Bring
Troops Home and No War in Iran Toolkits
The downloadable copy is
available at www.citiesforprogress.org
Table
of Contents
Bring
Troops Home Now
-
Sample
Resolution
-
Sample
Petition
-
Talking
Points on Iraq War: Quick Facts
-
Resources
o
Additional
Talking Points/Opinion Pieces
o
Websites
No
War with Iran
-
Combination
Iran/Iraq Sample Resolution
-
Sample
No War with Iran only Resolution
-
Two
Sets of Talking Points on Iran Issue
-
Resources
o
Legislation
o
Additional
Talking Points/Opinion Pieces
o
Websites
Guide
to Getting a Resolution Passed in Your Community
Cities
for Progress in the News – Politico Article

Contact
Information
Karen
Dolan
Director, Cities for Progress/Cities for Peace
Fellow,
Institute for Policy Studies
1112 16th St NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
kdolan@igc.org
202.234.9382 x228
Bring
Troops Home Resolution Toolkit
Sample Resolution
(please
click here
for original Gary, Indiana Peace Resolution)
A
RESOLUTION EXPRESSING THE (YOUR
CITY/TOWN NAME HERE) CITY COUNCIL'S SUPPORT FOR THE U.S. TROOPS CURRENTLY
SERVING IN IRAQ, AS WELL AS THOSE THAT HAVE PREVIOUSLY SERVED, AND THOSE THAT
HAVE BEEN KILLED OR WOUNDED DURING SUCH SERVICE, AND THEIR FAMILIES; AND
EXPRESSING THE COUNCIL'S PREFERENCE THAT MISDIRECTED FUNDS TO CONTINUE THE WAR
IN IRAQ BE REDIRECTED TO DOMESTIC PRIORITIES, INCLUDING PRESSING NEEDS IN THE CITY
OF XXX.
WHEREAS,
more than 150,000 United States military personnel, including many from the
city, are bravely and honorably serving in Iraq and deserve the support of all
the city citizens and Americans; and
WHEREAS,
the people of this city will always honor the sacrifices of the American
soldiers who have died or been wounded in combat in Iraq, including the more
than 4,000 United States military personnel who have died in Iraq and the more
than 29,000 who have been wounded; and
WHEREAS,
the proposed war budget of year 2008 is 27.2% of the total proposed security
budget; and
WHEREAS,
our state's cost of war is XX
(http://www.nationalpriorities.org/costofwar_home), and our city's cost of the
war is XX, (http://www.nationalpriorities.org/costofwar_home) while community
development block grants are being cut by XX in our state
(http://www.nationalpriorities.org/table1_cdbg); and
WHEREAS,
the CITY Council of the city hereby expresses its deep opposition to the
current budget of increasing military and war spending in Iraq, in part due to
the impact on the available federal resources required to provide for the
urgent needs of the most vulnerable portions of the American population,
including the need to provide for the health, education, and homeland security
of the City and of other major urban areas within the United States; and
WHEREAS,
in excess of $526 billion has been appropriated by Congress to fund military
operations and reconstruction in Iraq while in contrast, the City's total
amount of HUD grants has decreased significantly since 2002, the year before
the commencement of the war in Iraq; and
WHEREAS,
this decrease in federal grant money severely lessens the ability of the City
to rebuild its urban core, promote home ownership opportunities in the city,
and provide critical housing services for the poor, the disabled, and for
people with HIV-AIDS and other medical needs; and
WHEREAS,
according to analysis by the Task Force on a Unified Security Budget for the
United States published by the Institute for Policy Studies 55.91 billion
dollars of the total military spending could be cut allowing for development of
domestic nonmilitary goals and redirect funds for immediate domestic goals in
this city; and
WHEREAS,
polls show that greater than 60% of Americans oppose sending additional
American troops to Iraq, which indicates that the majority of Americans share
this Council's concerns with increasing funding levels in Iraq at this time
NOW,
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF XX:
SECTION
1. That X City Council supports the U.S. troops currently serving in Iraq, as
well as those that have previously served, and those that have been killed or
wounded during such service, and their families.
SECTION
2. That X City Council expresses its opposition to President Bush's increased
war and military funding
SECTION
3. That the city, its elected leaders and its citizens have a responsibility to
highlight the implications of sending available federal resources, which are
urgently needed by the most vulnerable portions of the American population in
the city and other major urban areas within the United States.
BE
IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Clerk of the city shall forward copies to
President George W. Bush, United States Senators --- and ---, House
Representative ---- and members of the state U.S. Congressional delegation.
ADOPTED
by the Common Council of the city, state this 2nd day of June, 2008.
So
and So, President
City Council
[Resolution xxx will now be forwarded
to the Mayor for signature.]
Sample Petition
BRING THE TROOPS
HOME NOW
Petition for the Chicago City Council to Pass a Resolution for Full U.S.
Withdrawal from Iraq
We, the
undersigned, request that the Chicago City Council pass a resolution calling
for: immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops, no permanent U.S. military
installations in Iraq, and an end to U.S. control of the Iraqi economy.
Our reasons are:
-The justifications for the invasion were false and violated the public trust.
-Iraq presented no threat to the U.S. at the time of the invasion and the U.S.
war violates international law.
-The U.S. government has spent more than $500 billion on the war in Iraq while
the U.S. deficit climbs.
- The war’s
funding has greatly influenced the economic downturn and oncoming recession
-Astronomical military spending steals from city citizens through cuts in
social programs as well as job loss from economic downturn
-As of 6/08, the cost of the war to the city was xx (STATISTICS FOR YOUR
COMMUNITY: http://www.nationalpriorities.org).
This money could have funded: (STATISTICS FOR YOUR
COMMUNITY: http://www.nationalpriorities.org)
-83,601 4-year scholarships at public universities,
-health insurance for 1,032,648 Chicago children,
-228,414 Head Start students for one year,
-29,886 public school teachers for one year
-15,572 housing units in city
Name ____________________________________
Address __________________________________
City/State_________________________________
Telephone (optional) ________________________
E-Mail (optional)____________________________
Sample Petition 2 from Vermont Network on Iraq War
Resolutions
http://iraqresolution.org/petition1_page.html
We the undersigned legal voters of the Town of
_______________ request the Selectboard to place the following article on the
warning for the Annual Town Meeting to be held on March 1, 2005:
Article __. Shall the voters of the Town of
__________________ vote to approve the resolution concerning the war in Iraq
and the deployment of members of the Vermont National Guard in that war, as
attached to the petition and incorporated herein by reference, and then send a
copy of the resolution to Vermont's state and federal office-holders? (A copy
of the full resolution can be viewed at iraqresolution.org or at the Town
Clerk's office.)
Printed Name --------- Signature ----------- Address -------
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
Talking Points on Iraq War: Quick
Facts
|
As of March 3, 2008
U.S. military killed in
Iraq: 3,973
Number of U.S. troops wounded in combat since the war began: 29,203
Iraqi Security Force deaths: 7,924
Iraqi civilians killed: Estimates range from 81,632-1,120,000
Internally displaced
refugees in Iraq: 3.4 million
Iraqi refugees living abroad: 2.2-2.4 million
Iraqi refugees admitted to the U.S.: 3,222
Number of U.S. soldiers
in Iraq: 155,000
Number of "Coalition of the Willing" soldiers in Iraq:
February 2008: 9,895
September 2006: 18,000
November 2004: 25,595
Army soldiers in Iraq who
have served two or more tours: 74%
Number of Private Military Contractors in Iraq: 180,000
Number of Private Military Contractors criminally prosecuted by the U.S.
government for violence or abuse in Iraq: 1
Number of contract workers killed: 917
What the Iraq war has
created, according to the U.S. National Intelligence Council: "A
training and recruitment ground (for terrorists), and an opportunity for
terrorists to enhance their technical skills."
