Monday, June 01, 2015

Listen, Yankee! Why Cuba Matters with Tom Hayden


Friday, May 29,  7:00 pm, First Church of Jamaica Plain, UU • 6 Eliot St. • Jamaica Plain
Sunday, May 31, 11:00 am, Community Church of Boston • 565 Boylston St • Copley Square • Boston
Tom Hayden - one of America's best-known voices of political and social activism - will give two book talks.
 
Based on unprecedented access to both Cuban and American officials, "Listen, Yankee!: Why Cuba Matters" offers fresh insight into one of history’s most enigmatic relationships between nations. His was one of the few voices that predicted the release of the Cuban 5 and the move to reestablish diplomatic relations.
 
Tom writes both as an observer of Cuba and as a US revolutionary student leader telling his own story, someone whose efforts to mobilize political change in the US mirrored the radical transformation simultaneously going on in Cuba.
 
A book signing and reception will follow the discussion.
 
Friday event sponsored by Jamaica Plain Forum and co-sponsored by the International Committee for a Just Policy towards Cuba.
Upcoming Events: 

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Guantanamo - What Is the Truth?

Detention, Interrogation and Judicial Practices of the US Government

Wednesday June 10, 2015
6:45 PM until 8:30 PM
Milton Public Library
Keyes Community Room
Snacks provided by Bent's Cookie Factory
 
A forum presented by Milton High School Amnesty International Club and Milton for Peace about Guantanamo Bay Detention Facility and the Detention and Interrogation Practices of the US Government - with speakers 
 
·  Terry Rockefeller – September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, and documentary film producer
·  Matthew Allen - Public Advocacy Coordinator for the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts
·  Margaret Ashur - International Law Journal at Boston University
·  Susan McLucas - Peace and Justice Activist
Upcoming Events: 

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America Admittedly Behind ISIS "Surge"

By Tony Cartalucci

Taking advantage of a Syrian military stretched thin to protect everywhere at the same time, high concentrations of well-coordinated Al Qaeda forces, based in NATO-member Turkey as well as in US-allies Jordan and Saudi Arabia, have attacked across several fronts. The tactical and strategic gains are minimal compared to the initial stages of the West's proxy war against Syria beginning in 2011, but the Western media is intentionally fanning the flames of hysteria specifically to break both support for Syria from abroad, and fracture resistance from within.

This latest attempt to overwhelm the Syrian people, its government, and its armed forces comes with several shocking revelations. Previously, veteran award-winning journalists foretold the coming conflict in Syria, warning how the US, Saudi Arabia, and Israel were openly planning to use Al Qaeda as a proxy force to overthrow Syria first, then Iran and how it would unfold into a cataclysmic sectarian war. There were also signed and dated policy papers advocating the use of terrorism and the provocation of war to directly target Iran after Syria and Hezbollah had been sufficiently weakened.
 

However, now, there is a US Department of Defense (DoD) document confirming without doubt that the so-called "Syrian opposition" is Al Qaeda, including the so-called "Islamic State" (ISIS), and that the opposition's supporters - the West, Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar - specifically sought to establish safe havens in Iraq and eastern Syria, precisely where ISIS is now based.
 
America is Behind ISIS
 

Looking at maps recently produced by the Western media and Western policy think tanks, it can be seen clearly that Al Qaeda/ISIS is streaming out of NATO and US ally territory, forming up in these two safe havens, and aimed both at the Syrian government and Iran.

Despite the Western narrative of "moderate rebels," the West itself has been increasingly admitting that such "rebels" do not exist. They also admit that to establish "stability," they must begin openly working with "questionable actors."
 

Michael O'Hanlon, a signatory of the Brookings Institution's "Which Path to Persia?" policy paper calling for terrorism and intentional provocations to overthrow the government of Iran, stated in a USA Today op-ed titled, "Michael O'Hanlon: American boots needed in Syria," that:
 
In the short term, this strategy requires an acceleration of our train and equip program for Syrian opposition fighters — including perhaps a bit less puritanical approach in who we are willing to work with. Most Syrian moderates are tired of waiting for us, or already dead given our delays in helping them. So we may have to tolerate working with some questionable actors to get things started.

