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Anti-Draft and Draft Resistance

War News 2 - Afghanistan/Pakistan

August 20, 2008

IVAW News - State of the Union Summer Tour Coverage (Watertown Daily News)

The article "Iraq Veterans Against the War event to be held in Watertown this weekend", by Sarah Rivette, was originally published in the Watertown Daily Times, July 31, 2008


The Iraq Veterans Against the War organization will make its way to Watertown this weekend for its State of the Union Base tour.
The speaking tour will have two official events this weekend: a concert at the Different Drummer Cafe, 12 Paddock Arcade, on Saturday night and a barbecue with a veterans' benefits workshop at Thompson Park on Sunday afternoon.
One objective, according to the organizers, is to make active-duty soldiers and veterans aware of their rights and privileges within the Veterans Affairs system. Members of the organization also say that becoming a part of IVAW has helped them deal with their post-traumatic stress disorder and they want to help other soldiers facing the same issues.
"When I found IVAW, it let me know there was a support group for people who have gone to Iraq and have seen the destruction and want to do something about it," said Kristopher Goldsmith, a former active-duty soldier with the 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Stewart, Ga. "Instead of getting out of the military and pretending like nothing ever happened, it has given me an outlet for my recovery with PTSD."
The tour will take six veterans and two musical acts across the country for a month, where they will visit the most deployed Army and Marine installations.
The Different Drummer Cafe will host a fundraising event at 7 p.m. Friday with a silent auction. The concert, featuring Son of Nun and Ryan Harvey and Head Roc, will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the cafe. The barbecue, where information on soldiers' rights and how to navigate the Veterans Affairs system will be available, will be at 1 p.m. Sunday at Thompson Park.
"We are going around to the busiest and most-deployed bases across the nation and we are bringing some food and fun with us," said Jason E. Hurd, 28, a former member of the Tennessee National Guard. "We are coming there to let them know they are not alone."

IVAW News - State of the Union Summer Tour Coverage (Why Not News)

This was posted to Why Not News, August 1, 2008


PHILADELPHIA – Members of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) will be hosting events near eight major military installations in the U.S. from Aug. 1 through Sept. 5 as part of the State of the Union Base Tour.
"Our message to the troops is simple," said IVAW member Jason Washburn, a tour organizer and three-time veteran of Iraq. "The state of the union is dire, but you are not alone."
The tour will take six Iraq Veterans roughly 6,800 miles across the country, from Fort Drum, N.Y. to Camp Pendleton, C.A. At each stop, concerts, fundraisers and V.A./GI rights workshops will be hosted by the veterans.
Washburn and others on the tour are delivering a message of hope to a group of people they refuse to leave behind.
"We're into the sixth year of this occupation," said Kris Goldsmith, another tour organizer and Iraq combat veteran. "It is no less difficult on the Soldier today than it was on day one. We know, we've been there, but we're not finished serving; not until our bravest get the care they need and every troop comes home."
Iraq Veterans Against the War was founded in 2004 to give those who have served in the military since September 11, 2001 a way to come together and speak out against an unjust, illegal and unwinnable occupation. Today, IVAW has more than 1,250 members in 48 states, Washington, D.C. and Canada and on military bases overseas. To learn more about IVAW, please visit www.ivaw.org/basetour.

