February 19 Rage Against War Rally – a Historic Success
Broad Coalition Drew Thousands in First National
Antiwar Protest
by John
V. Walsh Posted on March 08, 2023
Thousands of people assembled at the Lincoln Memorial
on February 19 to protest the US proxy war using Ukrainians as cannon fodder to
bring down Russia. It took as its name "Rage Against The War Machine."
And it sought to bring together people of all political persuasions in opposing
the war. "Everyone in; no one out," an invitation might have been
framed.
Not only was it the first national demonstration
against Joe Biden’s cruel proxy war; it was the first to be live streamed and
is now archived here with all the speeches. A very
21st Century event!
The crowd in DC was estimated variously from 2000 to
5000, with sister rallies in 19 other cities.
This was a remarkable achievement for a fledging coalition as its first action.
Its success is testimony to the hunger for such a broad-based movement.
And broad-based it was, another first, bringing
together people from across the political spectrum to oppose the war. The lead
organizations were the leftist Peoples Party and
the Libertarian
Party. The broad base was reflected by four former
presidential candidates among the many speakers: Ron Paul, Dennis Kucinich,
Jill Stein, and Tulsi Gabbard. No other antiwar protest in the U.S. even
aspires to such inclusivity.
Without such a broad-based anti-interventionist
movement, it is virtually impossible for popular forces in the US to end the
war in Ukraine, let alone wider wars with Russia or China. This kind of popular
movement must succeed if we are to get off the road to nuclear
war, WWIII. We have no other alternative as we face a threat to our very existence.
It must grow if we are to survive.
The February 19 protest was the first to raise as its
lead demand "Not one more penny for war in Ukraine." This is
simple, direct and captures the nature of the growing discontent over the war.
Previous, smaller, local demonstrations most often called for "Peace In
Ukraine," a sentiment, not a demand, and one that can easily be co-opted
by warhawks. After all, Joe Biden is for "Peace in Ukraine" – once
Russia has been brought to its knees, the goal of the war as Secretary of
Defense, Lloyd Austin, and Undersecretary of State, Victoria Nuland, state
openly.
"Not one more penny for war in Ukraine" is
directed at the role of our government, the only one we can
influence. If that demand were met, then a negotiated settlement would have to
be undertaken. As the second demand of the demonstration, "Negotiate
Peace," states: "The US government instigated the war in Ukraine with
a coup of its democratically elected government in 2014, and then sabotaged a
peace deal between Russia and Ukraine in March. Pursue an immediate ceasefire
and diplomacy to end the war."
"Not one more penny for war in Ukraine"
addresses the needs of Americans whose support it was designed to develop. Most
Americans feel this war in their pocketbooks and the last thing we need is more
tax dollars on top of the more than $113 billion allotted
in 2022. It is a demand meant not only for the ears of the US government but
also for the American people.
Average Americans feel the effects of
this war in their daily lives. They are strapped by inflation worsened by the
war; by an economy slipping into recession, by neglected disasters like the
toxic spill in Palestine, Ohio; by rising national debt; by the crisis of
homelessness; and by a health care system that grows ever more expensive, less
comprehensive and less universal.
This demand is so eminently practical that is now
embodied in a Resolution has been introduced in the House, aptly named "The Ukraine Fatigue Resolution."
It is authored by Rep. Matt Gaetz and gained 15 co-sponsors so
far. It quite simply calls for the US to "end its financial and military
aid to Ukraine." (A weakness of the bill is that it is only "a sense
of the House," not a law that is binding. A strength is that a vote on it
would force Representatives to stand up and be counted. Most importantly, it is
a beginning and shows that antiwar sentiment is growing. A binding law is the
next step.)
Tellingly, Gaetz and all cosponsors of the bill are
Republicans, a rebuff to the idea that all antiwar sentiment exists only on the
"left." The desire to end this war can be universal if politics and
ideology would get out of the way. The next step is for some – even one –
progressive in Congress to sign onto the Gaetz bill. That way, the Congress
would mirror the universalist sentiment we saw in the streets on Feb. 19.
Finally, a broad-based movement like RageAgainstWar is
part of a growing trend internationally as Max Blumenthal discussed here beginning
at the 1hr, 37 min mark. As one example, six days after the Feb. 19 rally,
Sarah Wagenknecht, member of the Bundestag (federal Parliament) and of the
German Party Die Linke (The Left), and feminist activist,
Alice Schwarzer, led a demonstration of
tens of thousands at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin. It too called for an end
to military funding for Ukraine. When Wagenkenknecht was asked if members of
the right wing AfD, (Alternativ fur Deutschland) were welcome, she declared they
were if they opposed the war. And Schwarzer said it
is time to look beyond left and right.
Sshwarzer’s plea should constitute watchwords not only
for Germans, but for Americans and the entire West as we face the peril of
nuclear war that could easily grow out of this cruel US proxy war.
John V. Walsh, until recently a Professor of
Physiology and Neuroscience at a Medical School in Massachusetts, has written
on issues of peace and health care for the San Francisco Chronicle,
EastBayTimes/San Jose Mercury News, Asia Times, LA Progressive, Antiwar.com,
CounterPunch and others.
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