Meeting in convention, the California Federation
of Teachers adopted another strong resolution calling for an end to the
war in Iraq and calling upon AFT to act on the AFL-CIO resolution calling
for rapid withdrawal. The overwhelming antiwar sentiment among the
hundreds of delegates from across California was reflected in numerous
floor speeches characterizing the war as the "overriding" issue
affecting the conditions of teachers and students and the erosion of
financial support for education, health care and all other social programs
serving human needs.
Resolution on
U.S. Policy in Iraq
Adopted by the California Federation of
Teachers in Convention, March 26, 2006
Whereas, the premises offered by the United State government to
justify the invasion and occupation of Iraq have been exposed as lies:
there were no weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq; there is no
connection between Al Qaeda and the Saddam Hussein regime; and there was
no imminent threat from Iraq to the safety of the U.S. and that the
administration had no reasonable evidence to warrant a claim that there
was; and
Whereas, the cost of the war in human life continues to be high:
as of March 2006, more than 2,300 US soldiers have died and more than
17,000 have been severely injured, the majority of casualties occurring
after the end of "major combat" in May 2003; the number of
civilian casualties, as is typical in modern wars, is many times greater
than the number of military deaths: estimates of the Iraqi civilian death
toll range from 30,000 to more than 98,000, with many more several
injured; and deaths and injuries continue to mount; and
Whereas, the financial cost of the war has led directly to cuts in social
and human services: as of December 2005, the war and occupation cost the
United States approximately $195 million per day, or more than $8 million
per hour, with the total cost approaching $230 billion. This amount spent
by the US on the war could have paid for almost 4 million new public
school teachers to be hired for one year, or for similar investments in
health care, housing, jobs, or for the rebuilding of the Gulf States
communities devastated by hurricanes Katrina and Rita; California's share
of the cost of the war (more than $31 billion) alone could have funded
nearly 550,000 new public schoolteachers for one year; and
Whereas, we recognize the hardships undergone by US military
personnel, many of whom are members or family of members of unions, and a
disproportionate number of whom are from poor and working-class families.
The burden of the war—its deaths, injuries, psychological trauma,, and
lack of support for veterans—falls disproportionately on working people,
poor people and people of color, thousands of whom enlisted because they
had no access to other viable options for their lives, including
affordable education, health care and decent jobs; and
Whereas, the war and the occupation have undermined the economic
and social rights of the Iraqi people, producing grinding poverty for
many, and an unemployment rate that had reached 70% in June 2004 and has
persisted at high levels throughout the occupation; and
Whereas, Iraqi workers are struggling to maintain their labor movement,
which has been one of the few entities that is both secular and
non-denominational, and the US has moved against labor rights in Iraq,
enforcing a 1987 Saddam Hussein law outlawing labor organizing,
collective bargaining and strikes in the public sector—over 70% of Iraqi
jobs and privatizing formerly nationalized industries, issuing a decree
allowing 100% foreign ownership of all Iraq businesses except oil. The
beneficiaries of the privatization are primarily US-based multinational
corporations, many of them with ties to the Bush Administration;
and
Whereas, human rights in Iraq, consistently violated in the Saddam
Hussein regime, have now been violated again in the abuse and torture of
Iraqi prisoners at the hands of US military and intelligence personnel
and private contractors; and
Whereas, the U.S. government policy on Iraq is founded on an
unjustifiable intention and failure of implementation and integrity, and
far from being, as claimed, a "war of liberation," the US
action in Iraq is a war for empire, the result of a conscious policy to
gain control over Middle East oil and expand U.S. dominance through the
building of permanent U.S. military installations in Iraq and elsewhere
in the Middle East; and,
Whereas, war has made the United States more insecure; because it
has led to a an expansion of terrorism around the world. Therefore be it
resolved, that the California Federation of Teachers—as an organization
that stands for the rights of working people, the promise of education,
and the pursuit of knowledge—continue to oppose this war begun under
false pretenses and inimical to the interests of working people, and that
CFT reiterate its solidarity with the hundreds of labor organizations and
U.S. Labor Against the War, with which CFT is affiliated, that have
called for the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. military forces, bases
and operations from Iraq; and
Be it further resolved, that CFT urge AFT to work vigorously to
implement the AFL-CIO resolution calling for a rapid withdrawal from Iraq
and mobilize the union's member to that end. and
Be it further resolved, that the California Federation of Teachers
to introduce a motion calling for its national affiliate, the American
Federation of Teachers (AFT) to become an affiliate member of US Labor
Against the War, and
Be it further resolved, that the California Federation of Teachers
urge AFT to call on the US government to meet the physical, psychological
and economic needs of returning and current veterans, including providing
full health benefits and restoring services cut by the Bush
Administration; and
Be it finally resolved, that the California Federation of Teachers
call on the California Congressional and Senate delegates to work for a
reordering of national political and economic priorities toward peace,
economic and racial justice, labor rights, true security, and human
needs.