“waiting for lefty: the state of the peace movement in the us.” john berg

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“Waiting for Lefty: The State of the Peace Movement in the US.” John Berg

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“Waiting for Lefty: The State of the Peace Movement in the US.”

John Berg

US Peace Movement

What is in a Name?

A 1935 Play: Waiting for LeftyUnion organizers waiting for Lefty, their leader. (Will he show?)

Current US Peace Movement:The movement was not waiting for an elected leader, it was waiting to elect a leader who would end the war in Iraq.

US Peace Movement

Berg’s Argument: State of the Peace MovementIn comparison to the 1960s and 1960s, the US peace movement today is

weaker, though the public is more opposed or uncertain about the war in Iraq.

Challenging the Convention Wisdom: The importance of the DraftA weak peace movement is not a result of the absence of a draft, rather it is a result of the fact that peace activists believe the war be ended through elections.

US Peace Movement

Vietnam War: A History

Tonkin Gulf Resolution: (August 7, 1964)Congress authorized the president to use force in Vietnam if necessary.

Troop Escalation:President Johnson escalated the war in early 1965:

- Operation Rolling Thunder (February 1965)- Rapidly increased troop levels (1964: 16,000; 1965: 180,000)

What was Johnson’s personal/political rationale for sending additional troops?

US Peace Movement

Public Response: Rapidly Escalating Protests

Students for Democratic Society (SDS)Organized a protest on April 17, 1965 in DC. 30,000 people showed up.

National Mobilization Committee (May 1967)/Vietnam Moratorium:October 1967: 100,000 people protested in Washington, followed by civil disobedience at the Pentagon (800 arrested).

Five Years After Tonkin Gulf incident: International protests, 500,000 at October 1969 protest

US Peace Movement

Student Response: Challenge University complicity with the war

Targeted:1) Military research facilities2) Military recruitment on campuses3) Faculty contacts with the CIA 4) ROTC

US Peace Movement

Student Response: Developed a Broader Analysis

1) Anti-imperialist analysis 2) Linked antiwar and the civil rights movement

Developed New Tactics:1) Militant civil disobedience2) Building occupations 3) Campus strikes

US Peace Movement

War in Iraq: A different Public and Student Response

Started with Large Demonstrations: 1) 6 to 10 million people worldwide protest ( February 15 2003).2) 250,00 million march in New York3) 300,000 march the day after the war begins4) 2 million protest on the first anniversary of the invasion (March 2004).

US Peace Movement

War in Iraq: A different Public and Student Response

Strength of Movement Fades: After Bush declares victory (May 1, 2003)

No Large-Scale Student Opposition: 1) Limited student opposition to the war2) No analytical critique of universities

US Peace Movement

Comparing the Opposition to Vietnam and Iraq Wars:Scholars have debated a number of reasons for the absence of a strong

opposition to the Iraq war.

Three Commonly Cited Reasons: 1) The absence of a draft (which mobilized students in 1960s)2) Divisions within the current antiwar/peace movement3) Differing strategies (social movement versus electoral tactics)

US Peace Movement

Comparing the Opposition to Vietnam and Iraq Wars:But there are problems with each argument:

The absence of a draft in Iraq War: 1) Is it reasonable to assume that students would be more likely to protest than individuals who have been drafted into the National Guard during the Vietnam War?2) Timing: most college students got an exemption from the draft until 1971. Most large-scale student protests happened before 1971.

US Peace Movement

Comparing the Opposition to Vietnam and Iraq Wars:But there are problems with each argument:

Divisions within the antiwar/peace movement: The antiwar movement now is no more divided than it was in the 1960s. United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) and Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (ANSWER) may disagree over tactics, for the same thing happened within SDS, for example, the 1960s.

US Peace Movement

Comparing the Opposition to Vietnam and Iraq Wars:But there are problems with each argument:

Differing strategies (social movement versus electoral tactics) and Electoral Environments:In the 1960s, the antiwar movement did not believe the war be ended by electoral means, since it had been started by the Democratic Party (to which most of the movement was politically affiliated). Now, however, the antiwar movement was led to believe that a Democrat might be willing to stop a war started by a Republican (George Bush).

US Peace Movement

Comparing the Opposition to Vietnam and Iraq Wars:

Differing Electoral Environments:Opponents of the war in Iraq looked to and pursued an electoral strategy to end the war in Iraq. The work of MoveOn.org provides a clear example of this:

1) 2004: Peace Movement Supports Dems (Dean, Kerry).2) 2004: Greens did not directly oppose Democrats.3) 2006: Peace Movement focuses on Congressional Election4) 2008: Elect Obama, who will end the war in Iraq.

US Peace MovementComparing the Opposition to Vietnam and Iraq Wars:

Differing Electoral Environments:The peace movements electoral strategy has produced only limited results:

1) 2004: Dean, then Kerry losses.2) 2006: Democrats win control of Congress, but lack the votes to end the war, or overrule a presidential veto.3) 2008: Obama is elected, keeps promise to withdraw troops from Iraq by August, 2010.

Is Obama lefty?