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President Bush Ditches Mother Of Slain Soldier
Nathan Diebenow, The Lone Star
Aug 11, 2005
CRAWFORD
— The mother of a U.S. soldier slain in Iraq was denied a
face-to-face meeting with President Bush here Saturday after she walked
through a ditch-like path in the August heat to the President’s
Prairie Chapel Ranch.
“I didn’t come all this way from California to stand here
in a ditch,” said Cindy Sheehan, 48, co-founder of Gold Star
Families for Peace, attempting to continue her trek to the ranch.
Even though two of the President’s aides later agreed to deliver
her message to him, Sheehan said that she would remain in Crawford for
the whole month, if need be, until she is granted a private audience
with the commander-in-chief to ask him for what “noble
cause” did her son die overseas.
“If he doesn’t come out to talk to me in Crawford,
I’ll follow him to D.C., and I’ll camp out on his
lawn,” she said, to a round of applause from her supporters.
“I’ll go to prison. I don’t want to live in a country
where people are treated this way.”
Sheehan’s actions, she said, were sparked by President
Bush’s comments like those made last Wednesday in Grapevine to
about 1,800 members of the American Legislative Exchange Council:
“Our men and women who’ve lost their lives in Iraq and
Afghanistan and in this war on terror have died in a noble cause and a
selfless cause.”
“We all know by now that that’s not true, and I want to ask
George Bush, ‘Why did my son die? What was the noble cause that
he died for?’” said Sheehan. “I don’t want
[President Bush] to use my son’s name or my family name to
justify any more killing or to exploit my son’s name, my
son’s sacrifice, or my son’s honor to justify more killing.
As a mother, why would I want one more mother to go through what
I’m going through, Iraqi or American?
“And I want to tell him that the only way to honor my son’s sacrifice is to bring the troops home now.”
Her son, Casey Sheehan, 24, of Vacaville, Calif., died in Baghdad,
Iraq, on April 4, 2004, when his unit was attacked with
rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire. He was assigned to 1st
Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort
Hood, Texas.
Bush’s comments Wednesday coincided with the deaths of 12 Marine
reservists from Ohio who were killed in perhaps the deadliest roadside
bombing of U.S. troops in Iraq. So far, the lives of about 1,821
Americans in uniform have been taken since the 2003 invasion. Pollsters
indicate that Bush’s approval ratings are declining in relation
to the rise in U.S. casualties in Iraq.
Sheehan, joining anti-war activists at the Crawford Peace House,
arrived with a busload of veterans from the Veterans for Peace
convention which was held in Irving, near Dallas, since Thursday. The
total group of activists there numbered over 50 and included members of
Veteran’s for Peace (VFP), Military Families Speak Out (MFSO),
Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW), CodePink, and the Crawford Peace
House.
Vietnam veteran Jim Waters, not affliated with any activist group, said
that he drove overnight from Lubbock alone in support of Sheehan and
the Gold Star Families for Peace because he is “very
concerned” about the war in Iraq and wants to ask President Bush,
“Why aren’t his daughters there?”
“One of the principles of leadership is you don’t ask
people to do what you yourself don’t have the courage to do, and
[President Bush] is asking people to fight to their deaths when he
himself and most of the architects of this war never served,”
said Waters, a retired Navy commander and former hospital
administrator. “[President Bush] served, but he jumped over
10,000 people to get into the National Guard Champagne Unit, so he
could avoid duty in Vietnam. I had to go to Vietnam, and now he’s
sending them to their deaths — over 1,800 so far.
“I’m sick and tired of what’s happening to our
country,” he continued. “To me it’s almost like the
White House operation is a mob operation. These guys are scary, and
they’re dangerous, in my opinion.”
The demonstrators gathered around one side of Sheehan as she spoke with
the news media. A World War II veteran, Archie Goodwin from Naples,
Fla., carrying a sign, stated away from the group that he is for peace,
but “Bush isn’t.” His sign read, “Somebody
lied.”
Sheehan was accompanied on Saturday by her sister, Dede Miller, and Amy
Ranham, another mother of a slain U.S. soldier. Among her fellow
supporters present were Ann Wright, a former U.S. diplomat who resigned
her post in March 2003 in protest of the invasion of Iraq; Camilo
Mejia, a reservist in the Florida National Guard who became a
consciousness objector upon returning from service in Iraq; and Persian
Gulf War Veteran Dennis Kyne, a former battlefield medic who is
outspoken on the effects of depleted uranium weapons.
