"...Ms. Sheehan said she broke in and told Mr. Bush that Casey was her
son, and that she thought he could imagine what it would be like since
he has two daughters and that he should think about what it would be
like sending them off to war.

"I said, 'Trust me, you don't want to go there'," Ms. Sheehan said,
recounting her exchange with the president. "He said, 'You're right, I
don't.' I said, 'Well, thanks for putting me there.' "

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/08/politics/08crawford.html?oref=login

August 8, 2005

Of the Many Deaths in Iraq, One Mother's Loss Becomes a Problem for
the President

By RICHARD W. STEVENSON

CRAWFORD, Tex., Aug. 7 - President Bush draws antiwar protesters just
about wherever he goes, but few generate the kind of attention that
Cindy Sheehan has since she drove down the winding road toward his
ranch here this weekend and sought to tell him face to face that he
must pull all Americans troops out of Iraq now.

Ms. Sheehan's son, Casey, was killed last year in Iraq, after which
she became an antiwar activist. She says she and her family met with
the president two months later at Fort Lewis in Washington State.

But when she was blocked by the police a few miles from Mr. Bush's
1,600-acre spread on Saturday, the 48-year-old Ms. Sheehan of
Vacaville, Calif., was transformed into a news media phenomenon, the
new face of opposition to the Iraq conflict at a moment when public
opinion is in flux and the politics of the war have grown more
complicated for the president and the Republican Party.

Ms. Sheehan has vowed to camp out on the spot until Mr. Bush agrees to
meet with her, even if it means spending all of August under a
broiling sun by the dusty road. Early on Sunday afternoon, 25 hours
after she was turned back as she approached Mr. Bush's ranch, Prairie
Chapel, Ms. Sheehan stood red-faced from the heat at the makeshift
campsite that she says will be her home until the president relents or
leaves to go back to Washington. A reporter from The Associated Press
had just finished interviewing her. CBS was taping a segment on her.
She had already appeared on CNN, and was scheduled to appear live on
ABC on Monday morning. Reporters from across the country were calling
her cellphone.

"It's just snowballed," Ms. Sheehan said beside a small stand of trees
and a patch of shade that contained a sleeping bag, some candles, a
jar of nuts and a few other supplies. "We have opened up a debate in
the country."

Seeking to head off exactly the situation that now seems to be
unfolding, the administration sent two senior officials out from the
ranch on Saturday afternoon to meet with her. But Ms. Sheehan said
after talking to the officials - Stephen J. Hadley, the national
security adviser, and Joe Hagin, a deputy White House chief of staff -
that she would not back down in her demand to see the president.

Her success in drawing so much attention to her message - and leaving
the White House in a face-off with an opponent who had to be treated
very gently even as she aggressively attacked the president and his
policies - seemed to stem from the confluence of several forces.

The deaths last week of 20 Marines from a single battalion has focused
public attention on the unremitting pace of casualties in Iraq,
providing her an opening to deliver her message that no more lives
should be given to the war. At the same time, polls that show falling
approval for Mr. Bush's handling of the war have left him open to
challenge in a way that he was not when the nation appeared to be more
strongly behind him.

It did not hurt her cause that she staged her protest, which she said
was more or less spontaneous, at the doorstep of the White House press
corps, which spends each August in Crawford with little to do, minimal
access to Mr. Bush and his aides, and an eagerness for any new story.

As the mother of an Army specialist who was killed at age 24 in the
Sadr City section of Baghdad on April 4, 2004, Ms. Sheehan's story is
certainly compelling. She is also articulate, aggressive in delivering
her message and has information that most White House reporters have
not heard before: how Mr. Bush handles himself when he meets behind
closed doors with the families of soldiers killed in Iraq.

The White House has released few details of such sessions, which Mr.
Bush holds regularly as he travels the country, but generally portrays
them as emotional and an opportunity for the president to share the
grief of the families. In Ms. Sheehan's telling, though, Mr. Bush did
not know her son's name when she and her family met with him in June
2004 at Fort Lewis. Mr. Bush, she said, acted as if he were at a party
and behaved disrespectfully toward her by referring to her as "Mom"
throughout the meeting.

By Ms. Sheehan's account, Mr. Bush said to her that he could not
imagine losing a loved one like an aunt or uncle or cousin. Ms.
Sheehan said she broke in and told Mr. Bush that Casey was her son,
and that she thought he could imagine what it would be like since he
has two daughters and that he should think about what it would be like
sending them off to war.

"I said, 'Trust me, you don't want to go there'," Ms. Sheehan said,
recounting her exchange with the president. "He said, 'You're right, I
don't.' I said, 'Well, thanks for putting me there.' "

Asked about Ms. Sheehan's statements, Trent D. Duffy, a spokesman for
the White House, said Sunday: "The president knows one of his most
important responsibilities is to comfort the families of the fallen.
That is why he has personally met with and grieved with hundreds of
families who have lost a loved one who made the ultimate sacrifice. We
can only imagine how painful and difficult it must be for a mother to
lose her son. Our hearts and prayers are always with the moms and dads
and spouses and children of those who have fallen."

It is not clear how the White House will handle Ms. Sheehan. Mr. Bush
usually comes and goes from the ranch by helicopter, but he might have
to drive by her on Friday, when he is scheduled to attend a Republican
fund-raiser at a ranch just down the road from where Ms. Sheehan is
camped out. She will no doubt get another wave of publicity on
Thursday, when Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice join Mr. Bush at the ranch to discuss the war.






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