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US Anti-War Resistance on the Rise

By Kevin Zeese
December 21, 2010

Editor’s Note: Though still relatively small, signs of resistance to the continued Afghan War and to the Obama administration’s campaign against leakers have become unmistakable, from the White House gates to Internet sites that present information the government would prefer to keep hidden.

In this guest essay, anti-war activist Kevin Zeese describes last Thursday’s demonstration at the White House and recounts the depth of new evidence about official wrongdoing and deception emerging from the WikiLeaks disclosures:

Mike Ferner, the president of Veterans for Peace, was speaking outside the White House calling for a “culture of resistance” against U.S. wars. His organization was leading a protest outside the White House at the same moment that President Obama was inside announcing the continuation of the Afghanistan War.

Pulitzer Prize winning war correspondent and author Chris Hedges, who has seen more war than most vets, joined in the call for action. He adapted President Obama’s campaign of hope and change, urging everyone not to wait for Obama, but to take action:

“Hope will only come now when we physically defy the violence of the state. All who resist, all who are here today keep hope alive. All who succumb to fear, despair and apathy become an enemy of hope. They become, in their passivity, agencies of injustice.”

Hedges urged actions, large and small, against the corporate-government’s militarism.

As Obama spoke inside the warm White House, outside in the snow 131 veterans and their supporters defied authorities, some chained themselves to the White House fence, others refused to leave when ordered by police. They were arrested. Many promised continued acts of resistance. 

Some, from other movements, like Margaret Flowers, MD of the single-payer health care movement, urged solidarity as resistance is needed on many issues mishandled by corporate-government. The seeds of resistance had been planted.

The watering of that seed was coming from Obama’s false words and the truth escaping from his government’s secrecy. He proclaimed progress in the Afghanistan War. But, the front page of the New York Times, the day before his speech, reported “two new classified intelligence reports offer a more negative assessment and say there is a limited chance of success.” 

These reports (not released by WikiLeaks, but by the traditional leaking in DC) were from the National Intelligence Estimates which brings together the findings of 16 intelligence agencies and showed a conflict with the Defense Department’s more rosy picture.

President Obama then went on to talk about how the U.S. could begin withdrawing troops as the Afghan police were trained and took their place. But, just four days before the President spoke, The Guardian described how “more than 20,000 officers from the Afghan National Police (ANP), the country's main law enforcement agency, have left over the past year.”

President Obama promised to persist until the United States achieved victory, but as Daniel Ellsberg, a veteran and former military analyst for the Pentagon pointed out, Gen. David Petraeus has told the President there will be no victory. 

Ellsberg, reading from Bob Woodward’s Obama’s War quotes Petraeus saying: “You have to recognize also that I don't think you win this war. I think you keep fighting. . . You have to stay after it. This is the kind of fight we're in for the rest of our lives and probably our kids' lives.”

If Obama’s inaccurate statements to the American people about a war costing $5.7 billion per month are not enough, you can look to the documentation of failure and potential war crimes in the WikiLeaks reports, the Iraq and Afghanistan War Logs and the diplomatic cables

They show, among other things, that:

--U.S. troops kill civilians without cause or concern and then cover it up (more examples of hiding civilian killings here, here and here) including killing reporters.

---The CIA is fighting an undeclared and unauthorized war in Pakistan with Blackwater mercenaries.

--Afghan President Hamid Karzai is not trustworthy.

--Afghanistan is rife with corruption and drug dealing.

--The Pakistan military and intelligence agencies aid Al Qaeda and the Taliban.

--U.S. officials look the other way when client governments engage in torture.

The cables also show that beyond the war fronts that Hillary Clinton has turned State Department Foreign Service officers into a nest of spies who violate laws to spy on diplomats all with marching orders drawn up by the CIA. These disclosures have the world looking at the United States with new eyes.

WikiLeaks, the Abu Ghraib prison photos, the reports from Guantanamo Bay, Red Cross reports of secret prisons, intelligence reports and so many other sources of information show Americans what their government is doing. 

And knowing the truth and not acting is complicity in these actions. In the face of this evidence, more and more Americans are acting. It was not only the arrest of 131 vets and their supporters that show a rising tide of resistance. That’s also apparent in the publishing of the documents by WikiLeaks and by major media outlets as well as in the independent media around the globe. 

In the more than 1,000 mirror sites of WikiLeaks set up as the original site was under attack, we see resistance. When more than 100,000 people downloaded the WikiLeaks “insurance policy” and were prepared to release documents if Assange was harmed, it was an act of resistance.  

This resistance also is seen in intelligence officials leaking documents to the New York Times the day before the President spoke on Afghanistan, showing the country that the war is failing despite what the President says. 

Resistance is seen in Americans organizing for their right to know and reaffirming freedom of the press, under the banner WikiLeaksIsDemocracy.org. It is also seen in those standing up for Bradley Manning in the Bradley Manning Support Network.
 
It has always been small things that people do that leads to massive change. While the government has a lot of weapons at its disposal, its insecurity is evident in its reaction to the truth. Government officials show more than embarrassment, they show fear – fear of their own words being exposed and people knowing what they do. 

Everyday that a truth is revealed, the government looses power and influence. It is a problem of its own making.

And, while the U.S. military is the most powerful in the world, and the U.S. taxpayer spends as much as the whole world combined on weapons and war, it has not won a significant war in more than 50 years. 

Now, all this “superpower” status rests on a fragile economy that is in deep collapse and showing no signs of real recovery, while the ship of state is too dysfunctional to respond to multiple crises facing the nation and world.

The superpower is strong, but weak at the same time.  These seem to be the signs of an empire that could collapse at anytime.

Kevin Zeese serves on the steering committee of the Bradley Manning Support Network and Voters For Peace, the organization he directs, is the initiator of WikiLeaksIsDemocracy.org.

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