i am sure every respondee will rush off to the barricades and risk injury, jail or death for the cause. i won't. ultimately people of conscience and progressive belief must deal with the reality that fascists (and this is who are running the country) play for keeps. there is far too much at stake to allow "people" to determine the policies of our nation. if there is tyhe slightest chance of our success we will be killed. simple as that- it is the basic reason that the left is moribund, or totally non-existant in the US. just look at the state of affairs in central and south america for the template- how mant americans will give up their lives, their homes and family for the cause. precious few. i admire greatly those that do resisit with all their hearts and bodies. i cannot. i don't want to be beaten, maimed and tortured and killed for. . .for..something i can barely percieve any more. a kinder capitalism? a real democracy? fat chance. history says no way. . .
This Congress was elected to stop this war, and their one ace in the hole is to withhold funding. They have not done this. Maybe they are afraid of looking like they don't support the troops. Whatever.
There is another way to stop funding the war, and that is for the citizen to withhold taxes. There could be many creative strategies to accomplish this. One would be to have a 'withhold taxes rehersal day', by designating a day when participants would symbolically withhold their taxes for next year. That would raise awareness of the concept. Another day could be designated 'withhold taxes initiative day' when particpants could choke government with letters, e-mails and telephone calls advising that they planned to withhold taxes unless the troops were brought home according to a quick shedule. Besides getting the message across, these 'days' would prepare both the public and the government for uncertainty about taxes when the time to file taxes comes. At that time, participants could withhold 30% of their taxes, and send 2% of their taxes to a 'taxpayers defence fund' for fighting any legal battles involved.
Just some ideas how it could be done. The main thing is that you are paying for this war. Do you really want to?
Malfoyd: Could you please inform me as to how I get my employer to stop withholding ALL of my taxes from my paycheck?
Thanks
When we stop thinking in terms of different politicians and different political parties we can see our political system isn't about to change from within. We have only one party in D.C. The Uncle Buck Party. The Dems and the Repbs have run Uncle Sam out of the country and are rewriting the Constitution to legalize the fascism we're headed for. We have no effective politicians who are amplifying the voice of we the people. There is not a STATESMAN in our country anymore. Uncle Buck only listens to his corporate sponsors. This politician is brought to you by General Electric, where our most important product is warfare technology.
Hoa binh
Rebel Farmer - good point. Maybe I haven't thought this one all the way through...I'm making this up as I go along.
So how about a 'strike for taxes back' week, when employers get their employees back if they agree to withhold taxes only to be released to the government on agreement by the employees.
I don't know, really, but I can't believe there is not some way to accomplish serious action using the citizen's taxpaying card. Or is the citizenry so well controlled that meaningful action is impossible?
Rebel, a general strike is an obvious solution, but I'm trying to suggest something more moderate, at least for a start. Also, withholding taxes on an organized scale sounds like it would be more palatable to many than a general strike would.
Another important strategy: don't vote for anyone who continues to vote for funding the war. That would include my Democratic House Rep. If I don't get an anti-war option, I'll simply not vote.
What alternatives have we to buying the oligarchy's products and increasing their wealth and power?
I agree with since1492 in that what we really need to do is boycott corporations. Buy nothing corporate. Tell your friends and family to not shop at WalMart, not eat at McDonald's or Crack in the Box, and if they need to purchase anything, go to the "mom and pop" stores.
David & Aimee, they ain't gonna do it. They didn't do it in '68, or '78, or '88, or '98, and they ain't gonna do it in '08.
Go back and listen to Simon & Garfunkle's Silent Night/Nightly News Report. There's a part there where candidate Nixon says that opposition to the war is the greatest single threat to our victory in Vietnam. Now opposition is TREASON. This is Fulfillment.
Doesn't mean there won't be opposition or that the Empire won't Shatter like brittle China. The dividing lines will always be focused on those who have missed a meal, and those who ain't. Those who have tombstones in their eyes lit by rage, and those who have hope for a 'future' under the status quo, however ugly that status might quo (don't mind the IDF chip in your ass, it's for Homeland Security). The brittle china part happens when the bills come due and we ain't got the money. Guess who's gonna turn out the lights? Our Chinese owned energy grid. We have been sold into the hands of Monsters.
