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Ms. Benjamin tells Paul Jay that when it comes to integrating foreign policy issues in broad united fronts, Democratic Party allied unions try to block it
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PAUL JAY: Welcome back to The Real News Network.
This is Reality Asserts Itself with Medea Benjamin, who joins us again in the studio.
JAY: So, one more time, Medea is cofounder of Code Pink, cofounder with Jodie Evans in
2002.
And she's the author of the book Drone Warfare: Killing by Remote Control.
Thanks for joining us.
MEDEA BENJAMIN: Thank you.
JAY: So in the last segment, we left off talking about the state of the American antiwar movement.
And you were talking about, you know, the way Obama and the Democratic Party sucked
a lot of the air out of the antiwar movement.
But is there also a problem, especially internally, with the movement?
I mean, with the financial and economic crisis of 2008, one would have thought maybe that
would have been an upsurge of resistance against such massive unemployment, you know, millions
of people losing their houses, and so on.
Everybody knows how bad it got and for many people still is.
In some of the urban centers in many, many cities across the country, including where
we are, in Baltimore, it's always been bad.
Chronic poverty here is terrible.
Is there a problem with the movement that it gets segmented?
So, like, you have--you know, you've done a lot of work on drones, and you have other
people talking about minimum wage.
But to really shift public opinion, does this not have to be somehow a more kind of integrated
vision, and then mostly deal with these issues at a way that ordinary people really get?
'Cause for most of the people we talk to in Baltimore, drones, foreign policy, like, it's
an abstraction.
BENJAMIN: Sure.
Yes, it's a huge problem that we're in our own silos.
As Code Pink, we try to be in solidarity with lots of different movements.
And so you'll see last night we were out at one of the protests around the Keystone Pipeline.
And we'll go--we're doing next week one that is trying to protect the bees.
And then we'll be doing the NSA stop spying.
And then we'll be at a minimum wage--increase the minimum wage rallies and union kinds of
things.
So we are all over the map in the sense that we see it as an integrated whole, and we like
to be supportive of lots of different movements.
But our movement is too separated.
And when it comes to trying to integrate the foreign policy issues, it's very, very difficult.
For example, the unions, I mean, there are so many unions that have union locals that
are involved in creating weapons, and so they won't take an antiwar position.
JAY: And you have union leadership so in bed with the Democratic Party leadership, you're
not allowed to critique foreign policy if it's a Democratic Party president.
BENJAMIN: Right.
So then there's these beautiful coalitions that are brought together, bringing all kinds
of different issues together to say, let's all work to increase the minimum wage, and
they barely want to invite the peace people into the room, because they don't want to
include that in the platform.
Now, we worked hard to get it in, and we have managed.
And I would say we have a good relationship with lots of different campaigns that are
going on.
But in general you're right.
And how do we address it?
Well, take the drones, for example.
We understand that partially because of the media not covering the issue of drone warfare
and giving us lots of examples of these poor families who've been affected by it in places
like Pakistan and Yemen, that there's very little knowledge and sympathy in the United
States.
That's why we bring the issue in about are you concerned about our airspace being opened
up to drones in 2015; and what is this going to mean for communities that are already oversurveilled,
infiltrated by police agents; who is going to be targeted; and reach out to those communities.
And we've had tremendous success in that, Paul.
So when I go out--and I've been to over 200 cities in the last year talking about drones--I
bring sample resolutions that you can pass in your own community, say, you don't want
your police department to have access to drones unless there is a court order, there are regulations
in place about how these can be used, our privacy is being protected.
And we've been tremendously successful in getting these passed on the statewide level.
There are over 40 states that are in the process of passing or have passed regulations to limit
the use.
And so we've reached out to libertarians, to ACLU, to legal groups, to Muslim communities,
to black community, and find tremendous response for that.
JAY: But is there a problem with focusing, in the drone discussion, too much on the drones?
BENJAMIN: Sure.
JAY: And what I mean by that is this, is that, you know, Islamic extremists, al-Qaeda type
forces, I mean, one has to believe that there are many of them that would like to blow things
up in the United States and hit American targets.
I mean, I don't have any reason to see why that isn't true.
One understands, if one studies this even a little bit, this is almost entirely the
consequence of U.S. foreign policy to begin with, I mean, from inviting bin Laden to come
to Afghanistan, to support for the Saudi Royal family that's up to their eyeballs in this
stuff, to creating the conditions through one-sided support for Israel.
And, you know, the whole of American oil politics is all about get the oil and screw the Arab
peoples.
Given all that, you then give rise to people that come with, to my mind, rather sociopathic
responses, and even very self-destructive policies in terms of the interests of the
Arab peoples.
But they really do want to do some damage.
