Socialist
Party
National
Action Committee Minutes: February 20-22, 2010
-
Socialist Party USA
National Action Committee Minutes
December 3-15, 2009
Response to Obama's Surge in Afghanistan
Motion (written by Matthew Andrews/ moved by
Greg Pason): On December 1st, President Obama has announced that he
will send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan. The justification is paper
thin. Far from creating security, the occupation itself has created a
state of lawlessness in Afghanistan. The fraud ridden reelection of the
puppet Karzai regime has put popularity for the US mission in
Afghanistan through the floor, and further inflamed anger in the middle
east. Far from building Afghan sovereignty, Obama's policy is to deepen
support for an illegitimate regime with tight associations with oil
companies, drug lords, and warlords. Americans are waking up to the
fact that, like the occupation of Iraq, this occupation isn't making us
any safer, nor is it bringing development, democracy, security, or
women's rights to Afghanistan. Rather, it is killing Afghan civilians
and U.S./ NATO troops while stealing badly needed funds from housing,
jobs, healthcare, and climate protection. Even before the
election, Obama refused to counter McCain's assertion that the surge in
Iraq had worked. Instead he said US policy should turn toward
Afghanistan. One year into his administration and we are on course to
double the number of troops in Afghanistan from Bush Administration
levels.
The anti-war movement is
slowly and painfully learning several important lessons. First, that
these occupations do not represent the mistaken policies of a
peace-loving government, but rather are to a global system emanating
from Washington that can only be addressed in their entirety. And
second, the Democratic Party will not move one inch toward a less
belligerent policy.
These wars are about
seizing natural resources, expanding unregulated markets, and
dominating the middle east militarily, politically, and economically,
vis a vis our competitors in Europe and Asia. These motivations
are not unique to one country or region of the world; nor were they
unique to the Bush administration. Rather, these factors
characterize a decades old global US imperial project. Rather
than enjoying a much sought after “peace dividend” after the Cold War,
US military spending and curtailments on civil liberties
continued unabated.
From this understanding
we can see how deeply radical a true peace movement must be. An
antiwar stance ought to be a point of unity among a variety of
movements, from climate change to health care; workers rights to civil
rights. This broad unity must be matched by a firm commitment to
uncompromising struggle. We can expect that every angle of
non-violent force must be fully leveraged in order to impose such
radical changes on how the US ruling establishment conducts business.
Lastly, we should
recognize that some elements of the establishment may be split away
from supporting direct military confrontation in favor of “smarter”
more efficient levers of domination. The withdrawal of troops
from any theater of conflict would signal a major victory in terms of
lives saved and the morale of peoples' struggles everywhere. But
the peace movement must go further to address military spending and the
power of those who own the war industry, or else we can expect the
unending threats and interventions around the world to continue. We
must not tolerate occupations like that suffered in Palestine, which is
underwritten with US sponsorship. While we make the immediate
demand of “troops home now from Iraq and Afghanistan,” we must also lay
the foundation for a movement that can dismantle US militarism and
demand real alternatives.
As this new phase of
imperial expansion unfolds under the leadership of the Obama
administration, the Socialist Party USA stands ready to struggle for an
antiwar movement that respects the right to self-determination of the
Afghan people; a movement that is democratic and inclusive; a movement
that involves the participation of broad sectors of society; and
finally, a movement that is truly independent of the partisan interests
of the Democratic Party and the capitalists they represent. Motion passed 5 yes (Greg Pason,
Jerry Stastny, Andrea Pason, Jim Sanders and Diana Demers) and 1 no (Billy Wharton)
Endorsements
Motion: To Endorse the March 4th
call to “Defend Public Education”. Motion
passed unanimously.
Motion: To endorse the Witness
Against Torture call for actions to shut down Guantanamo on the 8th
anniversary of the opening of Guantanamo Bay as a detention facility
and end torture center. Motion passed
unanimously.
Meeting adjourned
Socialist Party
USA 339 Lafayette St. #303 New York, NY 10012