Thousands in D.C. Protest Iraq War Plans
January 19, 2003
By LYNETTE CLEMETSON
WASHINGTON, Jan. 18 - In a show of dissent that organizers said "shattered the
false myth of consensus," for a war with Iraq, tens of thousands of protesters
representing a diverse coalition for peace converged here today for a rally and
march against the Bush administration's threatened use of military force against
Saddam Hussein's regime.
Energized by the British band Chumbawamba, which opened the Washington
demonstration with a performance of a new
antiwar song, a swelling crowd, packed densely to stave off the winter winds,
filled several blocks west of the Capitol carrying signs, waving banners and
chanting, "No war with Iraq."
Meanwhile, in San Francisco, swarms of demonstrators filed off buses, ferries
and up from the subways along the waterfront for a march heading up Market
Street and into the downtown. Among the protesters were a caravan of
environmentalists in electric cars with signs that read "Go solar, not ballistic,"
and the Stroller Brigade, a group of Bay Area parents pushing their children
through the crowds.
Both marches were sponsored by the activist group International Answer, after
months of intense local organizing following a similar large demonstration in
the capital last October.
In a show of solidarity with the march in Washington, which drew participants
from around the country and was timed to coincide with the Martin Luther King
holiday weekend, other antiwar activities took place nationwide. Thousands
marched
through downtown Portland, Ore., led by a drum ensemble and cheerleaders with
multicolored pompoms. In Tampa, Fla.,
protesters rallied outside the gates of MacDill Air Force Base as military jets
took off nearby. Other events were held overseas in cities including Tokyo,
Paris, Cairo, and Moscow. Many in the crowds seemed undeterred - even
invigorated - by the steady and seemingly inexorable march toward a possible war,
perhaps in a few weeks, as the United States and a few allies marshall troops,
naval flotillas and air wings in a rapidly escalating mobilization in the
Persian Gulf region. As protesters marched, Pentagon officials said that more
aircraft carriers soon would be bolstering the numbers of attack aircraft in the
region.
"The government is going to do what they are going to do regardless," said Mike
Smith, 22, a student who was one of hundreds of people to arrive in Washington
in a caravan of 11 buses from Chicago. "But at least by coming we can try
to make sure that people in other countries know that all Americans are not down
with this war."
Among the groups in attendance were the Gray Panthers, a social advocacy group;
Code Pink, a women's group; Black
Voices for Peace, an African-American group; and the Green Party, representing
environmentalists.
"Local actions are critical, but there are times when it is necessary to amass
an undeniable massive physical and vocal presence," said Mara Verheyden-Hilliard,
a civil rights lawyer and spokeswoman for Answer.
Margaret Conway, 21, drove overnight with 10 friends from a theater group at the
University of Michigan. Sager Williams, 51, a lawyer, came with friends from
Annapolis, Md. Howard Marland, 60, a carpenter, came to the rally with a dozen
people from Dumbarton United Methodist Church in Washington.
Protesters greeted one another and shared their backgrounds n small groups as a
steady stream of speakers rallied the crowd for two hours from the stage. In
addition to dozens of activists representing groups like the Muslim Student
Association, Pastors for Peace and Global Exchange, there were several celebrity
speakers.
Among them were the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton, the actresses
Jessica Lange and Tyne Daly, and Ron Kovic, the Vietnam veteran and antiwar
activist. In San Francisco, the actor Martin Sheen and the singer Joan Baez
participated in events.
"You all know what I do for work, this is what I do for a living," said Mr.
Sheen, who plays the president on the television show "The West Wing." "If the
people lead, the leaders will follow."
In addition to Answer, which drew support from 200 organizing centers around the
country, the march from the National Mall to the Washington Navy Yard about two
miles away benefited from the formation and growth over the past several months
of other antiwar coalitions.
The two main groups, United for Peace, an umbrella group of more than 120
organizations, and Win Without War, a coalition of religious, business and civic
leaders, have helped draw mainstream support by using patriotic antiwar
messages. In recent weeks the groups have won high-profile backing from groups
like labor unions, which have committed thousands of dollars and people to the
organizing efforts.
Last week, a number of Republican business leaders lent their support by taking
out a full-page advertisement in The Wall Street Journal opposing a war with
Iraq.
Still, many of those marching today were not part of organized groups, but were
simply skeptical and frustrated citizens who felt compelled to attend.
"The antiwar movement hadn't been very visible to us in our daily lives, and we
thought we needed to stand up and be counted," said Vicki Rosenwald, 53, a
research nurse from New York who attended the rally with her husband and a group
of friends. "It's important for ordinary middle-aged, middle-class people to
show up at these things because we can't be dismissed as campus radicals."
Two hours before the start of the antiwar rally here, supporters of the war
effort held a counter protest on the National Mall, southeast of the Vietnam
Memorial. Fewer than 100 people - mostly from two groups, one called Move-Out
and another called Free Republic - waved flags as "The Star Spangled Banner"
played over a portable speaker.
"We believe in America and what America stands for," said Joe Kernodle, a
Vietnam veteran and spokesman for Move-Out.
Many of the counter protesters were associated with the military, but Nina Burke
and her husband, Steve, came from Fredericksburg, Va., as civilians. "We need to
disarm Saddam before he sneaks a nuke into Chicago or New York, not after," Ms.
Burke said.