| Anti-war
gathering discusses Iran
IAC
leader says: ‘Don’t echo imperialist hypocrisy’
By Sara Flounders
Jul 24, 2009
The following
is based on a presentation by Flounders, a coordinator of the
International Action Center, during a discussion of the latest
events in Iran at the National Assembly anti-war conference held
in Pittsburgh July 10-12.
If the U.S.
government was interested in supporting democracy or in building
respect for the will of the people in a democratic election, it
should have started by respecting the outcome of the 2006 Palestinian
election. The Palestinian people voted in large numbers, electing
Hamas candidates to parliament with large enough votes to form
the Palestinian government. In Gaza, Hamas had a total sweep.
The U.S./Israeli
response was a starvation blockade of Gaza, a siege and then a
brutal all-out war on the entire population. When the Israelis
attacked Gaza last December and January, they killed more than
1,400 Palestinians, using U.S.-supplied weapons including white
phosphorous and cluster bombs.
Now more
than half of the elected members of the Palestinian Parliament
are in Israeli prisons. Why is the corporate media not telling
us day after day about this crime against democracy?
Don’t
jump on capitalist bandwagon
We in the
anti-war movement need to be especially careful not to jump on
the bandwagon when the entire capitalist class, their media, the
entire U.S. Congress, and numerous organizations that received
direct U.S. funding from the so-called National Endowment for
Democracy all speak with one voice in sudden defense of a cause.
Regardless
of how legitimate, genuine and concerned some individuals may
seem, this kind of overwhelming imperialist pressure will distort
the struggle.
The U.S.
corporate media is not interested in democracy even within the
United States.
The whole
focus and attention of progressive, anti-imperialist and workers’
struggles, especially here in the very center of imperialism,
must be to defend all those who are targeted by the Pentagon,
by the police and by the corporate media, which act as an extension
of the state on issues of war and peace.
Repression
in the U.S.
Just consider
the mass raids, round-ups and deportations going on in immigrant
communities in every major U.S. city. Think of the workers who
never come home from work, the families that are ripped apart.
We cannot
for a moment forget that this is the country with the largest
prison population in the world, with the greatest number of people
on death row. Mumia Abu-Jamal, an internationally famous journalist
and human rights activist, has been on death row for decades,
just 50 miles from where we are meeting here in western Pennsylvania.
When the
corporate media raises their concern about “democracy”
in Iran, we cannot forget the Black and Latina/o communities occupied
by police. Nor the targeting of Muslim communities, which are
overrun with snitches, spies and frame-ups.
We cannot
forget the millions of working people who are losing their jobs,
homes, health care and their future. They have no vote, no say
and no control over who receives trillions of dollars in bailout
money and who receives hot air. We cannot forget the police state
that greets every bankers’ or international gathering, putting
whole areas of cities in lock-down.
There is
a certain imperialist arrogance when the corporate media, which
hides the lack of democracy here in U.S., suddenly champions democracy
in Iran with wall-to-wall and sympathetic coverage of demonstrations
there.
Do we want
our movement to be an echo of that hypocrisy? Don’t you
wonder if there is another agenda? When has a demonstration in
the U.S. against war or cutbacks, or for housing or human rights,
ever received the kind of sympathetic coverage that we’ve
seen in the last month of Iran?
Do we expect
that the thousands of activists coming to Pittsburgh for the G20
summit protests will receive even 1 percent of the coverage that’s
been given to demonstrations in Iran?
No
women’s rights in U.S. client states
The whole
world knows the name and face of the young Iranian woman Neda.
But do we know the name of even one Iraqi woman killed by the
invading U.S. Army? Can you tell me the name of one Palestinian
woman killed by Israeli forces? Do we know the names of any Afghan
or Pakistani women killed in a drone attack?
Do we know
the name of the young Latina killed on the same day as Neda died
in Iran, who was shot by border militia in Arizona? Why not?
Have U.S.
wars and occupations brought democracy to countries they own and
control through feudal monarchies and total dictatorships?
There are
no rights for women, or for anyone today, in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Qatar, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Egypt or Jordan.
Nowhere in
the world is U.S. imperialism a force for democracy or women’s
rights. U.S. interventions bring millions of deaths, millions
of orphans, millions of refugees, a whole sex industry, torture
on a mass scale and massive impoverishment—but never democracy.
Of course
everyone here already knows this. We know of three decades of
wars, sanctions, encirclement, sabotage and coup attempts.
Don’t
echo imperialist designs
A number
of so-called human-rights groups that are funded by U.S.-government
NED programs have called for demonstrations on July 25 in the
name of “democracy in Iran.” Unfortunately, some anti-war
groups have endorsed this U.S. government-funded demonstration.
We want to use every skill to persuade our movement not to be
pulled in by imperialist destabilization efforts and propaganda
and to withdraw their participation.
There is
a class struggle in Iran today. Yes, there is. But there is also
a massive U.S.-government-sponsored destabilization effort. We
cannot allow ourselves to become an echo of imperialist destabilization
and interference in Iran. The group Stop War On Iran has called
a meeting in New York for an extended discussion of this question
on Aug. 1 at 55 West 17 Street at 4 p.m. See stopwaroniran.org
for more details.
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