Excerpt: "The anti-war movement is a coalition, not a party. There is no abiding ideology and no required readings. Opposition to the prospect of this U.S. aggression unites a broad spectrum of Americans of different and even opposing political stripes: socialists, anarchists, liberals, feminists, Quakers and members of almost every other American faith, army veterans, minorities' rights activists, libertarians, conservatives, environmentalists, isolationists, etc. There are also many, many people who are just citizens who smell something fishy. War is hell. We don't need a reason to resist it. We need an excellent reason to support it. So far, nobody has offered any serious one."

"Don't get mad, get going!" anti-war demonstration

By Gabriel Ash

Will there be war in Iraq? Wrong question. There
has been war against the people of Iraq since 1991. This war never
stopped; it is a war fought by the "civilized" world with gentle,
civilized weapons such as malnutrition, water contamination,
prevention of medical services, etc. The better question is: will the
war in Iraq be escalated to a ground invasion?

It seems almost inevitable, but there is still room for reading the
tea leaves. Dealing rationally with the arguments put forth by the
White House in favor of war is difficult. They are ridiculous. It
must be particularly tough for corporate journalists committed to not
insulting the administration. What can you say, beyond rolling your
eyes, when Bush recently warned of Iraqi plans for transatlantic
remote-controlled aircrafts attacking American cities? Can you
perhaps mention Saddam is also building photon torpedoes? How can you
argue with "secret evidence" of Iraqi nuclear capability which the
administration refuses even to hand over to the weapons inspectors?
Can Cheney at least tip Hans Blix about the whereabouts of Iraq's
alleged secret sites with "warm, warm, warmer, cold again, warm,
warmer"?

In despair, some even try to peer into Bush's soul, maybe by gazing
into his deep, anxious eyes. Is Bush a cowboy, a frat boy, an all-
American boy, or just a mentally-challenged boy? What does it mean
for America that Bush used to torture frogs when he was young? Is he
a dry drunk? Does he share the belief of some of his fundamentalist
fans in the soon-upon-us Rapture, Armageddon, Apocalypse now? If he
does, does he believe himself to be one of the horsemen? Will he be
inclined to hasten the end of the world? These and many other
questions will be resolved in the next episode of "The Empire."

Dwelling too much on these questions is not recommended. First,
gazing into Bush's soul can be hazardous to your health. You might be
sucked in by the vacuum. But the more important reason is that it
serves little purpose. At best, one is led to ponder the deep
dysfunctionality of American politics that allows someone like Bush
to rule the world. But it is too late for that.

The goal of understanding what goes on behind the scenes in
Washington should not be to reinforce our status as powerless
spectators of a magnificent drama. Unfortunately, most of the
analysis in the media is exactly that. The really crucial question
isn't, "will there be war," but "how can we prevent war."

The administration is quite unified about the right of the U.S.
government to exercise unlimited power over the whole world. But
there are different currents behind this unified facade. Here's what
I understand is going on:

First, there is the axis-of-pure-evil, Cheney-Rumsfeld-Wolfowitz-
Perle & Co. This is the War Party. Their song is bomb Iraq though the
justification keeps changing monthly. The War Party was all for
bombing Iraq already before the war in Afghanistan (in fact, before
the 2000 elections). It engaged in a sustained effort to launch an
attack around November, which was frustrated by Bush's decision to go
through the Security Council. The War Party did another attempt to
launch the war by defining Iraq's anti-aircraft fire at American and
British jets as a "material breach" of the inspection resolution.
That did not work either.

The War Party is still looking for excuses to launch the invasion.
The next date is January 27 when the inspectors' report is due. If,
as it is quite likely, the inspectors find nothing, there might be
attempts to invent or inflate findings. Or we might even be treated
to another blood libel, just like the false baby incubator story that
preceded the war in 1991. Who knows? Perhaps there'll be a "shocking
discovery" that the Iraqi officers' cantina is making soup stock from
baby bones.

Then there is the axis-of-banal-evil, Rove-Card-Bush & Co. That is
the Bush Re-election Party, obsessed with avoiding a replay of the
first Bush one-term presidency. The Bush Re-election Party supports
the war, but is weary of overspending political capital. In the face
of international pressure and lukewarm domestic support, the Bush Re-
election Party is seeking to outmaneuver the opposition to the war by
co-opting fence-sitters. Before attacking, it seeks to "market" the
war: domestically with outlandish lies and internationally with cash
promises and arm twisting.

Finally, there is the axis-of-evil-with-a-disarming-smile, mostly
Powell & Co. -- the I'm a Player Too Party. Powell favors the more
traditional foreign policy style of Papa Bush and Clinton. He is
eager to show how much the U.S. can gain by hardball diplomacy alone.
But his only leverage is his ability to save Bush precious political
capital. At worse, he can be the Republican ambassador to MTV.

The differences between the above three parties are minimal but
crucial -- they refer only to what each party sees as its highest
priority.

Within the War Party, there are two distinct wings: the "Pentagon
uber Alles" wing of Rumsfeld, Cheney and Rice, and the "Israel uber
Alles" wing of Wolfowitz, Perle, Abrams, Faith & Co. The Pentagon
wing wants Power with a capital P: unlimited and unchecked, over the
whole world -- they call it now "full spectrum dominance."
Domestically, to make such foreign policy possible, the Pentagon wing
wants to return to the good old days of the Korean war and the early
Vietnam war, when the government was secret and unaccountable, and
the public much more docile and naive than today.

