I don't know if "Protest Focuses on Troop Increase for Iraq" is the
title the New York Times will be also using in its print editions
tomorrow, but it looks like the paper of record is working hard to
frame this protest as opposition to the "Surge," rather than
opposition to the Iraq war or anything larger, since a lot of people
just see headlines, though coverage is favorable. -- Yoshie

<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/28/washington/28protest.html>
January 28, 2007
Protest Focuses on Troop Increase for Iraq
By IAN URBINA

WASHINGTON, Jan. 27 — Tens of thousands of protesters converged on the
National Mall on Saturday to oppose President Bush's plan for a troop
increase in Iraq in what organizers hoped would be one of the largest
shows of antiwar sentiment in the nation's capital since the war
began.

The event drew demonstrators from across the country, and many said
that in addition to taking their discontent to the streets they
planned to press members of Congress to oppose the war.

"When we voted it was a directive to bring our troops home now," said
the Rev. Graylan S. Hagler of Plymouth Congregational United Church of
Christ in Washington, referring to the November elections when
Democrats won control of Congress.

Demonstrators listened to speeches from a roster of politicians and
entertainment figures including the Rev. Jesse Jackson; Representative
Dennis J. Kucinich, Democrat of Ohio and a candidate for the
presidency in 2008; and Representative Maxine Waters, Democrat of
California. The actors Jane Fonda, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins also
addressed the crowd.

"We need to be talking not just about defunding the war but also about
funding the vets," Ms. Sarandon said, adding that more than 50,000 had
sought treatment through the Department of Veterans Affairs while
benefits for them continued to be cut.

With Mr. Bush facing low approval ratings and Congress continuing to
debate the terms of a nonbinding resolution opposing the troop
increase, elderly people in wheelchairs, housewives pushing strollers,
seasoned dissenters in tie-dye and veterans in uniform turned out to
protest.

"I grew up during the Vietnam War, but I never protested it and never
had my lottery number called to go fight," said David Quinly, a
54-year-old carpenter from Prairie Village, Kan., who arrived here
Friday night with about 50 others after a 23-hour bus ride.

"In my view, this one is a war of choice and a war for profit against
a culture and people we don't understand," Mr. Quinly said. "I knew I
had to speak up this time."

Along the north side of the Mall, teenagers in T-shirts featuring
sinister depictions of Mr. Bush chanted, "End the lunacy; end it now."
A man wearing prison stripes carried a sign with the likeness of Vice
President Dick Cheney. A man on 30-inch stilts, dressed as Abraham
Lincoln, carried a sign quoting him: "But you can't fool all of the
people all of the time." A tall, clear plastic column stood
overflowing with thousands of shoes symbolizing the civilians killed
in the war.

"I've got a son who just got out of the military and another still
in," said Jackie Smith, 65, from Sunapee, N.H., whose sign read "Bush
Bin Lyin." "And I'm here because this is all I can do to try to help
them."

Tassi McKee, from Bastrop, La., who said she was a staff sergeant in
the Air Force, was among a small contingent of about 20 active-duty
service members who turned out. "I believe this has become a civil
war, and we are being hurt and making matters worse by staying in the
middle of it," Sergeant McKee said.

She said that it was not illegal for active-duty members to attend
protests but that it was strongly discouraged.

Veterans were more numerous among the crowd.

Dressed in the olive green, military-issued flight jacket that he said
he wore during the invasion of Iraq while serving as a Marine
sergeant, Jack Teller, 26, said he joined a caravan from Greenville,
N.C., because he felt that it was his duty.

"I don't like wearing the jacket because it reminds me that I
participated in an immoral and illegal war," said Mr. Teller, who had
"Iraq Veterans Against the War" stenciled on the back of his jacket.
"But it's important to make a political statement."

Fernando Braga, a 24-year-old Bronx native who is a member of the Army
National Guard, said that he was skeptical of the war before it
started. Mr. Braga said his views hardened into opposition while he
served in Iraq from March 2004 through January 2005.

"My own commander told us when we arrived that if we thought we were
there for any reason other than oil then we had another think coming,"
he said. "I realized even commanding officers were against it but
following orders."

Michael McPhearson, executive director of Veterans for Peace, said
more than 100 veterans from the Iraq war participated in the march,
and several hundred veterans from previous wars attended as well.

Robert Watada, 67, of Honolulu, a retired executive with the State of
Hawaii who said his son, First Lt. Ehren K. Watada, was to be
court-martialed next month for refusing to deploy to Iraq, said: "So
many thousands of our own have died and hundreds of thousands of
Iraqis and for what? And still we are having to push Congress to block
the president."

At least 3,065 American military personnel have been killed and at
least 22,834 have been wounded since the start of the war in March
2003, according to Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, a Web site that
tracks Department of Defense numbers. The United Nations has estimated
that at least 35,000 Iraqis have been killed each year since the war
started.

President Bush, who often spends weekends at Camp David, was in
Washington on Saturday but had no public events scheduled. He spent
part of the morning on his weekly bicycle ride at a Secret Service
training facility in Beltsville, Md.

The White House issued a statement in response to the demonstration.
"The president believes that the right to free speech is one of the
greatest freedoms in our country," said Gordon D. Johndroe, a White
House spokesman. "He understands that Americans want to see a
conclusion to the war in Iraq, and the new strategy is designed to do
just that," referring to Mr. Bush's plan to increase troop levels in
Iraq.

The protest was largely organized by the group United for Peace and
Justice, a coalition of 1,400 local and national organizations.

"This war has been going on longer than she has been alive, and Cheney
says it will be a 50-year war," said Annie Yanowitz, a housewife from
Amherst, Mass., pointing to her 2-year-old daughter, Amira, who was
asleep in a backpack with a sign affixed that read "Money for Schools
Not for War."

"I find that totally inappropriate that our children may grow up with
this war continuing," Ms. Yanowitz said.

Police officials declined to provide crowd estimates, but Hany Khalil,
a spokesman for United for Peace and Justice, said the protesters
numbered about 400,000.

Counterprotesters also converged on the mall in smaller numbers, but
the antiwar demonstration was largely peaceful.

There were a few tense moments, however, including an encounter
involving Joshua Sparling, 25, who was on crutches and who said he was
a corporal with the 82nd Airborne Division and lost his right leg
below the knee in Ramadi, Iraq. Mr. Sparling spoke at a smaller rally
held earlier in the day at the United States Navy Memorial, and voiced
his support for the administration's policies in Iraq.

Later, as antiwar protesters passed where he and his group were
standing, words were exchanged and one of the antiwar protestors spit
at the ground near Mr. Sparling; he spit back.

Capitol police made the antiwar protestors walk farther away from the
counterprotesters.

"These are not Americans as far as I'm concerned," Mr. Sparling said.

Another counterprotester, Larry Stark, 71, a retired Navy officer who
fought in Vietnam for five years and was a prisoner of war, said, "We
never lost a battle in Vietnam but we lost the war, and the same is
going to be true in Iraq if these protesters have their way."

The protesters on Saturday were undermining troop morale, Mr. Stark
said, and increasing the likelihood of a premature withdrawal.

"It's like we never learn from the past," he said.

Sarah Abruzzese and Suevon Lee contributed reporting.
--
Yoshie
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