----------
  From: John P. Lacny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: Students in Solidarity Left List <[EMAIL PROTECTED];
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: [PEN-L:3806] End Iraq Sanctions NYT Signature Ad (fwd)
  Date: Wednesday, February 24, 1999 11:08 AM
  
  
        There's already an "editorial submission" for nationwide student
  newspapers; now there's this New York Times ad campaign.  Read on;
  naturally there's no "enclosed envelope" with this e-mail, so if you
 sign,
  you'll have to send it in a real envelope, or I suppose you could just
  contact these people at the e-mail listed below. 
  
        John Lacny
  
  ---------- Forwarded message ----------
  Please sign on, distribute, post, announce:
  
  Available at http://www.endiraqsanctions.com
  
  Advisory Board
  
  Noam Chomsky
  MIT
  
  Howard Zinn
  Boston University
  
  Edward W. Said
  Columbia University
  
  Robert Jensen
  University of Texas at Austin
  
  William Keach
  Brown University
  
  Ad Coordinator:
  Sharon Smith
  
  
  February 3, 1999
  
  Dear Friend,
  
  A growing chorus of people, in this country and around the world, are
  demanding an end to the murderous sanctions against Iraq, which are a
  direct result of U.S. government policy. The sanctions have taken a
  staggering toll among Iraqi civilians-especially the sick, the elderly
 and,
  above all, children under the age of 5.
  
  Here in the U.S., the mainstream media is finally giving some
 attention to
  the deadly effects of the sanctions. But much more is needed. Most
 people
  in this country have little or no knowledge of the human suffering
 that is
  being inflicted by our government, in our name.
  
  We have initiated a campaign to place a full-page signature ad in the
 New
  York Times. We believe that such an ad can play an important part in
 giving
  voice to the growing opposition to the sanctions against the Iraqi
 people.
  
  The purpose of this letter is to ask you to sign on to the signature
 ad,
  which will appear in the New York Times within the next six weeks. We
 also
  ask that, if at all possible, you enclose a contibution to help
 finance it.
  As you may imagine, the ad will cost a great deal of money-$34,000.
 But it
  will allow us to reach the widest possible audience with the facts
 about
  the sanctions.
  
  We have enclosed the text of the ad as it will appear. Please fill out
 the
  form below and return it to us in the enclosed envelope at your
 earliest
  convenience. We are certain that you share our sense of urgency to
 place
  this ad as quickly as possible.
  
  If you add your name, we will contact you to let you know when to look
 for
  the signature ad.
  
 
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  
   _____  Yes, add my name to the New York Times signature ad:
  
  Name/Title _______________________________________
  Organization* _____________________________________
  Mailing Address____________________________________
  ________________________________________________
  Telephone _________________ E-Mail _________________
  
  _____  I want to help finance the ad. Enclosed is a check for:
  
  $50____   $100____  $500____  $1,000____  Other_____
  
  Please make checks payable to the New York Times and mail to:
  
  End the Sanctions Against Iraq Signature Ad Campaign
  P.O. Box 16085
  Chicago IL 60616
  v 773-665-8695
  f 773-665-9651
  
  e [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
  *Organizations are listed for identification purposes only.
  
  
  Sanctions ARE Weapons of Mass Destruction
  
  We the undersigned call upon the United States government to end all
  sanctions against the people of Iraq.
  
          At the end of 1998, the United States once again rained bombs
 on
  the people of Iraq. But even when the bombs stop falling, the U.S. war
  against the people of Iraq continues-through the United Nations harsh
  sanctions on Iraq, which are the direct result of U.S. policy.
          This month, U.S. policy will kill 4,500 Iraqi children under
 the
  age of 5, according to United Nations studies, just as it did last
 month
  and the month before that all the way back to 1991. Since the end of
 the
  Gulf War, more than a million Iraqis have died as a direct result of
 the UN
  sanctions on Iraq.
  To oppose the sanctions is not equivalent to supporting the regime of
  Saddam Hussein. To oppose the sanctions is to support the Iraqi
 people.
  Saddam Hussein is a murderous dictator, who promotes those who are
 loyal to
  him and kills all those who voice opposition to his regime. But
 throughout
  the 1980s, when it suited U.S. strategic interests in the Middle East,
 the
  U.S. government was more than willing to ignore Saddam Hussein's
 brutality.
  In fact, U.S. and European companies provided Iraq with materials used
 to
  produce Saddam Hussein's "weapons of mass destruction." Moreover, the
  sanctions have not affected the lifestyle of Saddam Hussein or his
 inner
  circle. Food and medicine are available for those who can afford it.
 The
  sanctions hurt only the Iraqi people.
          The sanctions are weapons of mass destruction. When a UN
  inspections team visited Iraq to survey the damage from the Gulf War
 in
  March 1991, it concluded that the bombing has reduced Iraq to a
  "pre-industrial age." The team said at that time that if the sanctions
 were
  not lifted, the country faced "immediate catastrophe."  Yet the
 sanctions
  have continued for the last seven years, preventing Iraq from
 obtaining the
  hard currency to buy basic food stuffs and medicines-or to rebuild its
  infrastructure. The oil-for-food deal that allows Iraq to sell $5.2
 billion
  of its oil every six months has had only marginal effects. The United
  Nations takes one-third of all oil revenues for war reparations and
 its own
  expenses. The oil-for-food program does not generate enough money to
 feed
  adequately a population of 22 million. Raising the ceiling would not
 help.
  The refineries were bombed during the war and need to be rebuilt-even
 now,
  Iraq is unable to produce all the oil it is allowed to. In October,
 Denis
  Halliday, the UN coordinator for humanitarian aid to Iraq, resigned in
  protest, arguing that the sanctions "are starving to death 6,000 Iraqi
  infants every month, ignoring the human rights of ordinary Iraqis and
  turning a whole generation against the West."
          The sanctions also prevent Iraq from importing many basic
  necessities. Most pesticides and fertilizer are banned because of
 their
  potential military use. Raw sewage is pumped continuously into water
 that
  people end up drinking because Iraq's water treatment plants were
 blown up
  by US bombs in 1991-and most have never been repaired. Yet chlorine is
  banned under the sanctions because it also could be of military use.
  Typhoid, dysentery and cholera have reached epidemic proportions.
 Farid
  Zarif, deputy director of the UN humanitarian aid program in Baghdad,
  argued recently, "We are told that pencils are forbidden because
 carbon
  could be extracted from them that might be used to coat airplanes and
 make
  them invisible to radar. I am not a military expert, but I find it
 very
  disturbing that because of this objection, we cannot give pencils to
 Iraqi
  schoolchildren."
          For the past several years, individuals and groups have been
  delivering medicine and other supplies to Iraq in defiance of the U.S.
  blockade. Now, members of one of those groups, Chicago-based Voices in
 the
  Wilderness, have been threatened with massive fines by the federal
  government for "exportation of donated goods, including medical
 supplies
  and toys, to Iraq absent specific prior authorization." Our government
 is
  harassing a peace group that takes medicine and toys to dying
 children: we
  owe these courageous activists our support.
          This is not foreign policy-it is state-sanctioned mass murder.
 The
  Iraqi people are suffering because of the actions of both the Iraqi
 and
  U.S. governments, but our moral responsibility lies here in the United
  States. If we remain silent, we are condoning a genocide that is being
  perpetrated in the name of peace in the Middle East, a mass slaughter
 that
  is being perpetrated in our name.
  
  
  
  Anthony Arnove
  Editor
  South End Press
  7 Brookline Street #1
  Cambridge MA 02139-4146
  v 617-547-4002
  f 617-547-1333
  



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