Effect on al Qaeda of the
Iraq War, according to International Institute for Strategic Studies: "Accelerated
recruitment"
The bill so far: $526
billion
Cost per day: $275 million
Cost per household: $4,100
The estimated long-term bill: $3 trillion
What $526 billion could
have paid for in the U.S. in one year:
Children with health care: 223 million
or
Scholarships for university students: 86
million or
Head Start places for children: 72
million
Cost of 22 days
in Iraq
could safeguard our nation's ports from attack for ten years.
Cost of 18 hours in Iraq could secure U.S. chemical plants
for five years.
Iraqi Unemployment level:
25-40%
*U.S. unemployment during the Great Depression:
25%
70% of the Iraqi population is without access to clean
water.
80% is without sanitation.
90% of Iraq's 180 hospitals lack basic medical and surgical
supplies.
79% of Iraqis oppose the presence of
Coalition Forces.
78% of Iraqis believe things are going badly in Iraq
overall.
64% of Americans oppose the war in Iraq.
What the
"Declaration of Principles" has set according to Defense Secretary
Robert Gates:
"A mutually agreed arrangement
whereby we have a long and enduring presence."
|
Resources
Additional Talking Points/Opinion Pieces
Iraq Outlook 2008 – Erik
Leaver – 1/9/08
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4882>
The Surge: Illusion &
Reality – Conn Hallinan – 12/24/07
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4846>
Blank Checks for Defense
Spending: Where's the Fight from Congress? - Tom Dispatch- Robert Dreyfuss-
6/6/07
<
http://alternet.org/waroniraq/53236/>
We're All Feeling Impact of War
-Morning Sun- 6/3/07
<http://www.themorningsun.com/stories/060307/loc_opinion.shtml>
The Destruction of Iraqi
Healthcase Infrastructure - Foreign Policy in Focus- Adil Shamoo- 5/31/07
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4277>
The Democrats’ Support for Bush’s
War - Foreign Policy in Focus- Stephen Zumes- 5/31/07
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4278>
Websites
Cities For Peace
<http://www.citiesforpeace.org/>
Institute for Policy
Studies
<
http://ips-dc.org/iraq/index.htm>
The National Priorities
Project: Cost of War
<http://www.nationalpriorities.org/costofwar_home>
United For Peace and
Justice
<http://www.unitedforpeace.org/>
Code Pink
<http://www.codepink4peace.org/>
Global Exchange
<http://globalexchange.org>
After Downing Street
<http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/>
Bring Them Home Now
<http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/index.html>
Vermont Network on Iraq
War Resolutions
<http://iraqresolution.org/>
Foreign Policy In Focus
<http://www.fpif.org/>
AntiWar
<http://antiwar.com/>
Stop the War Coalition
<http://www.stopwar.org.uk/>
Iraq Veterans Against the
War
<http://www.ivaw.org/>
Military Families Speak
Out
<http://www.mfso.org/>
More Than a Number
<http://www.morethananumber.org/>
Veterans for Peace
<http://veteransforpeace.org/>
What About Peace?
<http://www.whataboutpeace.org/>
Bring Them Home Now.com
<http://www.bringthemhomenow.com/>
The Declaration of Peace
<http://declarationofpeace.org/>
Fellowship of
Reconciliation
<http://www.forusa.org/>
Iraq Body Count
<http://www.iraqbodycount.org/>
Iraqi Democrats Against
Occupation
<http://www.idao.org/>
Iraq Action Coalition
<http://www.iraqaction.org/>
No War with Iran Resolution
Toolkit
Combination Iran/Iraq Sample Resolution
WHEREAS, The Bush Administration and many of its Congressional allies are
engaging in a systematic campaign to convince the American people and their
representatives in Congress that the Islamic Republic of Iran threatens the
safety and security of the United States of America, members of our armed
forces overseas, and our allies; and
WHEREAS, In a strategy disturbingly reminiscent of the lead-up to the Iraq War
and Occupation, the Bush Administration and its Congressional allies are using
unreliable sources, exaggerated threat assessments, selective use of
information, and questionable accusations as centerpieces of their case to the
American people for war against Iran;
and
WHEREAS, A U.S. strike on Iran would be deadly for tens if not hundreds of
thousands of Iranian men, women and children; and
WHEREAS, According to the estimates of many respectable Western intelligence
agencies, Iran is years away from having a usable nuclear weapon, if indeed it
is seeking to manufacture one at all; yet nevertheless the Bush administration
seeks to convince the world that Iran's nuclear program is a clear and present
danger; and
WHEREAS, Iran has not threatened to attack the United States and has not been
convincingly shown to be likely to initiate such an attack; and therefore a
U.S. attack would violate the United Nations Charter's prohibition against
preemptive military attack; and
WHEREAS, Iran is a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and Iran's nuclear
power program, including enriching uranium, is currently legal and in
compliance with the NPT; and
WHEREAS, A widening of the United States war in the Middle East would almost
certainly drive all segments of Iranian society into increased hostility toward
the United States, turning potential friends into enemies by sending a signal
that the United States prefers violence to the peaceful resolution of disputes,
and would invite retaliation against our troops in Iraq and elsewhere; and
WHEREAS, Comprehensive direct diplomatic talks between the United States and
Iran would likely result in improved relations and reduced tensions between our
nations; and
WHEREAS, Continued threats of violence and other aggressive actions exacerbate
tensions with Iran and could obstruct efforts to cooperate with Iran over
ending violence in Iraq, thereby delaying the withdrawal of U.S. forces from
Iraq; and
WHEREAS, The Iraq War has already cost the lives of over 4,000 American
soldiers, the serious maiming of over 30,000 American soldiers, and the death
and maiming of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians, as well
as the cost of over 500 billion dollars of American tax dollars; and embarking
on yet another military campaign against a much stronger adversary could only
further exacerbate international tensions, endanger the lives and livelihoods
of millions of people both here and abroad, and do nothing to address the most
serious problems facing the American
people and humanity generally; now therefore be it
RESOLVED, that the Gary Common Council calls on our representatives in
Congress, Senator Richard G. Lugar, Senator Evan Bayh and Representative Peter
Visclosky, (1) to ensure that no preemptive military attack by the
U.S. against Iran takes place; (2) to make clear to the administration that
such a preemptive attack has not been authorized by any law, resolution, court
ruling or article of the Constitution; (3) to support diplomatic engagement
with Iran; and (4) to maintain pressure against all escalations of war in the
Middle East; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the Gary Common Council directs
City Clerk [ ] to send copies of this Resolution to the President of the United
States, our Congressional representatives, our Indiana legislative
representatives, and all local media outlets; and to arrange that a copy of
this resolution be placed on the Gary City website.
Sample No War with Iran only Resolution
WHEREAS,
The Bush administration is significantly ratcheting up its threats against
Iran, in the context of arguing about a battle between "moderates"
and "extremists" in the region.
