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Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2005 11:19:42 -0500 (EST)
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Subject: [NYTr] Toledo: Vets for Peace Confront Maneuvering Marines

Via NY Transfer News Collective  *  All the News that Doesn't Fit

The Progressive Trail - Jan 19, 2005
http://www.progressivetrail.org/articles/050119Ferner.shtml


Marines Stetching Movement

by Mike Ferner

No, this is not a military-oriented guide to keeping fit. Yet it has made
some people uncomfortable if not downright sore.

It's about the peace movement and how a U.S. Marine company using downtown
Toledo for "urban warfare" training January 7-8, provided an opportunity for
activists to think and act beyond normal limits.

With barely a week's notice, an article in the local paper announced that a
weapons company of the 1st Battalion, 24th Marine Reserves would spend a
weekend running around our downtown, honing combat skills by firing blanks
at imaginary enemies. The North West Ohio Peace Coalition (NWOPC) and local
Veterans for Peace (VFP) designed a response, different from what many in
the peace movement had seen or that some were even comfortable with.

That response was:

*A message written for the Toledo Marines by VFP member and retired Special
Forces Master Sergeant, Stan Goff. He compared the lies leading up to his
first combat assignment, Viet Nam, with Iraq, urging the soldiers to
"reflect on what you are doing and what you are about to do you yourselves
must carry the burden of the memoriesif you decide that you have to chart a
different course with your life, we have contact information for those who
can helpwe have a whole community of veterans and military families who will
welcome you with open arms and our support.

*"Cadence" chants written by VFP members around the country.

*Banners and picket signs with messages like, "We love you. Stay home,"
"Support the troops, keep them home," and "Bush and Cheney lied; soldiers
died."

*Oversized portraits of Iraqi civilians and war casualties.

*A sound truck playing Edwin Starr's rock classic, "War!"

For two hours late Friday night, as the Marines set up their weekend command
post in (believe it or not) an abandoned center for selling blood plasma, 30
peace activists stood with banners, signs, photos, and "War, Goff's message
and cadence chants alternating over the P.A. Negotiations with the Toledo
police got us only as close as the opposite side of the street, so an
artificial gulf kept us from reading soldiers, expressions or hearing their
responses that would have only been whispered under doubtless orders against
"fraternizing with us. One of our band, chafed by the order not to use a
public sidewalk on a public street, crossed the thoroughfare to make a point
and was promptly arrested.

The next day a dozen activists returned with signs, photos, banners, "War,"
and a bullhorn for Goff's letter, ready to peacefully engage squads of
Marines who had come to engage "enemies in parking garages and alleys.

With the mobile "War unit circling the blocks, broadcasting the song to the
Marines, the activists on foot followed one detachment past the main
library, singing out a whole list of VFP cadences.

The most familiar chant was:

"Hey, hey Uncle Sam
We remember Viet Nam
We don't want your I-raq war
Peace is what we're marchin' for.
Am I right or wrong (You're right!).
Am I right or wrong? (You're right!)"

But the most popular was:

"Dubya's lies should make him choke
He must still be snortin' coke
Saddam's secret poison gas
Must be something Rumsfeld passed."

In front of the Family Courts building, the Marines regrouped and rested
momentarily, presenting a perfect opportunity to read Goff's message again.
As the Reserves began to move out in pairs, guns pointed in all directions,
the words of the Special Forces veteran echoed off the court building, clear
as a bell:

"Vietnam was a war that was not possible to win. You will find that Iraq is
the same. Winning is not measured by who can cause the most death and pain.
And winning is not measured by tactical victories over locations you have no
intention of holding. The ultimate outcome of any war is political, and that
war has already been lost. So your Commander in Chief is now sending you out
to kill others, to wound others, to destroy the homes and livelihoods of
others, or to be killed or wounded by others, to pursue a goal that was
never just, and is now lost."

Back at the blood plasma/command post, the peace activists gathered to say
goodbye with an impromptu addition from one of the group, a high school
English teacher, interested in delivering a message of Christian love.

Describing Christ as an outspoken critic of the occupying Roman Army, he
referred to the command to "love your enemies as ultimately an act of self
protection, one that could interrupt the cycle of violence. He ended with
the Golden Rule and an exhortation to the Marines to "think for yourself.

The next day two email messages stood out against the usual inbox clutter.

One was from a local VFP member who, as a 15 year-old was drafted into the
German Army in the closing days of WWII, then emigrated to the U.S. just in
time to be drafted into the U.S. Army and sent to Korea. He wrote:

"Our troops are in Iraq engaged in an illegal war and they are there to kill
IraqisAt the Nuremberg war crimes trial, the Nazi war criminals who
perpetrated the kind of illegal aggression that we are now guilty of against
Iraq were found guilty and hanged. The soldiers who carried out these crimes
against the civilian population were also found guilty. The fact that they
followed orders was not then an admissible defense, nor should it be nowSome
of us think if we just pay lip service to the idea of supporting our troops
in time of war, we will be less severely criticized by the super patriots as
being unpatriotic. It won't work and it distorts our purpose of calling an
end to an illegal, murderous invasion of another country."

Another was from a University of Toledo student, a veteran of picket lines
and civil disobedience arrests, who asked: "Why exactly do we support the
troops? Activists have said the troops are fighting willingly in an unjust
warthe likelihood of us changing the minds of the Republican troops is about
the same as Karl Rove convincing us to become neo-conservative."

Added to those critiques is the following anecdote. Walking downtown the day
after the protest, a City streets worker dashed across the road to shake my
hand and say, "thanks for what you're doing to get our troops home.

That comment represented the kind of response I hoped our message would
elicit from the "persuadable middle of public opinion. The response I hoped
for from young soldiers was based on what I remembered as a teenager during
the Viet Nam war.

In those volatile days I alternated between being a conscientious objector
and following John Wayne's example of serving my country joining the Marines
to fight the commies. Remembering those days, it was easy to put myself in
the place of young reservists, quite possibly bound for Iraq, and wonder if
any of them were similarly conflicted. My hope was that a compassionate
message, delivered in familiar language, might be heard by one of the
Marines beginning to ask "what the hell am I doing here? Falling on fertile
ground, the message might grow into a decision by one of the reservists, or
a local GI who saw us on the 6 o,clock news last weekend, to join the
growing number of soldiers refusing to fight in Iraq.

This leads to the larger question of whether the peace movement can
ethically construct a message and deliver it at appropriate times that is
not about how we feel about the war, but how soldiers and our neighbors in
the persuadable middle feel about it? It's high time we undertook this
discussion.

[Mike Ferner is a former Navy Hospital Corpsman and a member of Veterans for
Peace. He spent three months in Iraq, before and after the U.S. invasion,
and is writing a book about his experiences. He can be reached at:
mike.ferner@ sbcglobal.net]





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