August 14, 2008

Tell Stephen Harper to Let Jeremy Hinzman Stay

This press release was just issued by the War Resisters Support Campaign


War Resister Family Ordered to Leave Canada

Hinzmans Were First to Seek Sanctuary
TORONTO, Aug. 13 /CNW/ - U.S. Iraq war resister Jeremy Hinzman was told today that his family's application to stay in Canada has been rejected. Hinzman was told that he does not qualify under Canada's Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) program following a review by a Citizenship and Immigration department officer.
Jeremy, his wife Nga Nguyen and their son Liam were the first Iraq War resisters to come to Canada to seek sanctuary. On July 21, their second child was born in Toronto. If deported, they would be the first family sent to the U.S. to face punishment.
On July 15, the Canadian government deported U.S. war resister Robin Long who is currently awaiting court martial at Fort Carson, Colorado.
Hinzman served a tour in Afghanistan in a non-combat role after applying for conscientious objector status. When his unit, the 82nd Airborne Division, was to be deployed to Iraq Hinzman and his family decided to come to Canada.
"I applied for Conscientious Objector Status in the U.S. Army because I realized that I cannot kill a fellow human being. But my application was denied. I knew that in Iraq I would be ordered to take part in combat operations, or other actions that are against my principles," said Hinzman. "Nga and I knew Canada had welcomed many Americans like us during the Vietnam War, and we knew Canada had refused to join the invasion of Iraq."
"Sending Jeremy and his family back to the U.S., where he would face harsh punishment, would be cruel," said Lee Zaslofsky, coordinator of the War Resisters Support Campaign. "It would fly in the face of the motion adopted by the House of Commons on June 3, which called on the Harper government to stop all deportation proceedings against these conscientious objectors."
Recent Federal Court of Canada decisions in the cases of U.S. war resisters Joshua Key and Corey Glass have indicated that the refugee process which failed to grant protection to the Hinzman family may have been seriously flawed.
The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on the federal government and the Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene to prevent the Hinzman family from being sent to the U.S. to be punished.

August 13, 2008

State of the Union Tour at Fort Sill

Ftsilll

August 12, 2008

Upcoming Events - Madison Winter Soldier Organizing Meeting

This announcement was originally posted to Facebook


Madison Winter Soldier Organizing Meeting
Because we need your help!

Event Info:

  • Host: Iraq Veterans Against the War - Madison
  • Type: Meetings - Club/Group Meeting
  • Network: Global

Time and Place

  • Date: Tuesday, August 19, 2008
  • Time: 7:00pm - 9:00pm
  • Location: Escape Java Joint, 916 Williamson St., Madison, WI

Contact Info

August 11, 2008

Military Families Speak Out (News)

Introducing the Base Spouse Outreach Team

Over the last year, a growing number of spouses living on military bases or in base towns have courageously joined MFSO and are speaking out to end the war in Iraq, bring our troops home now and get them the care they need.  One of the most difficult places to speak out is on a military base, and one of the most important things that MFSO can do now is to support those on bases who are speaking out, and connect them with others for mutual support.   To get involved e-mail basespouse@mfso.org

Please support our work with a one-time or monthly donation!

MFSO’s Base Spouse Project is an exciting new effort to support and build opposition to the war in Iraq within the active duty military and military base community. We know there is strength in numbers, and that our new Base Spouse Outreach Project will help encourage more military spouses to join MFSO and speak out.

Our membership currently includes over 150 spouses living on twenty military bases, and an additional 60 military families living in 30 military base towns. We know that a large number of military families on bases and in base towns are against the war, but are feeling that they cannot speak out. Our base and base town focus is designed to confront this problem head on.

On military bases and in military base towns, backlash against those speaking out to end the war in Iraq from those supporting the war is the most intense, and can mean isolation from a support system when that system is needed most.  It is the voices of base spouses  in particular, challenging the status quo from the heart of the military establishment, that are so powerful in the public discourse and debate. We believe it is imperative that spouses and partners who have stepped forward in opposing the war in Iraq receive support for their courageous voices, which will in turn spur new voices.

The Base Spouse Project Outreach Team recently sent out a letter to all MFSO members across the country and on U.S military bases internationally, to identify additional members who might be interested in working on the project. The team has received an excellent initial response. They are currently developing materials on “right to speak out” and “signs of ptsd” to distribute on bases.

In addition to discussing the specifics of organizing on military bases, they will also be able to discuss specific ways in which base spouses can participate in MFSO’s summer/fall campaign, "PTSD: The Hidden Cost of War" which is designed to raise awareness about the causes and consequences of PTSD, suicide, and addiction among troops, and the need to end the war that is creating these devastating but often invisible wounds.

IVAW News - An invitation to Senator Barack Obama to meet with IVAW

Dear Senator Obama,

Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) was founded by Iraq war veterans in July 2004 at the annual convention of Veterans for Peace (VFP) in Boston to give a voice to the large number of active duty service people and veterans who are against this war, but are under various pressures to remain silent.

From its inception, IVAW has called for:

  • Immediate withdrawal of all occupying forces in Iraq;
  • Reparations for the human and structural damages Iraq has suffered, and stopping the corporate pillaging of Iraq so that their people can control their own lives and future; and
  • Full benefits, adequate healthcare (including mental health), and other supports for returning servicemen and women.

Today, IVAW members are in 48 states and on numerous bases overseas, with chapters throughout the U.S. and in Canada and Germany.

