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Berkeley Rethinks Marine Snub
Bobby Caina Calvan, Sacramento Bee
February 12, 2008
That many folks in Berkeley oppose the war in Iraq should come as no
surprise. But in this city famously located on the far left, even some
war opponents say the City Council went too far last month when it
labeled military recruiters stationed here as "intruders" and
pronounced them a "violent influence" on the city's youth.
Now under the glare of unwanted national attention, the city tonight is
considering a possible retreat as it girds for hordes of out-of-town
protesters and news media.
City officials, while unwilling to fully back down, have found
themselves looking for the right words to calm their critics -- perhaps
by toning down the resolution's language and by clearly
differentiating, some said, between the war and the warrior.
While city leaders are accustomed to being dismissed by middle America,
they were clearly unprepared for a public relations backlash that
reached across the country -- fueled by talk radio, TV pundits and the
blogosphere.
Both sides of the war debate are expected to be out in force in
Berkeley's streets to rally for their respective causes on an issue
that has sometimes ebbed but has never been fully quieted.
"It's not over. Our Soldiers and all of us want them to come home, but
we want them to come home when it's over ... and when they win," said
Mary Pearson, deputy executive director of Move America Forward, a
Sacramento group that is mobilizing its supporters to counter anti-war
demonstrators who began a vigil this week as a prelude to tonight's
City Council session.
"They've gone too far. What are these people doing?" said Pearson. "We
are not going to let them disrespect our fine Soldiers who are fighting
overseas."
At its Jan. 29 meeting, the nine-member City Council reiterated its
distaste for the war when it said a Marine Corps recruiting office,
located a few blocks from a local high school and the flagship campus
of the University of California, was unwelcome.
It also gave the anti-war group Code Pink a permanent parking space in
front of the recruiting office, from which it could stage its frequent
protests.
On Monday afternoon, the recruiting station was dark, its blinds drawn
and doors locked. Police officers patrolled the area on bicycles.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. Marines' recruiting center for the San
Francisco region referred calls to recruiting command in Quantico, Va.,
but a spokesman could not be reached.
If Berkeley's mantra is to think globally and act locally, city
officials were nonetheless caught off guard by the swift reaction,
which included a call by conservative U.S. congressmen to withhold
federal funds for the city.
"I've had an avalanche of calls from across the country. The right wing
is calling us everything in the book and maybe hoping that we're
killed. I'm really concerned about our safety," said Councilwoman Betty
Olds, who voted against the resolution and has proposed that it be
reconsidered.
"I'm very much against the war, and I hope the majority of the people
in this country are," said Olds, whose twin brother was a U.S. Marine
in World War II. "But we should have nothing to do with the ability of
young people to join the Marines if they want to. If you want to blame
somebody, blame Bush -- don't blame the individual Marine"
Julie Sinai, a senior aide to Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates, said the mayor
"feels the vote was a symbolic vote against the Iraq war and the Marine
recruiting center has been a symbol of that war. We don't want to see
our young people recruited for that war."
But some said the inflammatory language of the resolution overshadowed the city's heartfelt opposition to the war.
"Nobody could care less if Berkeley passed a resolution against the
war, but some people thought they were making a statement against the
troops," said Scott Sigmund Gartner, a professor of political science
at UC Davis.
As a consequence, he said, "this has reignited the pro-war side."
"Who does Berkeley think they are? We're not going to let our sons and
daughters be treated despicably," said Deborah Johns, a "blue star
mother" from Granite Bay, whose son served three tours in Iraq with the
Marines.
"Why are they continuing to harass our Marines? Berkeley has brought it
upon themselves," Johns said. "Berkeley has to be held accountable for
their actions."
The City Council, in approving a recommendation from its Peace and
Justice Commission, encouraged people to avoid cooperating with the
recruiting office and applauded Code Pink for impeding the office.
A spokeswoman for Code Pink urged the council to stand its ground.
City officials, mindful of the criticism, have been attempting to draft
a resolution to clarify their position, said Councilman Maxwell
Anderson, a Vietnam veteran. "There will be no retreat in our
opposition to the war," he said.
"This was meant to be a very small effort to get out a countermessage to potential recruits," Anderson said.
"But in no way do we intend to denigrate the people who are still there
(in Iraq and Afghanistan) and who are going to come home."
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