| ANSWER Coalition respondsto President Obama's speech on Iraq
     
 It is necessary to separate fact from  fiction regarding the announcement by the Obama administration that it  is removing "combat brigades" from Iraq. This is not the time for progressive  people to pat themselves on the back, claim "victory" and pretend that  the U.S. government is pursuing a different policy than that which was  carried out by the previous administration. Today's announcement that renames the  50,000 U.S. troops in Iraq is nothing more than the rebranding of the  illegal U.S. occupation of Iraq that began with the criminal invasion of  the country by hundreds of thousands of U.S. forces on March 20, 2003.  Let's remember, the goal of the Bush administration, too, was not to  keep a certain number of U.S. troops in Iraq forever, but instead to  exercise U.S. domination over the country and the region. The Obama administration has maintained  the principal military and civilian leaders from the Bush  administration. The withdrawal of some combat brigades from Iraq is  essentially a redeployment exercise so that tens of thousands more U.S.  troops can be sent to Afghanistan. Since Bush left office, and contrary to  the deep desire of the masses of people who constituted the electoral  base for President Obama’s November 2008 victory, the U.S. military  machine has grown, not diminished. The U.S. military budget has actually  increased, not decreased. The ongoing occupation of Iraq, the  escalation of the war in Afghanistan, the increasing threats against  Iran, and the enduring U.S.-Israeli war directed against the Palestinian  people are all clear indicators that U.S. foreign policy and its  military strategy are premised on the pursuit and maintenance of Empire  regardless of whether the Democrats or the Republicans occupy the White  House. When he delivered his major address in  Cairo on June 4, 2009, President Obama described the war in Iraq as a  "war of choice." That is simply popular vernacular for a war of  aggression. 
 The reality of his position, however, was revealed today  when President Obama actually called George W. Bush to confer with him  in advance of tonight's address on Iraq. Tonight, President Obama took  the occasion to salute Bush as a "patriot" with "love of country and  commitment to our security."
 George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald  Rumsfeld and other high officials in the Bush administration should be  indicted and prosecuted for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The invasion and ongoing occupation of  Iraq has shredded Iraqi sovereignty and "succeeded" in killing as many  as 1 million Iraqis. The invasion and ongoing occupation has succeeded  in ripping apart a once-united country. It is the U.S. invasion that  stoked a sectarian civil war. It was a deliberate and conscious policy  by the U.S. occupation forces to organize, finance and arm Iraqis along  ethno-sectarian lines in order to weaken the nationwide resistance of  the people against foreign occupation. The thousands of organizers and  volunteers who have worked with the ANSWER Coalition in organizing mass  protests and nearly daily activities in cities throughout the country  for the past nine years believe that the U.S. should end all of its  foreign occupations, and that the people in Iraq and Afghanistan must  have the right of self determination. The struggle for jobs, social justice,  equality and freedom at home cannot be separated from the international  struggle against empire, colonialism and war. 
 Last Saturday, Glenn Beck  and the forces of right-wing racism tried to hijack the legacy of Dr.  Martin Luther King Jr. and the millions of people who fought,  organized—including for some going to jail and giving their life—in the  struggle against racism at home and war abroad. We must take note of the  fact that the forces of right-wing racism and militarism are mobilizing  throughout the country. Their demagogic attacks against the Obama  administration are nothing more than a cover for their real agenda. We in the ANSWER Coalition believe that  it is imperative that all those in the anti-war movement, labor and  civil rights movements and others come together in a massive  mobilization on Oct. 2 in Washington, D.C., for jobs, peace and justice.  Only the mobilization of the people, and not the politicians, can  radically change the political climate. 
 When we march together on Oct.  2, we must raise high the banners of "U.S. out of Iraq now," "End the  occupation of Afghanistan Now" and "Money for jobs, schools, health care  and housing, not war and occupation." With your help and support, the movement for jobs, peace and justice can grow. Please make your donation today. 
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