WHEREAS,
U.S. efforts to control or undermine Iran are long-standing, and are rooted in
Iran's historic role as one of only two indigenous regional powers in the
Middle East (with water, wealth and size) who can contend with U.S. domination
there.
WHEREAS,
A U.S. (or U.S.-Israeli) strike on Iran, especially with the nuclear "bunker-buster"
bombs being talked about, would be deadly for tens or hundreds of thousands of
Iranians, and would be a preventive attack - in violation of the
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the UN Charter, and other parts of
international law, as well as the U.S. Constitution.
WHEREAS,
Overheated U.S. rhetorical accusations against Iran are expanding earlier
allegations about Iran's alleged nuclear ambitions to claims (including
show-and-tell but absent real evidence) that Iran's government is directly responsible
for "killing American troops" in Iran. Current U.S. policy in Iraq
calls for "dual escalations" - an escalation in troop numbers inside
Iraq, and a geographic escalation from Iraq to Iran.
WHEREAS,
Iran is not a threat to the United States. It does not have a nuclear weapon
and is not threatening to attack the U.S; it is a signatory to the
Non-Proliferation Treaty and the UN's nuclear watchdog agency has found no
evidence of a nuclear weapons program; Iran's nuclear power program, including
enriching uranium, is legal under the NPT. Back in 2003 Iran had proposed a
comprehensive "grand bargain" with the U.S., which the Bush
administration has ignored.
WHEREAS,
The February 2007 U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) asserts that Iran's
involvement in Iraq "is not likely to be a major driver of violence"
there.
WHEREAS
the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate provides a consensus assessment of all
U.S. intelligence agencies that Iran does not have a nuclear weapons program,
and that Iran makes decisions regarding its nuclear capacity on the basis of
cost-benefit, rational analysis,
WHEREAS
the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate confirms what the UN's International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director and 2006 Nobel Peace laureate Mohamed
el-Baradei has said for many years, that Iran is years away from even the
capacity to create a nuclear weapon, and therefore there is no urgency and
negotiations are called for ...
WHEREAS,
The consequences of a U.S. attack on Iran will be dire, regionally inflammatory
and prohibitively costly in both material and human costs, and
WHEREAS,
The cost to the city of ___________ for the war in Iraq has been $___________
thus far
THEREFORE,
THE CITY OF X CALLS ON OUR REPRESENTATIVES IN CONGRESS TO ENSURE:
·
No military attack on Iran
·
A Congressional "Boland Amendment" for Iran to
preempt any funding for any attack on Iran
·
Diplomatic, not military engagement with Iran
Maintain
pressure against BOTH escalations of the Iraq War - no escalation of troops,
and no geographic escalation into Iran.
Talking Points on Iran
Taken from United for Peace & Justice
<http://UnitedforPeace.org>
Escalating Threats of U.S. Attacks Against Iran
Institute for Policy Studies, Phyllis Bennis, 2/15/2007
**
The Bush administration is significantly ratcheting up its threats against
Iran, in the context of arguing about a battle between "moderates"
and "extremists" in the region.
**
U.S. efforts to control or undermine Iran are long-standing, and are rooted in
Iran's historic role as one of only two indigenous regional powers in the
Middle East (with water, wealth and size) who can contend with U.S. domination
there.
**
A U.S. (or U.S.-Israeli) strike on Iran, especially with the nuclear
"bunker-buster" bombs being talked about, would be deadly for tens or
hundreds of thousands of Iranians, and would be a preventive attack - in
violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the UN Charter, and other
parts of international law, as well as the U.S. Constitution.
**
Overheated U.S. rhetorical accusations against Iran are expanding earlier
allegations about Iran's alleged nuclear ambitions to claims (including
show-and-tell but absent real evidence) that Iran's government is directly
responsible for "killing American troops" in Iran. Current U.S. policy
in Iraq calls for "dual escalations" - an escalation in troop numbers
inside Iraq, and a geographic escalation from Iraq to Iran.
**
Beyond rhetoric, U.S. provocations include sending a second aircraft carrier
group to the Persian Gulf, sending minesweepers to the Strait of Hormuz,
arresting Iranian officials legally working in Iraq, openly backing the
anti-Iranian Mujahideen el-Khalq (MEQ) guerrillas, appointing a naval flier as
head of Central Command, continuing pressure in the United Nations to expand
sanctions against Iran.
**
Iran is not a threat to the United States. It does not have a nuclear weapon
and is not threatening to attack the U.S; it is a signatory to the NPT and the
UN's nuclear watchdog agency has found no evidence of a nuclear weapons
program; Iran's nuclear power program, including enriching uranium, is legal
under the NPT. Back in 2003 Iran had proposed a comprehensive "grand
bargain" with the U.S., which the Bush administration has ignored. The
February 2007 U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) asserts that Iran's
involvement in Iraq "is not likely to be a major driver of violence"
there.
**
The consequences of a U.S. attack on Iran will be dire. The evidence looks
cooked, like a repeat of pre-Iraq invasion lies, but even if Iran was closer to
a nuclear weapon or had sent weapons into Iraq, there is no legal or moral
justification for a preventive attack.
**
Israeli rhetoric against Iran largely parallels U.S. claims; unlike the run-up
to the Iraq War, Israel and the pro-Israeli lobbies in the U.S. are pressing
hard and early to attack Iran, and any Israeli involvement would significantly
undercut Congressional opposition.
**
The U.S. pressure on American-dependent Arab regimes to back a U.S. (or
U.S.-Israeli) attack on Iran include imposing a "rising Shi'a threat"
framework over regional events and renewing the appearance of
Palestinian-Israeli peace talks.
** The U.S. is more isolated now
than at any time since the beginning of the 2003 Iraq War; no U.S. allies
except Israel are supporting calls for a U.S. attack on Iran.
What should it be done?
- No military attack on Iran
- A Congressional "Boland
Amendment" for Iran to preempt any funding for any attack on Iran
- Diplomatic, not military
engagement with Iran
- Maintain pressure against BOTH
escalations of the Iraq War - no escalation of troops, and no geographic
escalation into Iran
- Build people-to-people ties
between Americans and Iranians, including work with the Iranian community
in the United States
- Support for a WMD-free or
Nuclear Weapons-Free Zone throughout the Middle East
Even the New York Times has editorialized that the Bush
administration is "bullying" Iran. Noting that "the one tactic
the administration is refusing to consider is diplomacy," the Times warned
that Bush "could end up talking himself into another disastrous war, and
if Congress is not clear in opposing him this time, he could drag the country
along." The temperature of anti-Iranian rhetoric is escalating rapidly,
particularly since Bush's January speech on Iraq and his State of the Union
address. While U.S. antagonism towards Iran is an old story, the particular
timing of the current escalation is linked to the ever-clearer failure of U.S.
strategy in Iraq.
The framework for the current
drumbeat is the claim that Iran is at the center of the bad-guy side of the new
Middle East divide allegedly pitting the "moderates" (read: the good
guys - the absolute monarchs, flawed "democracies" and military
dictatorships of the region, such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, etc.) against
the "extremists" (read: the bad guys - Iran, Syria, al-Qaeda, Hamas,
Hezbollah…). The framework is sometimes overlaid with Washington's "good
Sunnis, bad Shi'as" grid for dividing regional political forces (the
opposite of how they view the Iraqi situation). But even regionally that
doesn't work since neither Syria nor Hamas are Shi'a-dominated, and Hezbollah's
Shi'a base is allied with a host of Christian, secular and even a few Sunni
forces. And the Sunni leadership of al-Qaeda, of course, are anti-Shi'a in the
extreme.
