Tens of Thousands Demand Iraq Withdrawal
Jan 27 3:43 PM US/Eastern
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2007/01/27/D8MTRJ880.html
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Convinced this is their moment, tens of
thousands marched Saturday in an anti-war demonstration linking
military families, ordinary people and an icon of the Vietnam
protest movement in a spirited call to get out of Iraq.
Celebrities, a half-dozen lawmakers and protesters from distant
states rallied in the capital under a sunny sky, seizing an
opportunity to press their cause with a Congress restive on the
war and a country that has turned against the conflict.
Marching with them was Jane Fonda, in what she said was her
first anti-war demonstration in 34 years.
"Silence is no longer an option," Fonda said to cheers from the
stage on the National Mall. The actress once derided as "Hanoi
Jane" by conservatives for her stance on Vietnam said she had
held back from activism so as not to be a distraction for the
Iraq anti-war movement, but needed to speak out now.
The rally on the Mall unfolded peacefully, although about 300
protesters tried to rush the Capitol, running up the grassy lawn
to the front of the building. Police on motorcycles tried to
stop them, scuffling with some and barricading entrances.
Protesters chanted "Our Congress" as their numbers grew and
police faced off against them. Demonstrators later joined the
masses marching from the Mall, halfway around Capitol Hill and
back.
United for Peace and Justice, a coalition group sponsoring the
protest, had hoped 100,000 would come. Police, who no longer
give official estimates, said privately the crowd was smaller
than that.
At the rally, 12-year-old Moriah Arnold stood on her toes to
reach the microphone and tell the crowd: "Now we know our
leaders either lied to us or hid the truth. Because of our
actions, the rest of the world sees us as a bully and a liar."
The sixth-grader from Harvard, Mass., organized a petition drive
at her school against the war that has killed more than 3,000
U.S. service-members.
More Hollywood celebrities showed up at the demonstration than
buttoned-down Washington typically sees in a month.
Actor Sean Penn said lawmakers will pay a price in the 2008
elections if they do not take firmer action than to pass a
nonbinding resolution against the war, the course Congress is
now taking.
"If they don't stand up and make a resolution as binding as the
death toll, we're not going to be behind those politicians," he
said. Actors Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins also spoke.
Fonda was a lightning rod in the Vietnam era for her outspoken
opposition to that war and her advocacy from Hanoi at the height
of that conflict. Sensitive to the old wounds, she made it a
point to thank the active-duty service-members, veterans and
Gold Star mothers who attended the rally.
She drew parallels to the Vietnam War, citing "blindness to
realities on the ground, hubris ... thoughtlessness in our
approach to rebuilding a country we've destroyed." But she noted
that this time, veterans, soldiers and their families
increasingly and vocally are against the Iraq war.
The House Judiciary Committee chairman, Rep. John Conyers,
threatened to use congressional spending power to try to stop
the war. "George Bush has a habit of firing military leaders who
tell him the Iraq war is failing," he said, looking out at the
masses. "He can't fire you." Referring to Congress, the Michigan
Democrat added: "He can't fire us.
"The founders of our country gave our Congress the power of the
purse because they envisioned a scenario exactly like we find
ourselves in today. Now only is it in our power, it is our
obligation to stop Bush."
On the stage rested a coffin covered with a U.S. flag and a pair
of military boots, symbolizing American war dead. On the Mall
stood a large bin filled with tags bearing the names of Iraqis
who have died.
A small contingent of active-duty service members attended the
rally, wearing civilian clothes because military rules forbid
them from protesting in uniform.
Air Force Staff Sgt. Tassi McKee, 26, an intelligence specialist
at Fort Meade, Md., said she joined the Air Force because of
patriotism, travel and money for college. "After we went to
Iraq, I began to see through the lies," she said.
In the crowd, signs recalled the November elections that
defeated the Republican congressional majority in part because
of President Bush's Iraq policy. "I voted for peace," one said.
"I've just gotten tired of seeing widows, tired of seeing dead
Marines," said Vincent DiMezza, 32, wearing a dress Marine
uniform from his years as a sergeant. A Marine aircraft mechanic
from 1997 to he did not serve in Iraq or Afghanistan.
About 40 people staged a counter-protest, including Army Cpl.
Joshua Sparling, 25, who lost his leg to a bomb in Iraq.
He said the anti-war protesters, especially those who are
veterans or who are on active duty, "need to remember the
sacrifice we have made and what our fallen comrades would say if
they are alive."
Bush reaffirmed his commitment to his planned troop increase in
a phone conversation Saturday with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki. The president was in Washington for the weekend. He
is often is out of town during big protest days.
"He understands that Americans want to see a conclusion to the
war in Iraq and the new strategy is designed to do just that,"
said Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security
Council.
___
Associated Press writers Stephen Manning and Kasie Hunt
contributed to this report.
___
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