So once you get to that point in the argument, a lot of people say--and I think, you know,
people have very mixed feelings about this, that it's better to use drones over there
than to have something blow up over here.
And so this isn't so much a defense of drones.
If you don't add to the argument you want to stop people from coming over here and blowing
you up, get the hell out of the Middle East.
Doesn't that get a little lost in just the focus on drones?
BENJAMIN: Well, no, because what we're doing is saying why this focus on drones that is
the centerpiece of a counterterrorism policy, along with the commando raids and along with
the cyberwars, is to say that it doesn't work.
And it's not only ineffective in getting rid of extremism; it's causing more.
And so what are the alternatives?
And then we have to talk about the alternatives.
So when we go around talking about this, one, we're bringing it up in the civil liberties
context, so that Americans care about it here at home, and two, we're bringing it up in
the context of how are we going to move ourselves away from perpetual war and away from a war
economy.
So, yes, these all have to be put in context.
And we try to do that--maybe not always successfully, but we do try to do it.
And I think we've been amazingly successful in convincing a lot more Americans that drones
are ineffective way of countering terrorism, because you see a precipitous drop in the
polls from 2012 being over 80 percent of Americans supporting the use of drones to kill terrorist
suspects overseas to about 60 percent now.
That's a big drop, given that this is a policy the administration and the right are in favor
of.
And we've also been successful in forcing Obama to talk about this policy, a policy
that was secret before, and in forcing some changes in the policy, so that right now there
is supposedly a moratorium on the use of drones in Pakistan.
And there's been a decline in the number of drone strikes from a high in 2010 of 128 strikes
in one year to only 26 strikes last year.
So we've affected the policy.
JAY: And what do you think is the alternative?
Let's talk about Pakistan a little bit.
You know, in the areas where al-Qaeda and the Pakistan Taliban have strongholds, this
is mostly where they're hitting with the drones--of course, not only.
What is the alternative?
BENJAMIN: The alternative is what's happening right now, is for peace talks to happen.
The Taliban are part of the society.
They have to be reincorporated into society.
And how do terrorist groups end?
They most of the time--in fact, there was a study done by the RAND Corporation that
showed that 40 percent of 268, quote, terrorist groups that they looked at over the last 60
years ended by better policing.
You capture people and you give them trials.
Another 40 percent were through peace talks, negotiations, incorporating people into society.
And only 7 percent was through military action.
We've been doing the military action for over 12 years now, so now we have to try something
different.
JAY: Well, it seems to me President Obama actually proposed a pretty good solution,
except he never did it.
These things--it's amazing how these things get said and then completely forgotten in
terms of the mass media and the discourse.
And Bush did the same thing.
After 9/11, he said what we need in Afghanistan is something like a Marshall Plan for the
reconstruction of Afghanistan.
Of course, it never happened.
American troops chased the Taliban around the hills, and they left development up to
Norway and Canada and Germany, and it spent very little time--.
BENJAMIN: Well, it spent a lot of--it misspent a lot of U.S. tax dollars in what was supposed
to be nation-building, but most of the time didn't build anything.
JAY: But it was mostly war-making.
Yeah.
But then he said the same thing about Pakistan.
His Pakistan policy was going to be a civilian upsurge in Pakistan as well.
And the way to deal with the situation was to fight poverty in these areas of Pakistan.
And then, after saying all this, he never did it, and no one's ever asked him, hey,
what happened to your policy.
BENJAMIN: Well, look at Yemen, which is, after Pakistan, the second place where the drones
are being used so much.
There were maybe 200 groups that identify with extremist organizations when Obama started
the drones in 2009.
Now there's over 1,000.
And what's the biggest problem in Yemen is poverty.
And the U.S. has been focusing again on a failed strategy, one that we see failed in
Pakistan, and now trying to implement that same thing in Yemen with the drone strikes.
And with every single drone strikes, there are more and more people who join the ranks
of extremist groups to try to seek revenge.
JAY: Let's get back to the antiwar movement, 'cause there's kind of two issues.
One, we talked a bit about how the Democratic Party, both through the unions and others,
as long as there's a Democratic Party in power, in the White House, it takes the legs out
of the antiwar movement, especially in united front building.
I remember there was something that the unions held, some rally.
I think--was it--Al Sharpton or someone hosted it.
And they wouldn't allow anyone come to speak that was going to critique foreign policy.
BENJAMIN: Right.
JAY: You could talk about inequality in mild ways.
But there's another issue, and this partly has to do with linking these movements together,
is that not entirely, but to a large extent, you have such a racial divide in the American
left and American movement.
You know, you have white groups, and then you have black organizations, and, you know,
you have a little bit of in-between.