U.S. interest in controlling Iran,
or at least undermining its independence, sovereignty and potential power, is
not a new phenomenon. The U.S. overthrew the democratically elected Iranian
leader Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953; installed, armed and protected brutal
dictatorships (the Shah of Iran); cut off diplomatic relations and imposed
tight economic sanctions (the Islamic Republic from 1979); and provided seed
stock for biological weapons, targeting information for chemical weapons, and
financial backing for Iran's enemy (Iraq) throughout the years of the Iran-Iraq
War (1980-1988).
The reasons have not changed. Iran
is one of only two countries in the Middle East that contains the three
prerequisites for indigenous power: oil/wealth, water, large land and
population. The only other country is (or was…) Iraq. Iran and Iraq
traditionally competed for territory, oil rights, military control, and
regional influence; this competition was always that of national interests -
economic, military, influence. The two nation-states competed - not because
Iran was Shi'a and Iraq's government privileged its minority Sunnis and was
allied with largely Sunni Arab regimes, but for the same reason that Germany
and France or Argentina and Brazil historically fought regional wars -for
territory, money and power.
Later the U.S. moved strategically
to prevent either regional power from challenging overall U.S. domination of
the Middle East. It was on that basis that the U.S. backed Saddam Hussein's
Iraq throughout the Gulf War - because Iran was stronger, so the U.S. weighed
in on the side of the weaker competitor to keep the war going and encourage
both regional challengers to waste their blood and treasure fighting each
other, rather than turning on the U.S. So U.S. interest has always been in
controlling Iran's oil (less for direct access, which was never a real
necessity or real problem, than for control of pricing and supply, and to be
able to act as guarantor of access for Washington's allies and now competitors
such as China and India) and suppressing its regional influence.
Washington's current anti-Iran
campaign has pushed Arab governments towards a much harsher stance against
Iran. The same regional competition that once led to the Iran-Iraq War is
already resulting in a new regional contest between Iran and a Saudi-led (and
U.S.-backed) consortium of Arab governments. Saudi Arabia is not an indigenous
regional power either on its own or even backed by the other weak and
legitimacy-challenged states in the area, and the current conflict is unlikely
to lead to an "Iran-Arab" war. But the new U.S.-backed high profile
of the Saudi king (in negotiating the recent internal Palestinian ceasefire,
for instance) must be seen in the context of Washington continuing to encourage
regional competitors to challenge Iran.
What's wrong with a U.S. attack on
Iran?
Bush administration claims that
negotiations are their first choice. But they have gone to war based on lies
before, and there is no reason to believe that they are telling the truth this
time.
Iran does not have nuclear
weapons, and has not threatened the United States. Under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, the U.S. is absolutely prohibited from using - or even threatening to
use - nuclear weapons against Iran, a non-nuclear signatory of the NPT. But the
Bush administration has threatened exactly that, specifically by circulating
calls for use of nuclear "bunker-buster" bombs to destroy hardened
sites attached to Iran's nuclear power program. According to the National
Academy of Sciences "the use of such a weapon would create massive clouds
of radioactive fallout that could spread far from the site of the attack,
including to other nations. Even if used in remote, lightly populated areas,
the number of casualties could range up to more than a hundred thousand…"
Any U.S. military strike on Iran -
ANY strike - would be a violation of international law prohibiting preventive
war. And George Bush now admits that "preventive war" - not only his
earlier claim of pre-emptive war - is indeed his strategic doctrine. According
to the International Court of Justice, even threatening to use nuclear weapons
is a violation of international law - and the Bush administration is
threatening to use nuclear "bunker-buster" bombs to attack Iran.
The Bush administration seems to
have recognized that their efforts to win public support (in the U.S. and
internationally) for a preventive attack on Iran on the basis of Iran's alleged
but never seen nuclear weapons program have failed. Too many people, in the
U.S. and globally, remain suspicious because of the legacy of the
administration's false claims regarding Iraq's alleged WMDs. As a result, new
rhetorical accusations - similarly unproven - are now being floated, claiming
that Iran is directly responsible for "killing American troops" by
providing bomb equipment to Iraqi insurgents. The heated language is clearly
designed to mobilize "protect the troops" sentiments and to galvanize
Americans' anger, regardless of whether the claim is true. And members of
Congress including some Democratic opponents of the Iraq war are asserting that
regarding Iran, "all options must remain on the table."
U.S. policy towards Iran now is
going far beyond rhetorical accusations. Current U.S. strategy in Iraq calls
for "dual escalations" - not only an escalation in troop numbers
inside Iraq itself, but a geographic escalation of the war from Iraq to Iran.
That strategy has had visible military components. A second aircraft carrier
group is en route to the Persian Gulf, joining the first carrier, with its
partner ships, bombers and fighter-planes, already in place. The U.S. has kept
a carrier group off the Iranian coast since about 1980; sending a second
represents a significant escalation. Months ago, the Pentagon also sent
minesweepers to the Strait of Hormuz. This was widely viewed as a pro-active
move in the expectation that Iran would respond to any attack by blockading the
Straits, through which a huge percentage of Middle East oil flows to the rest
of the world.
In some of the most provocative
actions, the U.S. command announced its intention to "seek out and
destroy" Iranian networks found in Iraq, and U.S. troops have already
raided sites in Iraq where Iranian diplomats, legally present in Iraq with the
permission of the Iraqi government, were working. A number of Iranians were
arrested, of whom several are still being held despite calls from both Tehran
and Baghdad for their release. And the Bush administration continues to
pressure the United Nations to expand the sanctions imposed on Iran despite the
IAEA having found no evidence of illegal nuclear weapons in Iran.
In other actions, Bush appointed
as the new chief of Central Command, Admiral William Fallon. He will oversea
the two massive ground wars in landlocked Afghanistan and almost-landlocked
Iraq, even though he is a Navy pilot. It was widely assessed as a sign that
future expansions would be looking to naval and air power, rather than
"boots-on-the-ground," with Iran as the most likely candidate. CNN
has reported that Bush has asked Strategic Command - which oversees the U.S.
nuclear arsenal - to prepare plans for a possible U.S. attack on Iran.
And new reports are emerging
indicating that neo-conservative analysts inside the Bush administration and in
right-wing think tanks influential in the White House, are actively promoting
Iranian exile leaders and especially the Mujahideen el-Khalq (MEK), an Iranian
opposition guerrilla cult once backed by Saddam Hussein and listed as a
terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department.
We must include in our opposition
an understanding of "even if" rules. All evidence points to the
likelihood that the Bush administration is lying, that there is no actual
evidence to support the recent allegations. But even if Iran was trying to
build a nuclear weapon for some time in the future, even if Iran was sending
some weapons into Iraq, there is no military necessity, no legal or moral
justification for a preventive U.S. attack.
What kind of threat does Iran
pose?
Iran is not a threat to the U.S.
