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War on Iraq

Carlos' Way: Turning Grief Into Action

By Amy Goodman, King Features Syndicate. Posted March 14, 2007.


As the U.S. enters its fifth year in Iraq, an increasingly powerful voice comes from soldiers and their families, who are turning grief into anti-war action.
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The United States is entering the fifth year of its violent, failed occupation of Iraq, longer than the U.S. was involved in World War II. Through the grimly deepening quagmire, a strengthening, pervasive U.S. anti-war movement is emerging. An increasingly powerful voice comes from soldiers and their families, turning grief into action. Take the Arredondo family.

On Aug. 25, 2004 -- Carlos Arredondo's 44th birthday -- a U.S. Marine van arrived outside his house. He thought that his son Alex had managed to come home from his second deployment to Iraq to surprise him. Instead, the Marines informed him that Alex had been killed in action in Najaf.

Carlos lost his mind. He asked, he begged, the Marines to leave. He pleaded. They didn't leave, so he ran to his garage and grabbed a hammer, gasoline and a blowtorch. He began pummeling the van. He climbed in, pouring the gasoline. His mother, distraught and wailing, tried to pull him from the van. The blowtorch accidentally sparked, and Carlos was blown from the van into the yard, in flames.

Then his wife, Melida, arrived. She saw her husband burning. Carlos' younger son, Brian, 16 years old, in Bangor, Maine, saw the incident on television. This was the day he learned that the brother he loved and emulated was dead.

Carlos suffered burns on more than one-quarter of his body. The physical healing was the easy part. It is the emotional healing that he pursues in his tireless and remarkable odyssey to end the war. To honor Alex's memory, he has been crisscrossing the country, from Capitol Hill to Crawford, Texas, pulling a flag-draped coffin. He calls it his public mourning: "I want the caskets coming home to be very public. The government doesn't want you to see them."

Carlos stopped for a few days this week in New York. He parked outside the military recruiting station in Times Square, where activists have established an "Endless" War Memorial. For six days, sunrise to sunset, hundreds of people are taking turns reading the names of the Iraq War dead -- all the dead whose names could be discovered. The roughly 3,200 U.S. military fatalities, the other "coalition" casualties, the journalists and the 7,733 Iraqi names they were able to find. The organizers point out that there are 200 unnamed dead Iraqis for each of the thousands they have gathered (based on the British medical journal Lancet study estimating more than 650,000 Iraqi dead).

The scene is surreal and unforgettable. Passers-by stop at the flag-draped coffin Carlos has rolled out of the back of his pickup truck. There are army boots of loved ones lost, and large photos of grieving Iraqi women and one of Alex in an open casket. This is all set against the massive video display atop the recruiting station. Among its slogans: "There is nothing on this green earth stronger than the US Army." Above that, an even larger display promotes Fox News, Bill O'Reilly and flashing phrases like "Gitmo justice." The famous Dow Jones news zipper runs its endless recitation of stock quotes and the daily count of dead and injured. A video ad for sunglasses flashes the words "Never Hide."

Carlos is heading next to Washington, D.C., to lead this weekend's march on the Pentagon.

As we part, Carlos shows me the latest recruiting letter sent to his son Brian. It contains a fake red, white and blue credit card with Brian's name on it. It says: "This is not a credit card. It is money in the bank." An earlier letter promises him a bonus of up to $20,000. "What can you do with $20,000? A new car? Pay off credit cards? Help your family? ... Remember the decisions you are making right now will have a huge impact on how the rest of your life turns out." Which is exactly why Carlos prays his surviving son will not join up.

Meanwhile, around the corner, each name being read was once a living, breathing, complex human being, whose life was snuffed out as a result of this four-year-old war. Alongside the named dead are living people, like Carlos, following their conscience, making connections, building a movement, each day bringing the end of the war one day closer.

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Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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Anti-recruitment letter
Posted by: oldwoman on Mar 15, 2007 8:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm going to print this out and give a copy to my nephew who's talking about joining the military when he graduates from high school. Is there any such thing as an information packet designed to counter the military recruitment packages of lies handed out to vulnerable and uninformed kids? If not, that's a good task for pro-peace organizations who might be able to intervene and educate these kids with vivid images and real-life stories of the horrors that lurk behind recruitment sales pitches.

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anti war. great, democratic party, not so
Posted by: wleming on Mar 15, 2007 10:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anti war activists are doing more and more each day. But they must consider a third party, the Democrats have proven themselves.. NOT A pro WAR PARTY.
Democratise the Democrats.... lets get a third party thats anti war.

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Amy Goodman is a hypocrite
Posted by: gretavo on Mar 15, 2007 10:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If she cared at all about the people dying she would stop ignoring the obvious problems with the official story of 9/11. There is just no excuse at this point--she has been approached many times about it and insists that evil muslims attacked us because they hate our freedom. What is wrong with some of these so-called progressives? Whose side are they actually on?

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» RE: Hate Our Freedom? Posted by: Edward George
Our Military keeps us Safe
Posted by: kbest on Mar 15, 2007 7:49 PM   
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Thank God so many good people have a yearning to keep America safe. The all volunteer force. These people that protest outside recruitment centers just don't get it. If you do what they do in some countries, you become a political prisoner or worse, end up in a mass grave.
I salute our noble warriors all over the globe, protecting the United States of America, the greatest test of democracy ever.

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thank you mr arredondo
Posted by: blaine s on Mar 15, 2007 9:47 PM   
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i think actions like his may help galvanize the resolve to end the war. the public should see the coffins coming home, this way the human cost of was will be more plainly evident. for most people, all they see is a number. this makes it a mere statistic to many, not personal enough. it took the coffins to swing it with regards to vietnam. of course the MSM is complicit in this debacle, so i don't expect it to happen. one wonders how so many can lack any sense of humanity...

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Every recruitment center
Posted by: oregoncharles on Mar 16, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Brilliant. There should be flag-draped coffins in front of every recruitment center. The kids considering signing up deserve fair warning.

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