| VOICES NEWSLETTER
(SEPT 2002)
Contents
- We
Have The Power To Stop This War
- Recent
Activities
- Gearing
Up To Prevent The War
- A
Humanitarian Disaster
- Why
We Break The Sanctions
- War
Plan Iraq
- Mother
Of All Propagandists
- Mounting
Oppostition
- Kathy's
Reflections
1)
WE HAVE THE POWER TO STOP THIS WAR
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We now have a
real chance at stopping the war on Iraq in its tracks. As the incoming
Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams (who has lent his support
to voices) has commented, there has been a 'significant shift in
what people assumed was an automatic run-up to war': there is now
'an extraordinary window of opportunity' for making peace. (Sunday
Times, 25 Aug., p. 2)
A major mobilisation
by the British peace movement over the next three months could
force Tony Blair to withdraw Britain from military participation
in the war; this could help to tip the balance in the US against
an invasion.
Voices in the
wilderness uk is concentrating on helping to build the anti-war
movement into a force that can shake Mr Blair's determination and
prevent President Bush's war.
The
Achilles Heel
Militarily, Britain
is irrelevant, but politically, British support seems to be essential
in shoring up US public and congressional opinion. US polls show
that while most Americans support military action against Iraq,
that support drops significantly if the US has to go it alone.
(Christian Science Monitor, 17 July; Times, 14 Aug., p. 14)
General Norman
Schwarzkopf, commander of US-led forces in the 1991, and James
Baker, US Secretary of State in 1991, have both warned George W.
Bush. not to 'go it alone'. (Times, 26 Aug. p. 1)
We
Are The Majority
Two out of three
people in Britain who have an opinion oppose the threatened invasion
of Iraq. A Daily Telegraph /YouGov poll found 58 per cent of people
in Britain opposed to war - only 28 per cent are supportive. Only
19 per cent of people think Britain should participate in the war.
54 per cent think Tony Blair looks like Bush's poodle - 39 per
cent think that's unfair. (12 Aug., p. 12)
A majority of
Conservative voters oppose war (49 per cent as against 39 per cent
support). (Guardian, 28 Aug.,p. 1)
A
programme For Peace
In the next few
months we need to persuade doubters and supporters of the war;
we need to strengthen those who oppose war by supplying the best
information and arguments to combat war propaganda; and we need
to mobilise and channel people's opposition and outrage into effective
nonviolent protest.
Oppose
'Containment'
We must vehemently
reject the choice we are being offered between 'containment' and
'regime change'.
'Containment'
is a code word for strangling 23 million people with economic sanctions
and killing tens of thousands of children every year through poverty
and disease.
'Regime change',
on the other hand, is a code word for assaulting the people of
Iraq, disrupting the fragile network of humanitarian distribution
on which they depend, and destroying key elements of Iraq's public
health infrastructure - all in order to replace the current leader
of Iraq with a more pliable Iraqi general.
To solve the
humanitarian crisis in Iraq, we must lift the economic sanctions.
To solve the inspection crisis in Iraq, we need to negotiate the
return of UN weapons inspectors.
There are risks
in taking this route. But the risks of sanctions and war are much
greater - for the peoples of Iraq, for the peoples of the region,
and perhaps even for the world.
Local
Organising
In our local
anti-war groups, we have the opportunity to reach out to a wide
range of groups and institutions for support - to local constituency
party organisations, including the Gleen Party; to local churches
and mosques, including Friends Meeting Houses; to trade unions
and trades councils; to local peace and human rights groups; to
students, women's organisations (women are much more hostile to
the proposed war than men), and environmental groups.
We can ask some
or all of these local bodies to pass resolutions opposing the planned
war and calling on the Prime Minister to publicly pledge that Britain
will not participate in, or support, President Bush's attack on
Iraq - these resolutions can be used as part of the lobbying of
our local MPs. We can invite all of these groups to circulate the
Stop The War petition www.stopwar.org.uk,
ARROW Anti-War Briefings www.j-n-v.org,
and news of anti-war events local and national.
We can ask the
most supportive to sponsor or sign the Pledge of Resistance sponsored
by ARROW, Pax Christi and voices uk.
Local
Action
At the local
level, weekly stalls, local vigils and demonstrations, anti-war
church services, acts of nonviolent civil disobedience such as
sit-down protests, letters to local newspapers, participation in
local radio phone-ins, putting up anti-war posters and stickers,
even wearing anti-war badges, can all help to raise awareness and
move people into action.