As a non-nuclear signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), it has the
right (like all the 185 or so such signatories) to build and use nuclear power
plants, and to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. (We may believe this to be
a huge problem for the NPT, since the technology for nuclear power is
essentially the same as that required for nuclear weapons, but nonetheless it
is the law. And in the context of our own government's refusal to abide by its own
disarmament obligations under the NPT, American officials are particularly
ill-placed to deny Iran's right to enrichment technology.) The UN's nuclear
watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has expressed concern
over some lack of transparency in Iran's program, but it has found no evidence
of a nuclear weapons program.
The U.S.-led demand that Iran give
up its enrichment activities is not based on even a claimed Iranian violation
of the NPT. Rather, it is simply a U.S. declaration that it "does not
trust" Iran, and that therefore the UN Security Council should agree to
enforce an Iranian halt in enrichment. The demand has no basis in international
law or the terms of the NPT.
Shortly after the U.S. invasion of
Iraq in 2003, Iran proposed a comprehensive "grand bargain" with
Washington. It reportedly offered more stringent IAEA inspection of Iran's
nuclear activities, acceptance of the 2002 Arab League proposal that would
allow normalization of relations with Israel in exchange for an Israeli
withdrawal from all the 1967 occupied territory, ending material support to
Hamas from Iran, and providing the U.S. with names of al-Qaeda operatives in
Iranian custody. In return it asked for the U.S. to go after the anti-Iranian
Mujahideen el-Khalq. But the U.S. government never took the offer seriously.
It has been known for years that
what Iran wants, beyond the specifics, is a security guarantee from the U.S. -
giving up "regime change" or other efforts to attack or undermine
Iran. Such a guarantee cannot be offered by the UN, the European Union, or any
other country, only by the world's sole military superpower. But the U.S. has
never been prepared to offer such a guarantee.
The Bush administration is now
focusing on the claim that Iran is responsible for the deaths of U.S. soldiers
inside Iraq. But the February 2007 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) makes
clear that Iran's involvement in Iraq "is not likely to be a major driver
of violence" there. The February 11, 2007 press conference in Baghdad that
purported to "prove" that the highest levels of the Iranian
government were providing bombs to Iraqi insurgents simply showed the weapons,
"without providing direct evidence," as the New York Times reported.
Two days later, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Peter Pace,
said he saw no evidence that the Iranian government was actually involved in
arming militias in Iraq.
In London's Independent, the
respected Middle East analyst Patrick Cockburn wrote, "the evidence
against Iran is even more insubstantial than the faked or mistaken evidence for
Iraqi WMDs disseminated by the United States and Britain in 2002 and 2003. The
allegations appear to be full of exaggerations. … It implies the Shiites have
been at war with the U.S., when in fact they are controlled by parties which
make up the Iraqi government."
Aside from the problem of lack of
proof, there is a huge problem of hypocrisy in the U.S. making threats against
Iran for ostensibly supporting militias, given that the U.S.-backed Iraqi
government is itself inextricably bound up with support for various Iraqi
militias. Further, even as it continues threatening Iran and accusing it of
"meddling" in Iraq, Washington officials are publicly weighing the
efficacy and advantages of shifting their current support for Prime Minister
Nuri al-Maliki to support instead the leader of the most pro-Iranian party in
Iraqi politics, SCIRI. And there is the overarching hypocrisy of the U.S. -
which illegal invaded, bombed, and continues to occupy the entire country of
Iraq from 8,000 miles away- threatening war against Iran on the grounds that
Iraq's next-door neighbor is the one "meddling" in Iraq's affairs.
The Bush administration continues
to reject any diplomatic solution in Iran. It has ignored recent developments
that should have led to significant easing of U.S. anti-Iran hysteria,
including the new assessments indicating that Iran's nuclear enrichment program
is facing serious technological hurdles and is not progressing well; and that
Iran is opening its Isfahan nuclear site to IAEA diplomats (even if not yet to
a new team of IAEA inspectors) and journalists. Even more crucial, the U.S.
continues to ignore the fact that in elections following the deliberately
provocative Holocaust-denial conference sponsored by Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, the struggling president's party suffered a serious electoral
defeat.
Is there really a serious
possibility of a U.S. attack on Iran?
The Bush administration has proven
its willingness to ignore public opinion, run end-runs around Congress, violate
international law, and engage in the most reckless, dangerous foreign policy
disasters. An attack on Iran would be just as illegal as the 2003 invasion of
Iraq. Although some of the leading neo-con forces key to the Iraq war are now
outside of the administration (Wolfowitz, Feith, Libby, Perle, others), and
those who continue to call for "regime change" in Iran face some
louder challengers inside the administration, they remain a potent and influential
force in Washington.
An attack using nuclear
"bunker-buster" bombs would be explicitly a violation of the
Non-Proliferation Treaty, to which Iran is a signatory, and which prohibits any
attack with nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear weapons state. The U.S., in
threatening to use nuclear weapons against Iran, is directly undermining the
no-first-use assumptions that have prevented nuclear war for more than half a
century. In fact, the International Court of Justice has ruled that for a
nuclear weapon-state such as the U.S. to even threaten to use a nuclear weapon
against a non-nuclear signatory like Iran is a violation of the NPT. Iran is,
even according to U.S. officials, at least four years and more likely closer to
ten years from having the capability of making a nuclear weapon, even if it
chose to do so. The U.S. remains in violation of the NPT's requirement (in
Article VI) that it, along with the other four recognized nuclear powers, move
towards full and complete nuclear disarmament.
An attack on Iran would be far
more dangerous even than attacking Iraq. Militarily, Iran remains a strong
regional power; although Iran's military is not close to the capacity of the
Pentagon, it has not been destroyed by a dozen years of crippling global
sanctions as Iraq was. Iran remains influential in the region, and the
consequences of an attack would be felt far beyond Iran's own borders.
Like the situation in pre-invasion
Iraq, Americans have little familiarity with the people, culture and country of
Iran, and the demonization of all things Iranian that began in 1979 with the
overthrow of the U.S.-backed Shah of Iran has continued. Many members of
Congress, even those strongly opposed to an attack on Iran, have little
understanding of the dangers, of what might happen "the day after" a
U.S. attack.
Although no one is calling
directly for an invasion of ground forces into Iran, the threat of a U.S.
airstrike against Iran - "surgical" or otherwise - could well bring
swift Iranian counter-attack, in self-defense (which much of the world would
recognize as authorized under UN Charter Article 51 allowing self-defense after
attack) or retaliation. Iran's actions could include a direct attack on U.S.
troops in Iraq, or in other neighboring countries including Saudi Arabia, Oman,
Qatar, Bahrain, Djibouti, or elsewhere. It could attack U.S. interests through
proxies, particularly in Iraq. It could destabilize Iraq even further, while
uniting Iraqis (and Arabs across the region) even more strongly against the
U.S. Iran might attack Israel, particularly if the U.S. claimed that its attack
on Iran was somehow tied to "protecting" its Israeli ally. And it
could use the oil weapon - manipulating prices or supplies, or even more
dangerously, Iran could sink a ship to block the strategic oil waterway, the
Strait of Hormuz.
What is Israel's connection to the
U.S. escalation against Iran?
