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May 5, 2009
Labor’s Voice for Change ( 32)
Should Our Unions Have Anything to Say or Propose
About the State of the War in Iraq and Afghanistan?
By Harry Kelber
Since George Bush made his famous “Mission Accomplished” victory speech six years ago about the war in Iraq, it has been an undeclared policy for labor leaders to stick to domestic issues and leave statements about the progress of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan to the military. This is exactly how we got into the war—by trusting President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Pentagon’s Donald Rumsfeld.
There are a growing number of men and women in the labor movement, who are now convinced it was wrong to give President Bush a blank check to pursue a failed war in Iraq, that never should have been started. Older activists remember that it was the anti-war movement, not Henry Kissinger, that brought the long Vietnam war to an end. And they are not going to be badgered into silence by smooth-talking politicians.
The American people are paying a heavy price in lives and treasure for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; We certainly have a right to ask what value are we getting for our money? We want to be kept informed, not misled We want to hear from the troops as well as from the generals We want to be listened to with respect when we express our opinions about the wars.
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