War Protesters Near Bush Ranch Moving to Nearby Property; FBI Whistleblower to
Join Gathering
By Angela K. Brown Associated Press Writer
Published: Aug 17, 2005
CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - War protesters camping in roadside ditches near
President Bush's ranch have accepted a neighbor's offer to stay on his
property, and their vigil will be joined this week by FBI whistleblower Coleen
Rowley and by another mother whose soldier-son died in Iraq.
The neighbor, Army veteran Fred Mattlage, said he sympathizes with
participants in the vigil started Aug. 6 by Cindy Sheehan, who lost her
24-year-old son in Iraq last year. The makeshift camp off the winding,
two-lane road to Bush's ranch has angered residents and snarled traffic.
"I just think people should have a right to protest without being harassed,"
Mattlage told The Associated Press. "And I'm against the war. I don't think
it's a war we need to be in."
Sheehan, of Vacaville, Calif., has vowed to remain through Bush's monthlong
ranch vacation unless he meets with her and other grieving families.
Former FBI special agent Rowley said she and Minnesota state Sen. Becky Lourey,
whose son was killed in Iraq, will leave for Texas on Thursday and camp at the
site through Sunday.
"It puts a human face on this issue," said Rowley, who is now a Democratic
candidate for Congress in Minnesota. "Many people, if they don't have a
personal connection to the troops, it's so easy for this to become a
discussion that lacks seriousness and urgency. I think it's good to show that
there are real people that are being affected."
Lourey's 41-year-old son, Chief Warrant Officer Matt Lourey, died May 26 when
the Army helicopter he was piloting was shot down. The state senator has
consistently criticized the Iraq war but was also supportive of her son's
military career.
"Our children are dying and I think it's time to go support Cindy and see if
Bush will come out and we can say, 'President Bush, what is the mission
exactly?'," Lourey said. "Truth has been shifting all around and I think we
need to rejoin the world community and not occupy another nation."
Now retired from the FBI, Rowley criticized the agency for ignoring her pleas
before the 9/11 attacks to investigate terrorism suspect Zacarias Moussaoui
more aggressively. Her actions earned her a slot as one of Time magazine's
"persons of the year" for 2002.
Demonstrators said they would start moving their tents, anti-war banners and
portable toilets to Mattlage's corner 1-acre lot Wednesday and hope to have
the new camp set up in time for a dusk candlelight vigil. Organizers say the
vigil will be one of about 1,000 to be held across the country.
The new campsite will put the protesters about a mile from Bush's ranch, said
Hadi Jawad of the Crawford Peace House, which is helping the group.
For more than a week, the rural area has been a traffic nightmare as the camp
attracted hundreds more protesters as well as Bush supporters holding
counter-rallies.
Landowners have asked county commissioners to extend for at least two miles
the public no parking zone around Bush's ranch. The ordinance now prohibits
cars from stopping on the road within about a quarter of a mile.
Bush, who said he sympathizes with Sheehan, has made no indication that he
will meet with her. Sheehan and other families met with Bush two months after
her son's death before she became a vocal opponent of the war.
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Associated Press writer Patrick Condon contributed to this report from
Oakdale, Minn.