Israel's role, and the role of the
pro-Israeli lobbies (both the traditional Jewish organizations and newer
right-wing Christian Zionist groups) in pressing for a military strike against
Iran are much stronger than they were during the run-up to war in Iraq. (In
that period the main pro-Israeli forces weighed in strongly to support war in
Iraq largely after the decision had already been made for the war.) Many
Israeli officials have long viewed Iran as a much greater threat than Iraq, and
the recent leak to the British press regarding detailed Israeli preparations
for a strike on Iran was clearly orchestrated to ratchet up the threat.
However, Israel holds the fourth
most powerful nuclear arsenal in the world, and its conventional military is by
far the most advanced in the region even without its strategic alliance with
the Pentagon. As a result, there are divisions even among Israeli elites, and
some key sectors, particularly some in the military, do not share the
government's obsession with an alleged Iranian "threat."
The problem here in the U.S. is
that among government, policy and media elites, it is taken as a matter of
unchallengeable "fact" that Iran IS a threat to Israel, that all
threats Israel claims are real, and that any threat to Israel is necessarily a
threat to the United States. Because this view is predominant in Congress, the
involvement of Israel in any way with a U.S. attack on Iran - whether to
support an attack carried out by the Israeli military itself, or conducted by
the U.S. ostensibly because of a concocted claim that Iran is threatening its
Israeli ally - would seriously undermine Congressional opposition. As a result,
those advocating for such opposition must be prepared to confront members of
Congress, their staff, newspaper editorial boards, etc., with the reality that
not every rhetorical attack against Israel reflects an actual, let alone an
existential threat, and that not every threat against Israel represents a
threat to the U.S. They should also be reminded, particularly recognizing
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's penchant for ugly anti-Jewish rhetoric,
that he is not the only power center in Iran (he is particularly less than
all-powerful in the military), that his party suffered a serious electoral
defeat after the Holocaust-denying conference, and that U.S. threats against
Iran only serve to strengthen his sector of Iran's elite.
What is the regional and international
reaction?
Washington is attempting to win
Arab government support for a U.S. or perhaps U.S.-backed Israeli attack on
Iran, through two strategies. One involves the claimed concerns about an
"extremist" or "rising Shi'a threat" to the region, in
which the Bush administration wants to win "moderate" Arab
governments to an anti-Iranian position. Its claimed basis is Iran's support
for anti-government forces in Lebanon (Hezbollah), Palestine (Hamas), and even
Iraq (with several Shi'a militias, despite their strong backing from parts of
the government and the parliament). There even seems to be some interest in
trying to divide Syria from Iran.
The other strategy is reflected in
the recent Bush administration moves to renew Israeli-Palestinian negotiations,
including Condoleezza Rice's trip to the region and the convening of the
so-called "Quartet." The resumption of Israeli-Palestinian talks
(made more feasible after the Fatah-Hamas unity process in the recent
Saudi-brokered Mecca Accord), however inconclusive, will allow Washington to
push Arab governments to accept a U.S.-backed anti-Iran escalation on the
grounds that Arab public opposition will fade because of a new initiative on
Israel-Palestine. It is not likely to work, but weak and U.S.-dependent Arab
regimes, still facing their own crises of legitimacy, may feel they have no
choice but to comply.
The escalating threats against
Iran are taking place at a moment in which failures in Iraq are more obvious
than ever, and in which the U.S. is again increasingly isolated
internationally. Germany and Italy have issued arrest warrants against dozens
of CIA agents involved in the kidnapping and "extraordinary
rendition" of European citizens sent to be tortured around the world.
Canada's right-wing prime minister and former Bush-backer Stephen Harper
publicly excoriated the White House for keeping Canadian citizen Maher Arar on
the U.S. "no-fly" list despite Arar's absolute exoneration (complete
with official apology and an $8.5 million settlement) by Canada. Russian
President Vladimir Putin condemned as "very dangerous" what he called
Washington's "unconstrained hyper-use of force." And even in loyal
Britain, Tony Blair's heir-apparent Gordon Brown has made clear he is
considering a very different relationship with Washington than that of
"Bush's poodle." It is possible we are seeing the rise of a new
incarnation of the anti-war "Old Europe" of the months before Bush's
2003 invasion of Iraq.
In Congress, there are a number of
bills pending, including those by Republican former war-supporter-turned-critic
Republican Congressman Walter Jones, and the courageous California
Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who have introduced bills that take steps towards
prohibiting a U.S. attack on Iran. While neither would absolutely prohibit any
attack on Iran, both take significant steps towards using Congress'
Constitutional power of the purse to prohibit funding for "regime
change" efforts and other attacks. Either of these bills could emerge as
the new "Boland Amendment" for Iran - reclaiming the role of the 1982
bill that prohibited the Reagan administration from using U.S. funds in its
covert contra war against Nicaragua. While the original Boland Amendment did
not unequivocally cut off funds, it did capture the breadth of both public
anger and congressional opposition to the war, forcing the administration to do
an illegal end-run around Congress to continue funding the contras, ending up
in what quickly became known as the "Iran-contra scandal" that nearly
brought down the administration.
What does the peace movement need
to do and demand?
- Peace activists face a huge
challenge of expanding our work - to challenge the possibility of a new
war in Iran, without abandoning the on-going work to stop the war in Iraq.
The peace movement must challenge both escalations now underway in Bush's
war: the so-called "surge" in Iraq, and the geographic expansion
to Iran while continuing to call for a complete and immediate end to the
entire war.
- No military attack on Iran -
"even if" Iran sent some weapons into Iraq, or some day in the
future decided to build a nuclear weapon, that does not justify a military
attack.
- We should demand a
Congressional "Boland Amendment" for Iran to preempt any funding
for any attack on Iran. None of the current resolutions provide an
absolute prohibition, but any of them could emerge as more politically
powerful than their actual language.
- There must be diplomatic, not
military engagement with Iran. Iran is not a threat to the U.S., so any
attack would represent a preventive war, illegal in international law.
- We need to build
people-to-people ties between Americans and Iranians, including work with
the Iranian community in the United States. We must fight against the
demonization that has historically allowed U.S. policy to impose crippling
economic sanctions against the people of countries whose governments
Washington opposes.
- In the long-term, we should
support calls that have come from the Middle East for more than a quarter
of a century to create a WMD-free or Nuclear Weapons-Free Zone throughout
the Middle East, including an end to Israel's nuclear arsenal and a
prohibition against U.S. nuclear-armed submarines or other nuclear weapons
in the area. We should demand that the U.S. implement its own 1991 call
for a WMD-free zone, found in Article 14 of UN Security Council resolution
687 that ended the 1991 Gulf War.
___________________________________________________________________________
Phyllis Bennis is a Fellow of the
Institute for Policy Studies and the Transnational Institute in Amsterdam. Her
most recent books are Challenging Empire: How People, Governments and the UN
Defy U.S. Power, and the just-released Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli
Conflict: A Primer. Both are available from Interlink Publishing www.interlinkbooks.com.
Additional Talking Points
The most important
evidence of the split within the powerful came with the release of a new
National Intelligence Estimate on December 3rd. The NIE,
reflecting the consensus view of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies, made clear
that Iran did not have a nuclear weapon, did not have a program
to build a nuclear weapon, and was less determined to develop nuclear
weapons than U.S. intelligence agencies had earlier claimed.