Members of the second wing share this vision, but emotionally, they
seem to be motivated by something else: they believe that an
aggressive U.S. empire is necessary for the "survival" of Israel, for
which they have an inordinate and unseemly attachment that appears to
trump all other considerations. The remarkable resemblance between
the advice they give Bush today and the wildest dreams of Israel's
most extreme hawks is not a coincidence, and neither is the fact that
the Sharon government in Israel is the only other government in the
world that is positively salivating about the prospects of war.

The Pentagon wing, Cheney and Rumsfeld, control the brawn, but it is
the second wing, the committed Zionists, that provide most of the
strategic brain of the War Party.

The War Party seems to be the administration's motor; no doubt it has
set the agenda regarding Iraq. But Powell succeeded in forcing the
U.S. to seek a Security Council resolution and renewed arms
inspection instead of striking unilaterally. This has delayed the war
by a few months. The delay cannot be credited to Powell's influence,
which is minimal. It must be credited to the rise of an anti-war
sentiment and the fear that a unilateral war would not be approved by
a majority of Americans. The party that makes the final decision is
still the Bush Re-election Party, not the War Party.

This is our opportunity. We can hope to stop the war by raising the
amount of political capital Bush must spend. The War Party needs to
start the war within the next two months. After that, in the summer,
the cost of logistics and the advancing elections timetable might
make war impractical. So, it might be now or never. This is the time
for action, not speculation.

There will be a march in Washington D.C. on January 18th. The last
march was big with about 100,000 people showing up. This one has to
be big, too, preferably huge. We need to be there. We need to send a
message to the White House that there is a large anti-war movement
already. We need to make Karl Rove understand that this movement will
grow even bigger if the war is escalated, that it will expose the
price Americans will pay for the war, and that it will eventually
cost Bush the election. We must make Karl Rove make Bush worry that
his presidency doesn't end up like Johnson's or Nixon's.

The march is organized by the International Answer coalition. It and
various other groups organize transportation and many will also
organize a nightover if required. Many other groups will participate
with their own banners. The weeks ahead are marked for sustained anti-
war actions all over the world, so there will be plenty of
opportunities for people who cannot travel to Washington to
participate in expressing their objections to the war.

The anti-war movement is a coalition, not a party. There is no
abiding ideology and no required readings. Opposition to the prospect
of this U.S. aggression unites a broad spectrum of Americans of
different and even opposing political stripes: socialists,
anarchists, liberals, feminists, Quakers and members of almost every
other American faith, army veterans, minorities' rights activists,
libertarians, conservatives, environmentalists, isolationists, etc.
There are also many, many people who are just citizens who smell
something fishy.

You don't have to agree with International Answer or with me in order
to join the anti-war demonstration. All you have to agree with is
that you have an opportunity and a duty to stop the coming slaughter.

Here are a few other reasons to participate:

The war will devastate Iraq (again), kill tens of thousands of
innocent people, and an unknown number of American GIs, mostly from
minority groups and from working class backgrounds (none of the white
hawks in the current White House has ever been near enemy fire. They
all had the opportunity and chose not to. Dying in uniforms is a
privilege almost totally reserved for minorities and poor whites.)
The war will be a naked act of aggression against a country that
hasn't attacked the U.S., that has no plans to attack the U.S. and no
capabilities of attacking the U.S.
The war will be a boon to terrorist organizations recruiting people
willing to kill Americans.
The war will hasten the scraping of the Bill of Rights and the
suspension of American democracy.
The ten commandments say murder is wrong. So is stealing. Killing
Iraqis in order to steal their oil is a double offense.
The war will train more young Americans in murder and dehumanization,
a training that quite a few of them -- such as Timothy McVeigh, the
D.C. sniper and many other less remarkable victims of militarization -
- will later turn against their spouses, children and neighbors.
The war will cost hundreds of billions in direct costs and
potentially trillions in the likely economic disruption that will
result. That means lower standards of living for everyone.
The war will suck the air out of what's left of America's social
services, and will therefore contribute to misery, insecurity and
crime all over America.
The war will damage U.S. international standing and relations with
friendly countries. It will make American foreign policy more
expensive and more difficult. By making peaceful diplomacy difficult,
it will make war even more attractive; hence, the war will engender
more wars.
The war risks bringing chaos to the Middle East, boosts the rise of
militant Islam as the only alternative to American colonialism, and
plunges the Middle East into a new century of bloodshed.
The war, or everything that will go wrong with it, will be soon
blamed on "the Jews," thanks to the good work of Perle, Wolfowitz &
Co.
War is hell. We don't need a reason to resist it. We need an
excellent reason to support it. So far, nobody has offered any
serious one.
So make plans to be in Washington Saturday the 18th. Better yet,
spread the news to friends, family and neighbors. Bring your own big
party to Washington and earn points towards the real peace prize.
This is our chance to save tens of thousands of lives. We don't get
such chances every day.

Of course, there is much more one can do instead or beyond going to
one demonstration. To start with, here is a list of websites with
information on other anti-war groups:

United for Peace

Not In Our Name

Iraq Peace Team

Nonviolence Peaceforce Canada

Christian Peacemaker Team

Friends Peace Team

End the War

Michigan Peace Team List

If you find every other group too liberal, too radical, too
religious, too secular, too anything else for your taste, then why
not start your own?

[Gabriel Ash was born in Romania and grew up in Israel.  He writes
his columns because the pen is sometimes mightier than the sword
- and sometimes not. Gabriel is the Middle East Editor of
YellowTimes.org's News From the Front, located
at the following URL:
http://www.YellowTimes.org/nftf.html. He lives
in the United States.]

Gabriel Ash encourages your comments:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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