"Working with some questionable actors," is O'Hanlon and US policymakers' way of saying they intend to provide open material support to terrorists, including Al Qaeda, as they've been covertly doing all along, and as was warned against as early as 2007 by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh in his article, "The Redirection: Is the Administration's new policy benefiting our enemies in the war on terrorism?" which explicitly stated (emphasis added):

To undermine Iran, which is predominantly Shiite, the Bush Administration has decided, in effect, to reconfigure its priorities in the Middle East. In Lebanon, the Administration has coƶperated with Saudi Arabia’s government, which is Sunni, in clandestine operations that are intended to weaken Hezbollah, the Shiite organization that is backed by Iran. The U.S. has also taken part in clandestine operations aimed at Iran and its ally Syria. A by-product of these activities has been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that espouse a militant vision of Islam and are hostile to America and sympathetic to Al Qaeda.
If  Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists predicting verbatim the Syrian conflict and Western support for Al Qaeda terrorists years before these events unfolded, and US policymakers are now openly admitting they are willing to work with Al Qaeda isn't convincing enough, perhaps a signed and dated Department of Defense document admitting as much is.

DoD Document Admits Plot to Carve Out Safe Haven for ISIS

Judicial Watch, a US-based foundation seeking "transparency" in government, released a 7 page document dated 2012, detailing the background and status of the Syrian conflict. It admits that the Muslim Brotherhood and Al Qaeda form the basis of the "opposition." It then admits that (emphasis added):

Development of the current events into proxy war: with support from Russia, China, and Iran, the regime is controlling the areas of influence along coastal territories (Tartus and Latakia), and is fiercely defending Homs, which is considered the primary transportation route in Syria. On the other hand, opposition forces are trying to control the eastern areas (Hasaka and Der Zor), adjacent to the western Iraqi provinces (Mosul and Anbar), in addition to neighboring Turkish borders. Western countries, the Gulf States and Turkey are supporting these efforts.   

It also admits that terrorists are entering Syria from Iraq, hardly what one could call a "civil war," and clearly instead an invasion.

The document also admits that (emphasis added):

The opposition forces will try to use the Iraqi territory as a safe haven for its forces taking advantage of the sympathy of the Iraqi border population, meanwhile trying to recruit fighters and train them on the Iraqi side, in addition to harboring refugees (Syria).        

If the situation unravels there is the possibility of establishing a declared or undeclared Salafist principality in eastern Syria (Hasaka and Der Zor), and this is exactly what the supporting powers to the opposition want, in order to isolate the Syrian regime, which is considered the strategic depth of the Shia Expansion (Iraq and Iran).
That "Salafist principality" mentioned by the DoD in 2012 is of course now known as the "Islamic State." The DoD at the time openly admitted that the opposition's foreign sponsors supported the creation of such a principality, and clearly ISIS must have had such support to maintain its hold on vast expanses of territory in both Syria and Iraq, while propping up a military machine capable of fighting the combined forces of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon. Indeed, the DoD's admissions in this document explain precisely how ISIS has been able to perpetuate its activities throughout the region - with "Western countries, the Gulf States, and Turkey" supporting these efforts.

Narratives of a US "war on the Islamic State" are meant clearly to obscure this admitted and documented conspiracy, and serve as a means for US troops to directly violate Syrian airspace and territory incrementally until US forces are able to openly begin dismantling the Syrian military and government directly.

Appeasement and Accommodation are not Options 

The Syrian war is not a localized conflict with limited goals. It is one leg of a much larger agenda to destroy Iran next, then move on to Russia and China. Combined with the Syrian campaign, the West has attempted to create arcs of destabilization across Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and completely encircling China in Southeast Asia.