When the NIE was
released there was a sigh of relief from many quarters – in the U.S. and around
the world. How could anyone now claim there was any legal or moral
pretext for threatening Iran? But somehow the release of the NIE did not
stop Washington's talk of war. The day after the NIE was released, the Washington
Post headline read "U.S. Renews Efforts to Keep Coalition Against
Tehran." The White House, the president, the vice-president especially,
all continued ratcheting up the rhetoric. The president had been told of
the NIE's overall conclusions months earlier, back in the summer of
2007. It must have just been lucky happenstance that about the same
time the Bush administration began to change the nature of their threats
against Iran. It must have been just a coincidence that at about that same time
they started focusing not on nuclear claims, but instead on allegations that
Iran was responsible for the deaths of U.S. soldiers occupying Iraq.
Suddenly Washington had an entirely different reason to threaten war against
Iran. It was just luck, of course. Just in case the claims of Iranian
nuclear bombs proved false, the Bush administration still kept "military
options" against Iran on the table.
It was going to be a
long campaign. Facts on the ground would have little to do with it.
Tensions between the
United States and Iran have a long and inglorious history, stretching back
three-quarters of a century. But the 21st century edition of
the U.S.-Iran crisis began heating up around the time of the U.S. invasion of
Iraq in 2003, and then again escalated early in 2006, as the U.S. war raged and
conditions in occupied Iraq deteriorated.
The crisis began – and
continued – with an escalation of rhetoric emanating from the White House, in
language frighteningly similar to that which had preceded the U.S. invasion of
Iraq. The same words were coming from the president, the
vice-president, the secretary of state – "nuclear weapons program,"
"inspections aren't enough," "they can't be trusted,"
"the IAEA isn't doing enough…" At first it was all about Iran's
supposed nuclear weapons "threat."
In 2003, just a few
weeks after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Iran had offered to negotiate a
comprehensive solution with the U.S. According to then Middle East senior
director of the National Security Council, Flynt Leverett, Iran acknowledged
the need to address Washington's concerns regarding Iran's nuclear program, and
raised specific concessions it might be willing to make. They included the possibility
of ending support for Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Israeli-occupied Gaza, and
ending the arming of Hezbollah in Lebanon. What Iran wanted in return
from the U.S., beyond some specifics regarding lifting economic sanctions and
ending Washington's ban on Iran's entry to the World Trade Organization, was a
security guarantee. It was an offer of normalized relations between the
U.S. and Iran, something that had not existed since 1979 when the U.S.-backed
shah was overthrown. In return Iran wanted a guarantee that the U.S.
would not attack, or invade, or attempt "regime change" in
Iran. A grand bargain indeed.
Except it was
rejected. The "realists," including then Secretary of State Colin
Powell were reportedly interested. But within a few days, the proposal was
rejected and the State Department rebuked the Swiss ambassador for even having
passed it along. According to Powell's former assistant, Col. Lawrence
Wilkerson, "as with many of these issues of national security
decision-making, there are no fingerprints," Wilkerson told IPS. "But
I would guess Dick Cheney with the blessing of George W Bush."
There was to be no grand bargain.
Resources
Anti-War Legislation
S. 759: A bill to prohibit the use of funds for military operations
in Iran
<
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=s110-759>
H.R 770: Iran Nuclear Nonproliferation Act
<
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h110-770>
Rep. Walter B. Jones' Bill Concerning the Use of Military
Force in Iran
<http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c110:H.J.RES.14:>
Senator Robert C. Byrd's Resolution Concerning the Need for
Congressional Authorization of any United States Use of Force
<http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c110:S.RES.39:>
Opinion Pieces/Talking Points
Acting Locally:
Will Chicago Push Back Against Iran Warmongering?, 5/12/08
<http://www.alternet.org/story/85010/>
Taking a Stand Against War, 5/11/08
<http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080511_taking_a_stand_against_war/>
A plea to quiet
drums on Iran, and try talk, 5/11/08
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-iran-war_thinkmay11,0,7229998.story>
John Bolton: US should bomb
Iranian camps, 5/6/08
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1931520/John-Bolton-US-should-bomb-Iranian-camps.html>
United
States is drawing up plans to strike on Iranian insurgency camp, 5/4/08
<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article3868063.ece>
Dealing with Iran’s Hardliners, 4/4/08
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5123>
The Candidates on Iran, 4/4/08
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5122>
Iran in the Crosshairs, 2/28/08
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5025>
Nervously
and Rapidly, Iran courts Egypt, 2/14/08
<
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4967>
India and
Israel eye Iran, 2/13/08
< http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4959>
For an Iran Policy, More Nixon Less Bush, Posted 1/10/08
<http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4883>
The Day After: Iran - Phyllis Bennis, posted 10/30/07
<http://www.fpif.org/fpifoped/3225>
IAEA Report Contradicts Major Media Narrative On Iran - The
Huffington Post, Sean-Paul Kelley, 5/23/07
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/seanpaul-kelley/iaea-report-contradicts-m_b_49136.html>
Iran Disinformation - TomPaine.com, Rick Perlstein, 5/17/07
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/seanpaul-kelley/iaea-report-contradicts-m_b_49136.html>
Neo Cons Driving Iran Divestment Campaign - Inter Press
Service, Jim Lobe, 5/17/07
<http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/?q=node/22594>
How Congress Can Stop Bush From Attacking Iran - Mother
Jones, Jonathan Schwarz, 5/2007
<http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/?q=node/22589>
Websites
Cities
for Peace
<http://www.citiesforpeace.org>
Institute for Policy Studies
<http://ips-dc.org>
United for Peace and Justice
<http://www.unitedforpeace.org/article.php?list=type&type=98>
Arms Control Center
<http://www.armscontrolcenter.org/>
Women Against War
<http://www.womenagainstwar.org/>
StopWarOnIran.org
<StopWarOnIran.org>
After Downing Street
< http://www.afterdowningstreet.org>
No War on Iran!
<http://nowaroniran.com>
Peace Action
<http://www.peace-action.org/>
AntiWar.com
<http://antiwar.com>
Just Foreign Policy
<http://www.justforeignpolicy.org/issues/iran_peace_proposal.html>
Declaration of Peace
<http://declarationofpeace.org/declare-peace-nonviolent-action-contingency-plans>
Guide to Getting a Resolution Passed in Your
Community
|
The following is a simple guide to getting a City Council Resolution passed
in your community. A City Council Resolution campaign is not a "one size
fits all" effort but the following are ideas to get you started.
Step-by-Step Guide To Getting a Resolution Passed in Your City.
·
Gather a Coalition to Support the Effort
·
Survey Your Council
·
Gather Signatures of Support
·
Identify Council Member Allies
·
Hold a Public Education Event
·
Outreach to the Media
·
What to do if you face resistance in your council?
Gather a Coalition of
Local Organizations to Support the Effort
Many communities have existing community organizations, neighborhood
associations, peace and justice coalitions. If a coalition does not exist in
your community, a City Council Resolution campaign is a great opportunity to
launch an effort to amass the power of different groups and constituencies to
advance progressive policies in your community. Think outside the box! Gather
a host committee with representatives from different constituencies including
faith-based groups, students and youth organizations, peace and justice
groups, sympathetic business groups, groups that work on poverty, immigrant groups,
racial justice organizations etc. Call a first meeting to launch this idea.
Survey Your City/Town Council
If you are unsure about where your City Council stands on your issue of
interest, you may want to start by surveying the Council so you can assess
who are your allies, swing members, and those that will pose a tough
challenge. Call each office and ask the Council Members (or their staff) if
they would generally support a Resolution in favor of your effort. This
effort can be divided amongst different organizations. Make sure there is a
point person who is collecting the results of the survey to report back at
the next meeting.