On behalf of Iraq Veterans Against the War I would like to invite you to meet with a delegation of our members at Our Savior's Lutheran Church, located at 915 East 9th Avenue Denver, CO between August 25-27, at a time most convenient to you. We would like to discuss your position on withdrawal from Iraq as well as your commitment to veterans care and reparations to the Iraqi people. We would also like to present to you our Winter Soldier testimony, which illustrates the moral necessity of bringing an immediate end to the occupation of Iraq. Please RSVP at your earliest convenience regarding this matter, stating whether or not you or members of your staff will attend or proposing an alternative location for the meeting.

In addition, we would like you to review the following background information and provide your official response to the questions below prior to or on the date of August 27, 2008.

US-headquartered multinational corporations (MNCs) are currently awaiting passage of a law governing foreign direct investment (FDI) in Iraq's energy sector. They have indicated that they will not substantially invest in reconstruction of the country's oil infrastructure until the Iraqi government passes a law which will allow them to negotiate long-term investment contracts called "Production Sharing Agreements" (PSAs) in the parlance of the oil industry.

PSAs have been compared to the colonial concessions which European imperial powers imposed upon Middle Eastern nations in the 20th century, including Iraq and Iran. Numerous historians have pointed out that these concessions humiliated the Arab-Muslim world for decades and provoked internal political instability, the rise of militant nationalism and most recently, religious radicalism directed primarily against the United States.

We are concerned that the Bush administration, despite its denials, is exerting political pressure on the Iraqi government to pass a law which will open the door to these types of contracts once again. We believe that this sort of alleged pressure directly contradicts the ostensible mission of the United States military in Iraq and hinders political progress and stability there. Without a doubt, the prospect of perpetual instability will tempt future administrations to justify a prolonged occupation or continued interference in Iraq's internal political affairs.

Our troops have fought hard. They do not deserve to have their efforts undermined by this or any other administration. The Iraqi people demand independence and we have no right to deny it to them. In doing so we contradict the principles our own nation was founded on and act against our own national security interests. For these reasons we are determined to oppose such policies, official or otherwise.

For more information please see the accompanying documents.

Our questions are:

  • What is your position on long term FDI in Iraq's oil industry by US-headquartered MNCs?
  • What is your position on the role of the United States government in negotiating a so-called hydrocarbon law with the Iraqi government which would govern FDI there?
  • What is your position on Production Sharing Agreements and similar sorts of contracts?
  • What is your position on debt relief to the Iraqi government? Should it be contingent upon passage of the above-mentioned hydrocarbon law?
  • What is your position on the so-called Strategic Framework Agreement, which is rumored to contain language on FDI? Should it be ratified by the U.S. Senate, whether or not it is actually called a "treaty"?

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Sincerely,
Kelly Dougherty
Executive Director
Iraq Veterans Against the War

IVAW News - Upcoming Events Sponsored by IVAW Chapter 17 (Boston)

IVAW News - "Iraq Veterans Against the War" Open Coffee House near Ft. Lewis, US

This announcement was posted to indymedia.UK, July 28, 208


A group of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) are planning to start up a GI coffeehouse near the entrance of the Fort Lewis military base in Washington State. Though the project is still in its planning stages, the idea is that it will be a center for supporting GI rights and war resistance in the region, as well as a place for GIs to get coffee right off the base.


More details to follow as I become aware of them.

Military Injustice - Sems they Do Not Like Casey Porter's Independent Films he has been posting to YouTube

This was sent by Casey, to the IVAW website, August 6, 2008


Well, it's official sports fans! My chain of commands knows about my little hobby of making videos. The Battalion Commander talked with my Company Commander about my films, asking if he has seen them. The conversation took place about a week ago. Hector Torres, the a Soldier who can be seen in The First Days and Day of The Mechanic, was on radio watch with our Commander got the call. That was a week ago. Nothing has happened yet. Yet being the keyword. Everyone has to go see the reenlistment NCO and since I got back last night from outside the wire, I had to go see him this morning. He told me knew I was not reenlisting, he has seen my "artwork". I have already talked to legal and they are not sure what to do, so they are going to contact a lawyer and get more info. They also have not informed any of my NCOs. So really, only upper level command is tracking this. I am NOT asking anyone to do anything yet. I just wanted to let everyone that they know.
Take Care,
Casey

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