What this constitutes is a World War executed through the use of 4th generation warfare. At the same time, the West attempts to seek temporary appeasement and accommodation  for itself so that it can more effortlessly advance its plans. Attempts to portray itself as interested in "negotiations" with Iran while it wages a proxy war on its doorstep is a prime example of this.

The corporate-financier special interests that have hijacked the United States and Europe have essentially declared war on all lands beyond their grasp, as well as on any and all among their own ranks who oppose their hegemonic aspirations.

The vile conspiracy now openly unfolding in Syria, seeing to its destruction at the hands of terrorists the US is openly backing after claiming for over a decade to be "fighting" is a harbinger of the destruction that complacency and failure to resist will bring all other nations caught in the path of these special interests. Nations not immediately caught in the grip of chaos created by this conspiracy must use their time wisely, preparing the appropriate measures to resist. They must study carefully what has been done in Syria and learn from both the mistakes and accomplishments of the Syrian government and armed forces in fighting back.

More important than backing other powers to serve as a counterweight to the West's global aggression, is to identify the consumerist foundation these special interests are built upon and perpetually depend on. By creating alternatives nationally and locally, the swamps from which this global pestilence is emitted can be slowly but permanently drained.

~ Tony Cartalucci is a Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer
 
 
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 652
Brunswick, ME 04011
(207) 443-9502
http://www.space4peace.org  
http://space4peace.blogspot.com  (blog)

Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth. - Henry David Thoreau
REPORT ON THE

'STOP THE WARS AT HOME & ABROAD!'

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

May 8-10, 2015,  Secaucus, N.J.


By the 2015 Conference Organizing Committee


Against a background of seemingly endless U.S. wars abroad and growing domestic movements against racist police killings, low wages and devastating climate change, more than 400 activists gathered just outside New York City May 8-10 for a “Stop the Wars at Home & Abroad!” conference that ratified an Action Plan addressing both domestic and international issues.

Sponsored by the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC), the conference, held at a hotel in Secaucus, New Jersey, brought together a wide range of activists, from those who primarily concentrate on international issues to mostly younger activists in the emerging movements such as Black Lives Matter, Fight for $15 and environmental change.

Conference delegates came from 29 states, as well as Canada, Britain, Germany and Ukraine. A number of now-U.S.-based activists represented struggles in their home countries of Colombia, Haiti, Honduras, Iran, Mexico, Palestine, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Syria and Venezuel also attened.

Solidarity messages were received from Cuba, Ireland, New Zealand and Russia.

A total of 116 organizations participated in the conference. There were more than 100 speakers, more than half of whom were people of color and women. There were six plenary sessions, 31 workshops and a Saturday night “Tribunal on the Militarization of the Police& Structural Racism.”

Linking up the issues

While UNAC conferences have always addressed domestic issues, this one was unique in that it was the first time a national antiwar gathering so clearly took up the need to oppose the war being waged against oppressed communities in the United States. A central theme of many panels and workshops was support for the resistance of Black youth standing up to the epidemic of police brutality.

In the opening plenary session, Jaribu Hill, founder of the Mississippi Workers’ Center for Human Rights, delivered a stirring call for solidarity with young activists. Declaring that resistance to the status quo is the only way forward, she called the youth who rebelled in Baltimore “young Steve Bikos and Harriet Tubmans.”

Another especially dynamic speaker was Lawrence Hamm, founder and Chair of the People’s Organization for Progress (POP) in Newark, N.J. Explaining that we are really fighting one war on many fronts, Hamm called on those present to oppose “all U.S. boots on the ground, defeat the Trans-Pacific Partnership, fight union busting and other attacks on the working class at home and challenge white-supremacist attacks on Black and Brown people!”

As part of the conference's Action Plan, participants endorsed the POP-initiated “Million People’s March Against Racial Injustice and Economic Inequality” planned for July 25 in Newark.

Other New Jersey organizations with speakers at the conference included Action 21, the Jersey City Peace Movement and New Jersey Peace Action.

