Protest Against Bush Attack on Iran at Norfolk Naval Base
By Mac McKinney
Staff writer for The Southern ‘I’
10/03/06 "Southern ‘I’" -- --
Protesters held a peace demonstration at Gate 5 at NOB, the
Norfolk Naval Operating Base, home of the Atlantic Fleet, Sunday
afternoon, October 1st. This was in response to ongoing,
threatening rhetoric toward Iran by the Bush Administration and
news that a nuclear carrier strike group led by the USS
Eisenhower would be steaming out of Norfolk on Tuesday, October
3. The small strike group, consisting of some half-dozen naval
vessels, is said to be under orders to position itself for
actions off the coast of Iran by October 21st, 2006.
This is viewed by alarm in many quarters, particularly in light
of the fact that the US Air Force was tasked earlier this year
with drawing up plans for a massive bombing campaign against
Iranian nuclear reactor facilities and military infrastructure.
And there have been allegations in various journals and websites
of clandestine U.S. Special Forces-sponsored activities within
Iran’s borders, including sabotage and assassinations, possibly
through the aegis of the Kurdistan Workers Party or PKK, a
Kurdish independence group traditionally on the U.S. State
Department terrorist list, that is accused by both Turkey and
Iran of ongoing terrorist acts against their citizens.
In response to all this, local peace and justice groups mounted
a demonstration against an attack on Iran from Noon to after
2:00 pm today outside Gate 5, the main entrance for the
submarine piers at NOB, taking up positions at all four corners
of the intersection at Gate Five with signs and posters. Members
of the Norfolk Catholic Worker, Hampton Roads Peace and Justice
Coalition, the Tidewater Peace Alliance, Gaia Circle, Norfolk
Food Not Bombs as well as the Defenders for Freedom, Justice and
Equality focused on getting their messages out to local
motorists and pedestrians going in and out of the Naval Base or
moving up and down Hampton Blvd, many of whom are military
personnel. Reaction from military personnel and other motorists
was quite mixed, with some honking in support, many just staring
at the signs to read them, and some yelling out various hostile
remarks, several too crude to print.
Asked why she was demonstrating, Luna Negra, one of the
organizers from the Tidewater Peace Alliance, said, “The purpose
of this event for me was to let the military know that we are
aware of the intentions of the Bush Administration in relation
to Iran, just like we knew what their intentions were in
relation to Iraq. We took to the streets before the war on Iraq
and we will take to the streets again in order to be heard by
the people in power. Any of these wars are not endorsed by me or
by many of the American people.”
Around 1:00 pm demonstrators were surprised when an organization
all the way from the Washington DC/Maryland area showed up and
joined the demonstration, some half dozen members of CASMII, the
Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran,
carrying two large banners demanding dialogue with and
truthfulness about Iran that they unfurled along Hampton Blvd.
They had gotten wind of the local event through the Internet and
were glad to make the long drive to Hampton Roads to confront
what they consider a serious threat to the Middle East region.
They pointed out that certain elements within the Bush
Administration, the Media and Congress are clearly pressing an
attack on Iran.
They commented also that there seems to be a de facto media
blackout on demonstrations against war with Iran in the
Washington DC area. Ironically, there was no media coverage of
the demonstration today by any local newspapers or TV Stations
except for the Southern ‘I’, a small, local independent journal.
Local TV station and Fox affiliate WTKR, Channel 10, did do an
interview on a previous date with one of the organizers and did
dispatch a news van to this Sunday’s event. However, bizarrely,
no personnel ever left their van and they simply drove off after
a short wait.
When asked about this episode, another demonstration organizer,
Star Womanspirit of the Tidewater Peace Alliance exclaimed, “I
am here to do what I can to give a voice to the majority of the
people. The majority of Iraqis (62%), the majority of our troops
(72%), and the majority of Americans (64%) want America to
withdraw from Iraq. These voices have been silenced by a
corporate media that gives the elite--a tiny group--the power to
blast their message all over the world. That same corporate
media that silences the voices of the majority refused to cover
this rally today....the first local rally against Bush's war on
Iran.”
All told, some thirty plus individuals showed up over the two
hour plus period in the hot sun to voice their displeasure with
the Bush Administration's increasingly hostile stance toward
Iran. Some demonstrators also discussed among themselves reports
and rumors on the Internet that Karl Rove has promised the
Republican leadership an October Surprise, speculating whether
an attack on Iran would become just such a politically motivated
scenario.
The Southern ‘I’, a Hampton Roads, Virginia Independent Media
Journal
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