Finally, the
28 Sept mass demonstration in London organised by the Stop the
War Coalition and the Muslim Association of Britain will be a very
important signal to the Government. Please do come. You are very
welcome to join the Pledge section of the demo.
2)
RECENT ACTIVITIES
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Poodle
Voices joined
ARROW on 4 July to call for Independence from America, and to oppose
a US attack on Iraq. 40 people gathered at Downing St to meet a
cowboy-hatted George W.Bush leading a giant Tony Blair 'poodle'
on a string (thank you, Stig).
A list of Pledge
signers was handed in, and then it was off to the US Embassy, via
Oxford Street where an ARROW lamppost climber hung up a large 'No
war on Iraq' banner. Reuters carried the story and a photo.
54% of British
people think Tony Blair 'looks increasingly like President Bush's
poodle' (Telegraph, 12 Aug)
Week
Of Action
6 Aug. was the
twelfth anniversary of the imposition of economic sanctions on
Iraq, as well as being Hiroshima Day. In London 'Children Against
the War', ARROW and Women in Black all held vigils - the latter
braving the elements to do so. Birmingham's Iraqi People First
had a 40 person demo outside the BBC to protest the media's coverage
of the sanctions.
The Sheffield
Campaign Against War in the Gulf held a vigil entitled 'Sanctions
- a silent Hiroshima', while CASI launched a new booklet of ideas
on how to oppose the sanctions available from .
Faslane
Up at Faslane
Trident submarine base in Scotland, voice* joined forces with Trident
Ploughshares for a 'die-in' to mark the two anniversaries and to
protest recent British nuclear threats against Iraq.
A silent 40 minute
procession led to the main gate, where, after twelve slow drum
beats, most of those present lay in the road. There were 22 arrests
- a picture from the demo was used in the Guardian. Thanks to Lizzie
and Kez for beautiful banners!
3)
GEARING UP TO PREVENT THE WAR
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As the US and
UK escalate their threats, voices in the wilderness uk is building
up its anti-war/anti-sanctions campaign in response.
Anti-War
Action Centre
In cooperation
with ARROW (Active Resistance to the Roots of War), void has taken
up an office in Central London and is busy trying to equip the
room at 5 Caledonian Road (on the third floor), and replace our
ageing computer and printer.
Having moved
the office from Oxford, we would be very grateful for any offers
of accommodation in the London area for our office volunteers,
especially for the redoubtable Gabriel Carlyle: If you are able
to offer a room for the next six months (perhaps for free?), please
call Gabriel on 0845 458 2564.
The Anti-War
Action Centre is intended to be a resource centre, a place to pick
up the latest and best leaflets, briefings, badges, posters, stickers,
books (Housmans Bookshop on the ground floor is a treasure trove).
We will also hold regular anti-war organising meetings at No. 5.
If you live in
the London area and are able to spare a few hours regularly over
the next critical months, we would be very grateful for help in
the office. We are also keen to recruit people to staff stalls
at anti-war meetings and demonstrations.
If you would
like to drop by the office to pick up materials, or if you would
like to volunteer in some capacity, please call 0845 458 2564 before
dropping in to check someone is in the office to let you in.
Voices
Roadshow
Voice is keen
to offer anti-wai/anti-sanctions speakers to do talks around the
country. We are also now offering local groups a package of activities.
We can get together
the materials and people to hold a public sanctions-breaking auction
- either at a speaker meeting or in the open. We can also help
with holding a public Pledge of Resistance signing stall.
We can also hold
workshops for activists in preparation for Non Violent Direct Action,
or a workshop for Getting Better at Arguing Against War and Sanctions'.
The idea is that
we can send two or more voices people to your area for one, two
or three days to hold a number of events for external and internal
consumption to help boost the movement
Please call the
office or email voices@viwuk.fresserve.co.uk if
you are interested. Please do book at least three weeks in advance
of when you want to hold the events.
Pledge
The Pledge of
Resistance is entering a new, more active, phase. We now have over
1500 signatures, with nearly 1000 people pledged to take nonviolent
action in the event of a major attack on Iraq, and hundreds of
people publicly pledging to support those willing to risk arrest,
prosecution, and legal penalties.
We know from
past experience - certainly in the case of the Vietnam War - that
mass civil disobedience can help to contain State violence. It
turns out that President Nixon was intent on ending the war by
dropping a nuclear bomb on North Vietnam in November 1969. He was
deterred by the mobilisation culminating in the vast Vietnam Moratorium
demonstration in October 1969. The threat of internal disruption
was too great to go down the nuclear route. (More details in War
Plan Iraq.)