"The avalanche has begun, too late for the pebbles to vote" Kosh I, the Vorlon, Babylon5.
Peace.
As we all know, they won't and we won't - it's as simple as that.
"We need a strategy to end the occupation of Iraq and stop the next invasion, in Iran or elsewhere"
just in:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/pakistan/Story/0,,2220126,00.html
mwb: Thanks for the link. What will they think of next?! Jeez Louise.....
Lucky Lefty: Great post. Especially the "missed a meal" part. I've been saying for months, Americans are not going to get focused and start working for the betterment and survival of all of us until this thing hits home and gets personal. And that's going to take an economic implosion, the declaration of marshal law, or an attack somewhere that causes the nukes to fall (out?). So, I'm resigned and just preparing while I wait. I'm targeting putting together enough necessities to last about 6 months to a year. And planning next years garden with my neighbors. We're all going to need each other to get through this mess.
Get on Board, y'all! I have come to believe that action from the People is the only way we are going to effect meaningful Change. Clearly, there is not enough collective will among our "elected representatives" to get anything accomplished.
The People ARE the Power; We are the People!
LUCKY LEFTY -- I enjoyed the Vorlon Babylon 5 reference "The avalanche has begun, too late for the pebbles to vote".
A similar idea comes from:
"when the elephants start to dance,
the monkeys climb the trees""
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is enough to meet everybody's need, but there is not enough to meet everybody's greed »
Swell.
So now we're also going to go into Pakistan to control their nukes?!
Perhaps we should also go into Israel to control THEIR nukes?
Imagine. The U.S. with a military presence in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan AND Iran??
And Biden wants to wait until AFTER we bomb Iran to put impeachment on the table??
Dem/Repub Koolaid all round for the holidays! Ho, ho, ho.
A solution. "The pioneers of a warless world,are the youth that refuse to join the military".- Albert Einstein.
We start by teaching our children at a young age that as Einstein said "human beings are not condemned, because of their biological constitution, to annihilate each other or to be at the mercy of a cruel, self-inflicted fate. The economic anarchy of capitalist society as it exists today is, in my opinion, the real source of the evil."
Evil!
How about boycotting oil? We all believe it's the reason for the war. We mostly believe use of it causes global warming. Bush and his oil cohorts must be giddy with joy that we use their product, the one we claim the war is about, to the same degree that we did before the Oil War began. Isn't it probably true that the war won't end because we won't really commit and sacrifice, like people did during, say, the Montgomery Bus boycott? Think of the amount of commitment and inconvenience it has taken to make large changes in the past. This war continues because we want to drive and fly just as much as we did before, which is as much as we've been told we ought to drive and fly. Air travel is the new consumerism and antiwar liberals indulge in it as much as conservatives, and as much or more than before the war began.
If we're not willing to consider our lives and remove oil from them to the greatest extent possible, we should not expect that huge corporate and political interests are going to do what we want. We don't deserve it, either, even if the result we want is good, rather than the evil that now persists. The article mentions "workshops" that seem to encourage people to stand up and shift responsibility to a group they are unconnected to. The administration must also be happy that we drive to workshops and protests. We haven't touched them or their profits. We claim the war is about oil and see that oil companies are thriving, and we're determined to stay our own failed course, just like Bush. The first rule of being an American now must be: do whatever you want whenever you want, and claim that you have the right to, but that the other side, in their identical pattern of thought, does not. We bash Hummers and fly to retreats. We drive to protests and hold signs that read, "No Blood For Oil." We're the perfect antiwar protesters for the Bush administration. We're their enablers.
And by the way, to the commenter who claimed that what Rose Parks did was easy, google it. She was carefully chosen. It was known that whoever did this would face huge scrutiny and hostility. The boycott itself continued for, I believe, over a year, with great inconvenience. It was not at all easy, and many gave up, and many more wanted to, and called for its end. It was anything but easy, which is why it eventually worked, and why we probably aren't going to get the results it did. If we protest this war in a way that gets attention and ends it, it will suck. We'll mostly hate it. We'll bicker with each other, and oppose each other's commitment and strategies. We'll think it is failing. We won't know the outcome. We'll probably have to up the ante at times. We won't like it, and the more we dislike it, probably the more effective it will be.