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Kicking it Down K Street: Rolling Out the (Oil) Barrel
Kick That Barrel
by Mike Ferner In a town awash in irony, this particular example of it couldn't have been more striking.
Yesterday, in Washington, D.C., former Marine Corps Sergeant and Iraq War vet, Adam Kokesh, kick-rolled a 55-gallon oil drum lettered "Hands Off Iraqi Oil" across K Street, an avenue that has become synonymous with the power of corporate lobbyists.
Kokesh, former Army National Guard Sergeant Geoff Millard, and former Army Private Marc Train, in the center of a knot of demonstrators, took turns kicking the barrel up 16th Street towards Lafayette Park, adjoining the White House, for a protest sponsored by U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW), Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW), and Oil Change International.
The protest and an earlier news conference at the Institute for
Policy Studies was called to bring public attention to the Oil Law
passed by the Iraqi Cabinet one year ago and now waiting approval by
Parliament.
Citing a letter USLAW sent yesterday to Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and George Bush, Gene Bruskin,
co-convener of USLAW, said that under Paul Bremer, the man Bush put in
charge of running Iraq right after the invasion, the Hussein
administration laws were wiped off the books, except for Law 150 and
Law 151 which prohibit Iraqi workers from organizing unions in the
public sector, some two-thirds of the nation's economy.
"For
there to be freedom in Iraq," Bruskin said, "working people have to
have representation. And not just on labor contracts but on social
policy."
He pledged the continuing support of USLAW, whose member
organizations represent some three million U.S. workers, to Iraqi oil
workers and their union, the Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions.
Kokesh,
who said his time in Iraq taught him that "we are making enemies
faster than we can kill them," called the U.S. presence in Iraq a
military and an economic occupation, and that they are "inherently
tied."
Trina
Zahller, representing Oil Change International, stated, "No law passed
under the U.S. occupation can have legitimacy. Iraqi oil is not a
resource for the oil companies, it is for the Iraqi people."
She
said her group's position is that there should be an immediate
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq; that no oil law or long term
contracts law be passed under the U.S. occupation; and that
international oil companies should be prohibited from owning Iraqi
oil. She added that the pending Oil Law provides that currently
operating fields stay under Iraqi control, but that future profits from
"undiscovered" oil (estimated at 50 percent of all Iraq's oil)
be controlled by oil corporations.
Maintaining
its tradition of largely ignoring events critical of U.S. policy in
Iraq, U.S. corporate news outlets were conspicuously absent from
yesterday's news conference and protest.
United Press International,
Talk Radio News, Voice of America and a D.C. television station were
the only U.S. news media present. Representing the international press
were Reuters; Agence France Press, one of the world's top newswires;
Telesur, a TV network serving much of Latin America; Al Jazeera; and
the Japanese newspaper, Akahata.
Mike Ferner is an independent journalist and author of 'Inside the Red Zone: A Veteran For Peace Reports from Iraq'