The New Peace is Pro-Troops
Peace activists embrace voices of dissent within the military
March 17, 2005
Grace Hanson Utne.com
Counter-protestors won't be the only ones holding 'Support the
Troops' signs at this Saturday's international day of protest
against the war in Iraq. The second anniversary of the invasion has
the peace movement handing the bullhorn to voices within the
military to bring home the effects of war.
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Over President's Day weekend 500 delegates to the United for
Peace and Justice (UFPJ) conference converged in St. Louis to hash
out a strategy for the peace movement in the US. Top among the
movement's priorities is broadening its base by appealing to the
mainstream public and politicians who are against the war, but want
to support the troops.
'We must support and amplify the pressure coming from within the
ranks of the military,' Amy Quinn, founding steering committee
member of UFPJ, wrote on TomPaine.com. 'Military families
and veterans hold the moral authority to successfully communicate
with the U.S. public the reality on the ground in Iraq and the
disillusion soldiers are facing.'
Pro-war factions have long monopolized the notion that only they
truly support the troops. Now, peace activists are spinning their
own nuance of 'support the troops' by defining it as stopping the
war and caring for the troops when they return.
Having military lead the march convolutes the 1960s images of
protestors spitting on veterans, but as Karen Houppert writes this
week in The Nation, it could have its drawbacks. 'It risks
reinforcing the notion that civilian opposition to war is somehow
less legitimate.'
Combat deaths and the families that remain are bringing the war
zone to the home front in new forms of community activism. In
Vermont, 49 towns passed resolutions at annual March town meetings
asking the state legislature to investigate the use of the Vermont
National Guard in Iraq, as well as resolutions asking the president
and Congress to withdraw troops. The initiatives are not only a
push to change policy, but a way of engaging the public in
dialogue.
While individuals within the military are embraced, work is
being done to strike at weaknesses within in the institution, like
the decline in recruitment. A tenacious counter-recruitment agenda
has campus organizers protesting military recruiters at their
schools and soccer moms keeping their kids off recruitment lists
made accessible by a clause in the No Child Left Behind Act.