It may require
a credible threat of massive nonviolent disruption to stop this
war.
Hence our plans
for nonviolent civil disobedience on 2 December (see below) and
around the Gulf War anniversary in January, and ourpromotion of
the Pledge. If you haven't already, please do consider signing
up at www.j-n-v.org.
Pledge
Dayschool 20 Oct
To give the Pledge
a boost, we have organised a Pledge section of the 28 Sept. Stop
the War march, and a Pledgers' picnic afterwards.
We are also holding
an action-packed National Pledge Dayschool on Sun. 20 Oct. from
11-4 at the north end of Gower St, London WC1, in the Cruciform
Building of University College London. NVDA preparation and media
workshops, 'how to run a local Pledge group', plus anti-war speakers
including Mil and Gabriel.
Your
Support Needed
Voices relies
entirely on donations from the public. We are grateful for any
support you can give, however large or small. Please make cheques
out to 'voices in the wilderness uk' and send to Voices, 5 Caledonian
Rd, London N1 9DX. Many thanks.
4)
A HUMANITARIAN DISASTER
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In all the recent
media coverage surrounding the plan to attack Iraq, one topic has
received virtually no attention: its impact on ordinary Iraqis.
This is not because
nobody knows what the humanitarian consequences might be. Four
years ago the Pentagon warned President Clinton that a military
attack on Iraq might kill 10,000 Iraqis. In fact the humanitarian
impact on civilians could be even more horrific.
Humanitarian
Disaster
According to
Save the Children (SCP) UK bombing Iraq would lead to a humanitarian
disaster for which the international community would bear a heavy
responsibility'. Furthermore 'any attacks that targeted sectors
used for ration distribution (eg transport) or for public health
(eg water, sanitation, electricity) would be an attack on children's
ability to survive.' History suggests that such attacks will almost
certainly take place.
1991;
'Long Term Leverage'
During the 1991
Gulf War the US deliberately targeted Iraq's infrastructure in
what air force officers explained was an effort "to accelerate
the effect of [economic] sanctions." Iraq's electricity generating
system was deliberately crippled - in breach of the Geneva' Conventions
- to create what Col. John Warden III, the deputy director of strategy,
doctrine and plans for the Air Force, termed "long-term leverage."
4%
By the time the
air war was over Iraq's electrical system was generating less than
4 percent of its pre-war output. "Saddam Hussein cannot restore
his own electricity . He needs help", Warden explained. "If there
are 3 political objectives that the UN coalition has, it can say,
'Saddam, when you agree to do these things, we will allow people
to come in and fix your electricity'" The human consequences were
devastating.
47,000
The electricity
cut-off - in a highly mechanised, electricity dependent society
- led to a massive surge of water-borne and sewage related diseases
such as cholera, typhoid, gastroenteritis and malaria. An estimated
47,000 Iraqi children died during the first eight months of 1991
as a result of the war's aftermath.
Today, as a direct
consequence of the Gulf War and 12 years of economic sanctions,
Iraqi children are still drinking dirty water and ordinary families
are unable to earn a living. If Iraq's electricity system is damaged
again in a future military attack, it could collapse completely.
According to
the UN Secretary-General, the consequences of this 'could potentially
dwarf all other difficulties so far endured by the Iraqi people.'
Famine
Sanctions have
created unprecedented levels of dependency on the Government food
ration - upon which millions of Iraqis depend for their survival.
According to Save the Children, 'dependency levels are so high
that any shock to the system would lead directly and inevitably
to a humanitarian disaster'.
UNICEF's representative
in Baghdad, Carol de Rooy, has even stated that there is the possibilty
of 'large scale famine' if bombing interrupts the ration's distribution.
Andrea Needham
5)
WHY WE BREAK THE SANCTIONS
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Voices uk breaks
the economic sanctions on Iraq by taking humanitarian goods into
Iraq without an export licence, and by bringing Iraqi civilian
goods back to sell in the UK without permission.
Until Iraq is
allowed to resume normal civilian trade, and to re-inflate the
Iraqi economy, the humanitarian crisis will continue to kill large
numbers every month.
We break the
sanctions because they are a weapon of mass destruction. We break
the sanctions because they have killed hundreds of thousands of
children.
We break the
sanctions because one of the finest health systems in the Middle
East has been broken and destroyed as a matter of policy.
We break the
sanctions because a people who had clean drinking water now a crime
against humanity is being perpetrated in our name.
We break the
sanctions because the government lies and lies about the effects
of the policies it supports.
We break the
sanctions because food and medicines have been affected by sanctions.