Gather Public Signatures
If you already have a resolution draft in mind that you would like to have
the Council pass you may want to spend some time gathering petition
signatures from the Councilpeople’s constituents. This will help leverage
Council Members' support and may help in getting similar language passed by
the Council instead of a watered-down version. Ask the members of your
coalition to each collect a stack of signatures.
Identify Council Member Allies
Identify your strongest ally(s) on your City Council and set up a meeting
with him/her to discuss introducing a resolution. Bring education packet to
share with them including talking points, copies of City Council resolutions
from other communities, newspaper articles, costs to your community and
signed petitions. Ask the Council Person(s) to take the lead in garnering the
support of other Council Members. Ask the Council Person to approve the
language in the draft resolution. This process may take a number of days and
a fair amount of negotiating.
If the Council Person agrees to take the lead, set up a follow up meeting
with the Council Person's aid. To secure the support of other council members
and to move the process along swiftly it is often easier to work with aids.
If the Council Person is not willing to lead the effort to get a resolution
passed, first assess the reasons why. Is it that the resolution you presented
would prove impossible to get secure support? Is the Council Person afraid to
take the lead on this issue? Depending on the reason you may want to try some
of the following paths:
- Try
a different member of the council.
- Plan
actions to target the member.
- Negotiate
on the draft resolution language (see sample resolutions and other City
Council Resolutions).
Set Up A Public Education
Event or Town Hall Meeting
At any point in this process you may want to consider setting up a public
event in your city to garner wider support for your initiative, to bring more
citizen power into the effort, and to build the movement in your city. If
there are forums or teach-ins already planned you may want to just work with
the organizers of those events to get on the speaking docket and invite the
public to your next planning meeting. One way bring City Council Members into
this effort early is to set it up as a "town hall meeting" where
you have a panel of people presenting the various arguments for (and against)
the resolution and a panel of Council Members and citizens listening and
asking follow-up questions.
Outreach to the Media
The easiest way to make the resolution effort appealing to the media is to
draw the direct impacts on your city. The National Priorities Project is
available to help you crunch the numbers on how much various budget
initiatives, including war spending, will cost local taxpayers in your
community. This, combined with the budgetary crisis facing many cities, makes
a great hook for press.
A public education event or action is a great opportunity to inform
journalists about the Cities for Progress campaign. If you are not holding a
public education event, consider holding a press conference featuring City
Council Members leading the effort and diverse members of your Coordinating
body or coalition. If you don't have allied Council Members you may want to
plan the media outreach around an action designed to target the Council
Member and expose their unwillingness to support this effort. You may want to
hold a Candle Light Vigil at their home or conduct a sit-in at their office.
Draft a press release (see sample release) and send it to your local and
regional press.
If a Resolution passes successfully don't forget to do follow-up media work.
Hold a press conference and claim a victory for peace.
What to do when a City
Council Resolution will not pass (or even get introduced) in your city
It will prove almost impossible for many cities to pass a resolution on some
issues that may seem national in scope to your council. The following are
some alternative options for expressing the support for your position in your
city:
- If you have any
allied Council Members ask them to circulate a general letter in support
of your position to other members and other officials in your City
Government including the Board of Education, the Mayors office and other
municipal departments. Any formal expressions you can obtain in favor of
your campaign will help the national Cities for Progress efforts to show
the national strength of local movements
- You can also try
different bodies in your city such as University Resolutions, Labor
Union local resolutions, Parent and Teacher Associations, or other Civic
bodies.
- If
you have a sympathetic Mayor in your city, ask him or her to issue a
statement
|
Cities for Progress
in the News – An Article From Politico
Anti-war activists think global, act local
By: Josephine Hearn
Jul 30, 2007 06:58 PM EST
Thwarted so far in Congress from forcing an end to the war
in Iraq, anti-war activists are mobilizing to pressure members back home.
Much of the war debate has centered on the epic struggle between the White
House and the Democratic-led Congress. But with Congress set to recess at
week's end with no plan in place to end the war, activists are converging on
Washington to highlight the hundreds of small-scale, anti-war resolutions
passed by cities, towns and other municipalities.
While the local measures have no tangible impact on the war, they do register
broad-range public frustration and create a grass-roots message that can sway
some lawmakers -- and give opponents a rallying cry during the long
congressional recess next month.
"Democracy in America works best at the local level, where representatives
are closest to the needs of the people," said Chicago Alderman Joe Moore.
Anti-war activists also plan to step up their efforts in the coming months, to
continue the drumbeat of opposition to the war and push Congress to end it.
This week's anti-war visit comes as congressional Democrats are poised to
consider several Iraq-related measures this week as part of the defense
appropriations bill. More significant action on Iraq is planned for September,
when Congress is in session again.
More than 300 cities, towns, states and mayors have made public statements
against the war since the U.S. invasion of Iraq, according to a tally by the
Cities for Peace project at the progressive think tank Institute for Policy
Studies.
Just last week, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa signed a statement of
opposition. Also, city councils in Cleveland, Cincinnati and Santa Fe, N.M.,
have recently passed resolutions calling for an end to the conflict. And additional
resolutions are pending before city councils in Los Angeles; Dayton, Ohio; and
Fort Collins, Colo.
"We've found that as soon as a resolution passed in one place, cities in
other places said, 'We want that here,'" said Karen Dolan, who heads up Cities
for Peace. "It's had a wildfire effect."
On Tuesday, local officials from Illinois, Florida, Wisconsin, Washington State
and elsewhere will march to the White House to deliver their anti-war
resolutions to President Bush. They will then head to Capitol Hill to meet with
progressive lawmakers.
But even as Congress embarks on a new week of Iraq measures, progressives
differ on the best strategy to end the war. The most liberal and vocally
anti-war among them -- Reps. Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters and Lynn Woolsey, all
California Democrats -- have balked at a proposal put forth by Rep. John P.
Murtha (D-Pa.), another prominent war critic. Murtha wants to start withdrawing
combat troops in 60 days without a firm deadline for withdrawal. And that
omission has alarmed the three liberals.
"The public is looking for Democrats to keep pushing forward" on
withdrawal, Woolsey said in an interview.
Lee, Waters and Woolsey had planned to meet with Murtha on Monday to discuss
their differences, but the meeting was postponed, a Democratic aide said.
But other anti-war lawmakers appeared ready to embrace the Murtha plan.
"I view this as a step in the direction of redeployment," said Rep.
Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio), who added that she had yet to see the final language of
the proposal.
Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) said she was concerned about the lack of an end
date for withdrawal but she was optimistic that Democrats would work out their
differences.
"We will be united. This is definitely a work in progress," she said.
Schakowsky noted that it was important for the House to carry out plans to hold
a series of Iraq votes before the August recess.
"Having votes, having people on the record, especially with constituents
mobilizing in August, is important," she said.
Lawmakers will spend a month at home with voters in August, a prime opportunity
for anti-war groups to influence them.
Rep. John B. Larson (D-Conn.) met recently with representatives from the
National League of Cities and the Center for American Progress to talk about
local efforts, he said.
"It's the grass roots and the public taking hold of the issue. The push
has to come from the bottom up," he said.