And you can see when some of the unions rallies, you see some of the more ordinary people come
out and you see a fairly diverse--but at the leadership levels, mostly white.
To really have a people's movement in this country, that needs to be faced up to, doesn't
it?
BENJAMIN: Well, sure.
I think the antiwar movement, when it was at the height of the movement under Bush,
we got a lot of people in the black community to come out.
And many of the leaders, the people who were the faces of the movement, were leaders in
the black movement who told us--and I think it's true--that the black community is the
most antiwar community as a segment of the community in the United States.
Now, that might have changed somewhat under Obama, because they support him as an individual,
but the black community tends to be a very antiwar community, even though there are a
lot of people from the black community in the U.S. military.
And I think that there's a need to connect the issues of violence in our communities,
whether it's violence overseas and violence here at home, which brings a lot of support
from the black communities in there.
And then there's the bigger question, which is linking the amounts of money we spend on
the military and what that does to rob our communities from resources we need to rebuild.
And we have met many times, when Ben Jealous was the head of the NAACP, and he sees this
totally.
He says he was a conscientious objector from the time he was five years old.
And he totally gets how the money going into the military is sucking money out of black
communities, is keeping wages low, is part of the reason why we're in this economic crisis.
And that is something that we, as the antiwar community, have been trying to focus on.
JAY: King linked the two brilliantly.
BENJAMIN: Brilliantly.
Totally he linked it.
And our problem is: how do you link that in reality?
I mean, we can go and talk to people, and they understand that you can't have a war
economy and have the guns and butter at the same time.
But when it comes to actually making changes, then we get stuck.
I think we get more stuck on the how do we get cuts to the military budget, because you
see in the Congress that we have even Democrats don't want to touch the military budget, and
all of them want to continue to give increases to veterans' benefits.
And then the military, the weapons industry is so brilliant in making weapons in every
single congressional district in this country that even the Democrats will then say, well,
don't cut these tanks that the military doesn't even need anymore, because those are jobs
in my community.
JAY: So what do you see over the next two years or so?
BENJAMIN: Well, I see that we have momentum on our side because of where the American
people are.
And some people call it war weariness, which I think is true, but I also think there's
a war wiseness, where American people have learned that even if they want to help the
Syrian people, for example, that U.S. military intervention is just going to make matters
worse, because look at the record in Afghanistan, look at the record in Iraq.
And that is something that is a positive development, in Americans not being very anxious to get
involved in another war.
And I think we have to build on that.
And part of building on that is to say that one of the reasons it allows us to get into
these wars is because we have this strong military-industrial complex that does eat
up so much of the pie, and then move towards how are we going to shrink that piece of the
pie.
JAY: And how do you avoid or how do you deal with--let's say it's a Hillary running in
'16.
You're going to have, oh, women who want the first female president.
You could--I don't know who the Republican's going to be, but let's assume it's going to
be someone who's going to surround themselves with John Bolton types and more of the neocon
war hawks.
So, you know, while Hillary is her own kind of war hawk, they seem to be more extremist
than she would be.
You could wind up having somewhat a same replay.
How do you deal with that?
BENJAMIN: You know, I think we build up a movement that is not connected to the Democratic
Party.
There are libertarians right now who we work with on the issue of Iran and that joined
us in trying to stop the war on Syria.
They are now looking at their positions around Iran, and many of them are with us in saying
it's--we have to continue to hold back the forces of war there.
I think that if we can build a movement that's not tied at the hip to the Democratic Party,
we will find allies in different sectors, and we will be able to peel off some of the
Democrats who were afraid to speak up under Obama.
So I feel the momentum is on our side.
I think that this empire cannot continue to devour itself and still be able to supply
people's needs at home.
And those contradictions are becoming more and more apparent.
I think we're going to be able to insert the antiwar message more into movements, like
movements for decent wages and a full employment in the United States, because the military
is one of the worst industries--.
JAY: And, for that matter, climate change, for that matter.
BENJAMIN: And climate change.
You look at the military, it's the worst way to create jobs.
And I think it is going to be finding ways to make alliances across these different sectors,
to have movements that are not Democratic Party-based movements, and that also have
global alliances, because these are global issues.
We had a big global movement that was building before 9/11 that also disintegrated.
And I think that movement is building itself back up.
I know on the antiwar front we are recreating a lot of the connections that we had before.
I'm on my way to Gaza with 100 women representing women from about 12 different countries, and
we are purposely building up an international global women's movement.
So I think there's lots of positive things that we can build on in the coming years.
JAY: Great.
Well, thanks for joining us.
BENJAMIN: Thank you.
JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News and Reality Asserts Itself.
And we'll be back soon.
The Movement is in Silos - Medea Benjamin on Reality Asserts Itself (4/4)
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