Youth around the country protest the war, draft
By
Dustin Langley
Published Apr 6, 2005 5:36 PM
Two years after the Bush administration
launched its colonial war against the people of Iraq, a national popular
uprising against the occupation has stretched the U.S. military to the breaking
point. The Pentagon is struggling to find new recruits, prompting many to fear
the return of the draft.
The Army reported on April 1 that it had missed
its March recruiting goal by 32 percent. The Marine Corps also came up short.
The Army Reserve missed its March goal by 46 percent.
The Army National
Guard has not yet released its numbers for March, but has missed its recruiting
goal in every month of the current fiscal year through February.
The
ongoing strain on the Pentagon and its failure to recruit new cannon fodder has
led senior military officials, lawmakers and defense experts to question the
viability of the “all volunteer force.”
In the Washington
Monthly March cover story Phillip Carter and Paul Gastric wrote: “America
can remain the world’s superpower. Or it can maintain its current
all-volunteer military. It can’t do both.”
Meanwhile, the
Selective Service Sys tem, the agency responsible for conducting a draft, is
busy fine-tuning the conscription machinery. Accord ing to its 2004 Perform ance
Plan, the agency is staffing local draft boards, purchasing new software,
training local volunteer registrars, and practicing with the draft lottery
process.
All of this is in order to “ensure a mobilization
infrastructure of 56 State Head quarters, 442 Area Offices and 1,980 Local
Boards [is] operational within 75 days of an authorized return to
conscription.”
The agency filed a report with Congress on March 31,
summarizing its progress in meeting this goal.
On the same day, youth and
activists across the country issued their own report: They will refuse to be
cannon fodder for the empire.
Youth answer: ‘Hell
no!’
The anti-war group No Draft, No Way had issued a call for a
March 31 National Day of Action against the draft and military recruiting.
Youth, students and activists across the country took to the streets that
day.
In Boston, demonstrators included GI resister Carl Webb, students who
walked out of Somerville High School to protest the war, representatives from
Steel Workers Local 8751-Boston School Bus Drivers, and HERE/UNITE Local 26.
They picketed in front of the downtown Military Recruiting Center. The protest,
called by the International Action Center-Boston, received a lot of support from
passersby, including a group of students who joined the protest.
In New
York City, activists from the youth group Fight Imperialism, Stand
Together—FIST—were joined by students, parents, clergy, veterans,
and anti-war activists for a demonstration at the Board of Education. They
occupied the steps of the building and unfurled a banner that read,
“Resist the war, stop the draft!”
In Raleigh, N.C., the local
FIST chapter demonstrated in front of a military recruiting station. While more
than 30 people protested, several of them blocked the entrance. Meanwhile they
read a statement denouncing the war, the draft and military recruiting.
In
Bloomington, Ind., people turned out at the newly opened office of the Indiana
National Guard for a spirited protest against the draft and military recruiting.
Protesters carried big banners reading, “End the occupation of
Iraq,” and, “Stop recruiting for the war machine,” and signs
that said, “No recruiting on Kirkwood” and, “You
shouldn’t have to kill to pay for an education!” The demonstration
was publicized by local media for several days prior to the event and was
carried live on local radio.
In Buffalo, N.Y., the International Action
Center and the Troops Out Now Coalition held a protest in front of the federal
office building downtown. Activists carried signs that proclaimed, “Hell
no, we won’t go” and, “No draft, no way!”
In
Worcester, Penn., 60 Methacton High School students walked out of class, voicing
their opposition to the war and a potential draft reinstatement. The students
convened near the school’s flagpole holding anti-draft signs.
No
Draft, No Way held a protest in Charlotte, N.C., in front of the military
recruiting station.
In Nashville, Tenn., students held a No Draft, No Way
rally across from Vanderbilt University.
In Santa Rosa, Calif., the Sonoma
County Peace & Justice Center held a rally at the courthouse featuring
anti-draft speakers and music. Students joined in and signed a Conscientious
Objectors Pledge of Resistance.
In Ames, Iowa, students walked out of
campus at Iowa State University and rallied against the draft.
Next
step: April 16 conference
The next steps for the struggle against the
draft will include a conference on youth and resistance on April 16. This
conference will address the return of the draft, economic conscription and youth
organizing.
The conference will focus on concrete actions to shut down
recruiting and fight the draft—including a campaign to get United States
Army’s Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps out of schools. These
actions will include implementing an opt-out program so that information about
students is not given to military recruiters, and an educators’ petition
demanding that time be given in schools to talk about the truth behind military
recruiting and to educate about the draft.
Speakers at the conference will
include Gulf War era veteran and activist Monique Code, Pam Africa, Vietnam-era
military resister Larry Holmes, and young people involved in counter-recruiting
work on high school and college campuses.
For information about the
conference, or to register, go to www. NoDraftNoway.org.
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