GIULIANI AND CLINTON TASTE OCCUPATION IN IOWA
by Mike Ferner
A new campaign to place the Iraq war in the center of Iowa's presidential caucus races kicked off in Des Moines yesterday.
But as often happens, it wasn't so much the protest that made the story as the reaction to it.
photo Michael Gillespie
Chris Gaunt, 51 year-old Iowa farmer is
led to jail after peacefully
"occupying"
Senator Hillary Clinton's Des Moines
campaign office to protest her
support
of the Iraq war.
"Seasons Of Discontent--A Presidential Occupation Campaign," or SODAPOP as its organizers dubbed it, targeted the campaigns of Rudolph Giuliani and Hillary Clinton, taking over their offices in the Iowa state capital and disrupting both campaigns for several hours before a total of 19 people were arrested.
The "law and order" Giuliani campaign waited only about two hours to call on the suburban Clive, Iowa police to arrest 10 activists. The Clinton campaign appeared more reluctant to remove the protesters, waiting almost eight hours before requesting the Des Moines Police Department remove nine activists.
DES MOINES - The last two hours of the Clinton occupation generated reactions
from young staffers that typically send a candidate's damage control
unit into overtime, especially when that candidate is trying to appeal
to rock-solid Democratic voters.
The nine, along with a handful
of supporters, called on Clinton's Ingersoll Ave. office at 1:30pm,
telling staffer David Barnhart that they had come for the Senator's
response to a letter they had sent her a month earlier, asking her to
publicly pledge "to take the necessary concrete steps to end the Iraq
war, to rebuild Iraq, to foreswear military attacks on other countries,
and to fully fund the Common Good in the U.S."
Barnhart ended
a brief exchange with Catholic Peace Ministry director, Brian Terrell
by saying, "Look, nobody wants to end the war in Iraq more than Hillary
Clinton. We love to hear a diversity of opinion, but we are asking you
to leave now."
Ignoring Barnhart's request, the occupiers spent
until 8:00pm reading the names of Iraqis and U.S. soldiers killed in
the war, taping "End the Iraq War" flyers onto Clinton campaign signs,
taking a brief turn calling registered voters to inform them of
Clinton's war votes before the phone was disconnected, having limited
success engaging staffers and volunteers in discussion, and making
enough racket doing so to make it difficult to continue business as
usual. In twos and threes throughout the afternoon, all the campaign
volunteers and most of the staff departed.
At 6:30, Terrell and
Farah Mokhtareizadeh, a 24 year-old peace activist from Philadelphia,
followed by two reporters, drove across town to Clinton's Second Street
office. Through the building's glass doors they saw a group of about 25
people but found the door locked. First Terrell, and then the
reporters, asked to come in. One reporter, told earlier in the day that
all statements for the Clinton campaign had to come from press
secretary Mark Daly, asked unsuccessfully to speak with him. Staff
members ushered the knot of volunteers into an interior room, leaving a
half-dozen of their colleagues in the outer area who proceeded to
ignore not only Terrell and the reporters, but over the next half hour,
more than a dozen volunteers and paid staff, all surprised to see the
doors locked and unable to get anyone's attention from inside.
At
one point the reporters went to a side window to try and observe what
was happening, only to have a large "Hillary" sign placed to block
their view. At that, the four drove back to the Ingersoll Avenue office.
Shortly
after they returned, Mokhtareizadeh began reading the famous speech
that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. gave on April 4, 1967 at Riverside
Church in New York, titled "Declaration of Independence from the
Vietnam War." The most frequently quoted lines in it are, "A nation
that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense
than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death," but
it also contains a prophetic warning from the Buddhist leaders of
Vietnam.
"Each day the war goes on the hatred increases in the
hearts of the Vietnamese and in the hearts of those of humanitarian
instinct. The Americans are forcing even their friends into becoming
their enemies. It is curious that the Americans, who calculate so
carefully on the possibilities of military victory, do not realize that
in the process they are incurring deep psychological and political
defeat."
Moments after those lines were read, a booming guitar
riff thundered from the open door of a work room adjoining the space
held by the occupiers, drowning out King's words. Mokhtareizadeh
picked up a bullhorn and continued King's speech, overpowering the
music.
Shortly thereafter, the decible battle ended in
success for the occupiers and King's speech continued at a humane
level. A reporter went to the office from which the music had emanated
and asked the staff member if he wanted to give a statement about the
odd juxtaposition posed by a speech of Martin Luther King's being
drowned out in a prominent Democrat's Iowa campaign headquarters. The
unidentified staff member declined and referred the reporter to Mr.
Daly.
At the conclusion of the King speech, Robert Braam, a 51
year-old cabinetmaker from Manhattan, Illinois took up reading the
names of Iraqis killed in the war until through the main door strode an
assertive, middle-aged woman who went about the office introducing
herself with a firm handshake to every protester, as Teresa Vilman of
the Hillary Clinton campaign. "I'll give you three minutes to leave and
then I'll call the police," she said, smiling, "which I guess is what
you want anyway."
With that, Vilman directed the remaining
staffers to take down the numerous "End the Iraq War" flyers and remove
all traces of the occupation. She cheerily asked the protesters, "If
you don't mind, would you please take the empty water bottles with
you?"
No one objected to her request, but David Goodner, a
senior at the University of Iowa, retorted, "If you don't mind, would
you please get Mrs. Clinton on the phone for us?" And Des Moines
resident, Mona Shaw, 56, added, "And if she doesn't mind, ask her to
keep from invading Iran."
Within minutes, five police cars and
over a dozen officers began rolling into the campaign office's parking
lot. At Captain Bob Clock's request, Vilman went up to every activist
and the reporters, asking each to leave. Supporters of the occupiers
who did not intend to be arrested, and the reporters exited the office.
Not long afterward, Des Moines police officers led nine handcuffed
occupiers out of the Hillary Clinton campaign office and into a waiting
paddy wagon. The ninth was Mokhtareizadeh, who, throughout the day was
not planning on being among the arrestees. As she returned inside the
office to submit to the police, she said, "After reading that whole
speech from Dr. King, I just had to get arrested with the others."
The
other SODAPOPers arrested at the Clinton campaign office were Renee
Espeland, 46, a Des Moines chimney sweep; Chris Gaunt, 51, a
third-generation Iowa farmer from Grinnell; and Chrissy Kirchoefer, 30,
from Marseilles Illinois.
They were joined in the Polk County
Jail by the ten arrested at Giuliani's Iowa headquarters, Kathy Kelly,
Co-director of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, Chicago; Suzanne
Sheridan 31, photo assistant and artist model, Francis of Assisi
Catholic Worker House in Chicago; Ron Durham, 26, bike repair and
handyman, Francis of Assisi House, Chicago; Elton Davis, 45, proprietor
of Sweet Bee Infoshop, Des Moines; Ed Bloomer, 60, Dingman Catholic
Worker House, Des Moines; Joy First, 53, of Madison, Wisconsin; Nick
Kinkel, 19, Des Moines; Mickey Davis, 16, Waukee, Iowa; Jeff Leys, 43,
and Dan Pearson, 26, both Co-directors of Voices for Creative
Nonviolence, Chicago.
Organizers say the protests in Iowa will
continue, with more occupations slated for December 29 to January 3,
2008 as the caucuses take place. They hope peace activists will
generate similar actions in other states as the presidential primary
season develops, and challenge candidates "as they make public
appearances around the state without regard for arbitrary 'free speech
zone' restrictions that may be established by candidates, parties,
police or the Secret Service."
Mike Ferner is a freelance writer from Ohio and author of "Inside the Red Zone: A Veteran For Peace Reports from Iraq."
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