We break the
sanctions because the oil-for-food deal has failed to meet the
needs of the Iraqi people.
We break the
sanctions because we cannot obey the rules that are killing civilians
in their thousands every month.
We break the
sanctions because we have seen the children dying in front of our
eyes in Iraqi hospitals while British ministers claim to have no
quarrel with the Iraqi people.
We break the
sanctions because after ten years of vigils, and demonstrations,
and lobbies, and letters, and countless, countless leaflets, the
time has come to say with our whole selves, with our futures, with
our freedom, we will not be part of this.
We break the
sanctions because a whole people is in agony through our cruelty
and indifference.
Milan Rai, co-founder
voices uk
6)
WAR PLAN IRAQ
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Milan Rai: We
are confronting two Big Lies. The first lie is that the US and
UK are motivated by the threat from Iraq's suspected weapons of
mass destruction programmes.
In reality, this
is not a war for UN weapons inspectors. The US is undermining the
new weapons inspection agency UNMOVIC, just as it did UNSCOM.
As a top US Senate
foreign policy aide has said: 'The White House's biggest fear is
that UN weapons inspectors will be allowed to go in.'(Time, 13
May, p. 38)
The second Big
Lie is that the US and Britain are committed to/regime change'
in Iraq. In reality the US is committed to 'regime stabilisation,
leadership change'.
As Richard Haas,
then director for Middle East Affairs for the US National Security
Council, said in March 1991 after the end of the Gulf War, 'You
don't understand. Our policy is to get rid of Saddam, not his regime.'
(Andrew and Patrick Cockburn, Out of the Ashes, p. 37.)
The aim is merely
to replace the Iraqi President and his immediate entourage with
a more cooperative and obedient set of generals.
One candidate
being considered is Brigadier-General Najib al-Salhi, who served
Baghdad faithfully through the Iran-Iraq war, the campaign against
the Kurds, the invasion of Kuwait, and the crushing of the 1991
rebellions, until he defected in 1995.
General al-Salhi
has made grand statements about introducing 'multi-party democracy'
into Iraq. The reality is revealed by his emphasis on 'the need
to encourage Iraqi military leaders to switch sides by promising
that no more than 20 of Saddam's closest henchmen would be treated
as criminals by an incoming Iraqi government.' (Sunday Telegraph,
17 March 2002, p. 15)
In other words,
'regime stabilisation, leadership change'.
Ten reasons against
another war on Iraq: There is no evidence Iraq has developed or
acquired weapons of mass destruction; There is no link between
Iraq and the terrorist attacks of 11 September; This is not a war
for democracy; A war on raq could trigger a humanitarian disaster;
A war on Iraq could demolish Iraqi Kurdistan; A war on Iraq would
be illegal; Iraq's neighbours oppose the war, and fear its consequences;
Generals on both sides of the Atlantic oppose the war; A majority
of people in Britain oppose the war; A war on Iraq could trigger
a world recession.
War Plan Iraq:
Ten Reasons Not To Launch Another War on Iraq by Milan Rai (240pp)
is published on 11 Sept. £10 post-free until 7 Oct. (£12 in bookshops.)
Please send cheques made out to 'ARROW Publications' to 29 Gensing
Rd, St. Leonards on Sea, East Sussex TN38 OHE.
'Excellent.'
Alice Mahon MP
7)
MOTHER OF ALL PROPAGANDISTS
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John Sweeney's
BBC2 Correspondent programme 'Mother of All Ironies' alleged: (1)
that 'oil-for-food' has solved the humanitarian crisis in south/central
Iraq; and (2) that Baghdad is deliberately withholding medicines
purchased under oil-for-food from the autonomous Kurdish region
in northern Iraq.
Milk
And Honey
Whilst Sweeney
acknowledged that sanctions had caused suffering in the past, he
insinuated that this was no longer the case as 'billions of dollars
are coming in from oil-for-food and sanctions-busting'.
But goods coming
into Iraq from oil-for-food have amounted to less than $200 per
capita per year. A recent UNICEF document states that 'many Iraqis
[are] living on as little as the equivalent of $3 to $6 a month'.
Open
To Question?
Sweeney claimed
that a 1999 UNICEF child mortality estimate was 'open to question'
because the surveys which it was based on were conducted jointly
with the Iraqi Government.
He failed to
point out however that UNICEF helped design the surveys; were involved
in the training of survey supervisors; conducted field visits to
every governorate while the survey was being conducted; oversaw
the process of data entry; and asked a panel of experts to review
the surveys for evidence of manipulation. They found no such evidence.
Medicines |