Captain Kenneth Vanek of the McLennan County Sherriff’s
Department agreed to lead the caravan of anti-war demonstrators to the
Bush Ranch. “As long as y’all work with us, we’ll
work with y’all,” he said.
The situation, however, turned less friendly as the afternoon progressed.
At a checkpoint, the demonstrators, on orders from the peace officers,
exited their vehicles about eight miles from the ranch and were told to
walk in the direction of the ranch on the shoulder of the road, not the
roadway itself, so as to not impede the traffic. The conditions of the
shoulder made it increasingly difficult for the demonstrators to walk.
Five-to-10-feet wide, the shoulder was sloped inward ditch-like to
two-to-three feet in some places and lined with dry, uncut grass and
damp dirt.
The deputies finally ordered the demonstrators to halt miles from the
ranch because the group had not agreed to its side of the
“bargain” by walking on the roadway. “The media is
allowed on the road, so why aren’t we?” asked one of the
demonstrators, to which an officer of the Sheriff’s Department
replied, “Because they were following you.”
Sheehan, making one last attempt to push forward, said, “In the
name of 1,828 soldiers that should be alive, I’m going to see the
president. He killed my son.”
Holding signs that said, “No more blood for oil,”
“Support our troops, bring them home now,” “Iraq is
Arabic for Viet Nam,” and “Frodo failed. Bush has the
ring,” the demonstrators then chanted, “W. killed her son.
W. killed her son.”
This first attempt to meet the President ended up futile. Members of
the group, including Sheehan, exchanged a few heated words with the
Sherriff’s deputies, Secret Service agents, and Texas Department
of Public Safety troopers who kept their composure through the
afternoon. There were no arrests made during the demonstration.
Other political slogans and chants were heard, including one from Hadi
Jawad of the Crawford Peace House who urged the news media keep
reporting on the Downing Street memos. These documents are a series of
classified, British reports made during a planning session between
British and American officials over Iraq months before its invasion.
The British officials note in the memos that the United States was
“fixing” evidence around the administration’s policy
to justify the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
Sheehan, after the mainsteam media had left to file their reports,
said, “This is the beginning of the end of the occupation of
Iraq.” A wild round of applause followed.
White House spokesman Trent Duffy said in response to Sheehan’s
actions that President Bush also wants the troops to return home safely
but their mission must be completed in their honor. Two aides to the
President, national security adviser Steve Hadley and deputy White
House chief of staff Joe Hagin, later met with Sheehan to say that the
president cares, but she, though appreciative, said in a message
through The Iconoclast to the President, “George Bush, if you
really care about me, why aren’t you meeting with me?”
Sheehan, an opponent of the war in Iraq since its inception, took part
in a meeting with other military families and Bush in June 2004 at Fort
Lewis, near Seattle, Wash. This occured two months after her son was
killed in Iraq. In an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on
Sunday, she said that during her first meeting with President Bush, she
felt that the President seemed more jovial than sorrowful and expressed
no interest in knowing the name of her son or seeing pictures of him.
Sheehan intends to continue to attempt to gain an audience with
President Bush. “I’m filled with hope now, too, that we
might be able to turn things around,” she said, noting that
additional support is on its way from throughout the country as she
continues her efforts, which will include a candlelight vigil. Caravans
from Louisiana and San Diego are on the way, to name a couple, she said.
Before her first attempt to speak to President Bush in Crawford,
Sheehan met with two victims of the Hiroshima nuclear bombing, Dr.
Satoru Konishi and ex-Marine Paul Ritthaler, and Ritthaler’s
wife, Betty. A press conference was held at the Peace House on the 60th
anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing.
During the day Sunday, Sheehan received numerous votes of thanks,
well-wishes, and support from around the globe, said Diane Wilson,
founding member of CodePink, a national anti-war group. While Sheehan
was doing interviews Sunday afternoon, small groups of supporters were
arriving at her campsite, dropping off supplies and and enjoying the
cloudy weather on Prairie Chapel Road.
Wilson announced Sunday that she is starting a hunger strike in
Crawford aimed at getting President Bush to talk with Cindy Sheehan,
mother of a U.S. soldier slain in Iraq. According to CodePink’s
website Sunday evening, three others have joined the strike: Jodie
Evans, Cindy Sheehan’s sister DeeDee, and Sarah Rath. Wilson said
she believes that more volunteers will follow suit around the country
in the coming days.
Friends of Peace and Justice of Waco are in the process of mobilizing
support for Sheehan’s perhaps month-long vigil. More information
can be obtained at the Crawford Peace House website or by calling (254)
486-0099 after Monday.
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