-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the June 10, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
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WORKERS WORLD PARTY CANDIDATES: "BUILD MASS MOVEMENT 
OF RESISTANCE"

TO THE JUNE 5TH MARCHERS:

We salute everyone marching in Washington, D.C., San Francisco and other 
cities June 5 to demand: "End the torture--End the killings--End the 
occupation--Bring the troops home now!"

The ANSWER coalition and other groups should be commended for 
organizing 
these demonstrations. At a moment of political crisis for the capitalist 
political establishment over the occupation of Iraq, taking action is of 
paramount importance.

We also salute those who come out to bring attention to the heroic 
struggles against U.S. occupations in Haiti, Afghanistan, the 
Philippines and South Korea, the U.S.-backed Israeli occupation of 
Palestine, and the danger of U.S. military aggression against Venezuela, 
Colombia, Cuba and North Korea.

Every day, the world is learning more about the terrible crimes 
committed by U.S. occupation forces in Iraq: the siege of Falluja; the 
long-suppressed photos of dead soldiers returning to the United States; 
the torture and murder of prisoners at Abu Ghraib; the deliberate 
bombing of a wedding party; and much more. Each has helped to expose the 
brutal, racist and colonialist character of the occupation.

George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and the Pentagon brass, in collusion 
with leading Republicans and Democrats in Congress, are guilty of 
heinous war crimes. And behind them, calling the shots, stand the giant 
capitalist monopolies of Big Oil and Wall Street.

The growing popular resistance in Iraq has thrown Washington into 
disarray. Yesterday they all wanted to conquer Iraq; today they are all 
looking for someone else to blame. There is open political warfare 
within the Bush administration. The New York Times, which cheered on the 
war, was forced to admit that it printed false "evidence" to justify the 
invasion and occupation of Iraq. Public support for the war and 
occupation has fallen sharply.

The enthusiastic response to the June 5 protests shows that important 
sectors of the anti-war movement have not been swept up in the "Anybody 
But Bush" current. As even mainstream commentators now admit, there is 
little difference between Bush and Kerry over Iraq. Kerry is committed 
to the occupation and calls for tens of thousands of additional troops 
to be sent to shore up the chaotic operation. Like Bush, he hopes to 
convince more of the European imperialist allies to send troops and take 
some of the heat off Washington by giving the occupation an 
"international" veneer.

The road to getting U.S. troops out of Iraq lies through mass action, 
not electing a "lesser" evil.

With the nominal June 30 handover of "sovereignty" to a government 
handpicked by the U.S., the anti-war movement must raise ever stronger 
the demand for real self-determination for Iraq's people. There can be 
no true sovereignty while U.S. and British troops occupy the country and 
control all the vital avenues of political and economic life. There can 
be no real independence under the administration of the United Nations 
Security Council--a body dominated by the U.S., British and French 
imperialists.

The people of Iraq must be free to decide for themselves what kind of 
political, economic and social system they will have. That means 
demanding that the United States get out now--with no strings attached--
and pay reparations for the damage caused by war, occupation and 13 
years of genocidal sanctions.

We support the Iraqi people's right to resist the brutal occupation. And 
it becomes clearer every day that the masses of people are rising 
together--Sunni, Shiite and secular--to drive the invaders from their 
homeland.

We stand for the right of all those living under U.S. domination to 
resist.

In Haiti, U.S. Marines kidnapped Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the elected 
president, in February. They conduct house-to-house searches, 
collaborate with former death squad members terrorizing Aristide 
supporters and their families, and on May 18 presided over a massacre of 
demonstrators in Port-au-Prince. Yet Haiti's people continue to protest.

In occupied Palestine, the U.S.-backed Israeli army slaughtered 45 
people and demolished 67 homes in Gaza in late May. Yet the Palestinian 
people's unrelenting struggle has thrown Ariel Sharon's apartheid regime 
into crisis.

U.S. soldiers--mostly workers in uniform, many from nationally oppressed 
communities--have both the right and obligation to resist illegal 
occupations and the war crimes the brass tries to push them into, like 
the torture at Abu Ghraib.

The troops don't want to be stationed abroad for indefinite periods, 
forced to kill or be killed, hated as occupiers by the people Bush 
claimed they were "liberating." We look forward to the emergence of more 
heroic resisters like gay Marine Stephen Funk, recently freed from a 
military jail, and Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia, sentenced to a year in 
prison for refusing to commit war crimes. We pledge our support to them.

The working class here at home also has the right to resist. Tens of 
thousands of families have been torn apart to staff the occupations. 
Meanwhile, hundreds of billions of dollars that could be spent to create 
living-wage jobs, provide free, quality education, rebuild communities 
and create universal health care are instead being given to military-
industrial corporations for the slaughter in Iraq.

Workers--Black and white, Latin@ and Asian, Arab and Native, women and 
men, lesbian, gay, bi, trans and straight, immigrants and those born 
here--create all the wealth of this society. Nothing would move, nothing 
would be built, no profits would be made without our labor power.

We are committed to mobilizing this powerful class to end the 
occupations from Iraq to Haiti and everywhere, and to building a working-
class movement that can take the power away from the billionaires and 
create a society based on human need, not corporate greed. We are 
committed to struggling for socialism.

John Parker and Teresa Gutierrez

Workers World Party candidates
for president and vice president

- END -

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