NWN4P members and friends meet every week to show their support for peace. Extra signs are usually available for your use or you can bring your own.
Please join us at one of the following vigils:
Thursday, 4:45 to 5:45 PM ... or any time in between.
42nd (County Rd. 9) and Winnetka Avenue N. in New Hope
Saturday 11am- noon, Hwys 101 & 7, on the sidewalk near the fountain at Target in Minnetonka.
Ritter, who famously and accurately argued that Iraq no longer had weapons of mass destruction, stated In an interview with Amy Goodman: "There is no doubt in my mind that the United States is planning right now, as we speak, a military strike against Iran."
St. Luke Presbyterian Church Suggested donation: $10 (no one turned away)
3121 Groveland School Road, Wayzata, MN 55391
A book signing will follow the discussion.
Info: WAMM 612-827-5364
Co-sponsored by: St. Luke Presbyterian Church, WAMM (Women Against Military Madness), U.S. Tour of Duty, Veterans for Peace
Nancy Doyle Brown
Ms. Brown is a media and communications consultant for a variety of non-profit organizations and serves as an organizer for the Twin Cities Media Alliance.
Parish Community of St. Joseph, 8710-36th Avenue N. at the corner of Boone in New Hope.
Like all programs sponsored by the NW Neighbors for Peace, this is free and open to all members of the public.
For additional information, Carole Rydberg at 763-546-5368 or nwn4p@yahoo.com.
By Phyllis Bennis
A publication of the Institute for Policy Studies, January 2003
Adobe Acrobat Version / Summary / Contents / About the Author
Sections:I. The U.S. Rush to War / II. The World's Response, the UN & International Law / III. The Consequences of War: Iraq and Beyond / IV. The History of U.S.-Iraq Relations / V. Alternatives to War / Resource Guide
The current crisis between the U.S. and Iraq continues more than a decade of antagonism between Washington and Baghdad, involving three U.S. administrations. To truly understand why we stand now at the brink of war, however, one must look closely at the goals of the current Bush administration, which is drawn to conflict by Iraq's massive oil reserves and the goal of expanding U.S. military power around the world.
The Iraqi government's record is undeniably brutal, and the U.S. and its allies should never have facilitated its access to weapons of mass destruction, as they did during the decade of the close U.S.-Iraqi alliance in the 1980s. However, there is no evidence that Iraq currently has viable weapons of mass destruction, or that it presents an imminent threat to the United States.
Nor, despite Bush administration claims, is there any link between Iraq and the events of September 11. A U.S. war against Iraq would violate international law and worsen our global reputation as an arrogant, unaccountable superpower. The effects would be particularly dire in the Middle East, where many governments hang in the balance between increasingly outraged populations and the demands of Washington, on whom they rely for economic and military support. A war would cause great suffering within Iraq, already devastated by the 1991 war and years of crippling economic sanctions, and would put many others at risk, including tens of thousands of American troops.
A forward-looking United States would work through the United Nations to promote disarmament, human rights, and democracy at home and throughout the region, and pursue domestic energy policies that reduce our dependence on oil and thus our interventions in the Persian Gulf region and elsewhere.
II. The World's Response, the UN & International Law
III. The Consequences of War: Iraq and Beyond
IV. The History of U.S.-Iraq Relations
Phyllis Bennis, a fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, is a well-known writer and expert on the Middle East. Her recent books include Before & After: U.S. Foreign Policy and the September 11th Crisis and Calling the Shots: How Washington Dominates Today's UN. She has debated top administration officials and appears regularly on U.S. and international television and radio. In 1999 she accompanied the first U.S. Congressional staff delegation to Iraq.
The Institute for Policy Studies is an independent, multi-issue think tank founded in 1963. At a time when other think tanks celebrate the virtues of unrestrained greed, unlimited wealth, and indefinite war, IPS strives to create a more responsible society - one built around the values of peace with justice, sustainability, and decency. IPS, as I.F. Stone once said, is "an Institute for the rest of us."
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