Opposing the wars abroad

On the international front, conference participants heard from longtime antiwar activist Kathy Kelly of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, who recently completed a three-month prison sentence for protesting U.S. drone warfare. Kelly compared the reaction of the U.S. public to reports of beheadings by the extremist group ISIS to its muted reaction to the murder of thousands of surrendering Iraqi soldiers in 1991 and the deaths of more than a half-million Iraqi children from U.S.-imposed sanctions.

Other antiwar speakers included Kazem Azin of Solidarity Iran; Medea Benjamin of Code Pink; Maurice Carney of the Friends of the Congo; Bruce Gagnon of Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space; Malachy Kilbride of the National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance; Ed Kinane of the Upstate (N.Y.) Drone Action Network; Ray LaForest of Haiti Support Network; David Swanson of WarBeyondWar.org; and Kevin Zeese of PopularResistance.org.

The conference also heard from retired U.S. Col. Ann Wright, former CIA analyst Ray McGovern and former U.S. State Department official Peter Van Buren, all of whom are now prominent opponents of U.S. wars.

A Message from Cuba

The entire conference was exciting, but there were several especially high points.

On Saturday afternoon, the conference received a message from Kenia Serrano Puig, President of the Instituto Cubano de Amistad con los Pueblos (Cuban Institute for Friendship with the Peoples, or ICAP), an NGO established in 1960 soon after the Cuban Revolution. The message opened by stating “The work UNAC does in USA in the struggle for social justice and against military interventions in other nations is a topic of utmost importance.” (click here for the full message  from Cuba)

Several Ukrainian activists attended, including three from Odessa who brought a photo display of the murderous, right-wing attack on the House of Labor in that city. The Ukrainians spoke at a plenary session and in a workshop on the expansion of NATO and the situation in Ukraine.

On Saturday evening, the “Tribunal on the Militarization of the Police & Structural Racism” heard from Michelle Kamal, whose son was murdered by police. Other tribunal presenters included Manzoor Cheema of Muslims for Social Justice in Raleigh, N.C.; Larry Holmes from the People’s Power Assemblies; and the Rev. Osagyefo Uhuru Sekou from Ferguson, Mo.

Solidarity with the struggles at home

The theme of “Stop the Wars at Home & Abroad” was first used by UNAC at its founding conference in 2010 to oppose attacks on the Muslim community that were part of the phony U.S. “war on terror.” Today this war at home is increasingly impacting Black and Brown communities, working people and their unions and the civil liberties of everyone.

By featuring voices from communities under attack here at home, UNAC and the antiwar movement made an important political turn that solidly places us in the camp of those fighting the militarization of the police, mass incarceration, climate disaster and attacks on civil liberties, while drawing the connections between those struggles and the increasing U.S. wars and U.S. proxy wars abroad.

In keeping with this central theme of the conference, domestic issues were well-represented.

Clarence Thomas of International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 10 spoke about how his local shut down San Francisco-area ports this past May Day in support of the urban rebellions against police killings. In the past, the local has gone out on strike against the U.S. war in Iraq, apartheid in South Africa and in support of U.S. political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal.

Other speakers for workers' rights included John Dennie of National Postal Mail Handlers Union Local 300, a founder of the Postal Defenders coalition and an organizer for the “Stop Staples” campaign; Chris Hutchinson of Teamsters Local 671 and the Connecticut Community Committee of “Fight for $15”; Charles Jenkins, President of the New York Chapter of the National Coalition of Black Trade Unionists; Shafeah M’Balia of North Carolina-based Black Workers for Justice; and Rolandah Cleopattrah McMillan of the Virginia Defenders for Freedom, Justice & Equality, representing Virginia Raise Up and the “Fight for $15 and a Union” campaign.

And attending the conference were several members of United Steelworkers Local 8751, which represents Boston school bus drivers. This union had recently beaten back a vicious company-inspired frame-up of several of its leaders, who then went on to win re-election in a landslide victory. Recently-elected local President Andre Francois addressed the conference, surrounded by union members.

Marilyn Zuniga, a teacher from Orange, N.J., who was recently fired after some of her students wrote get-well cards to ailing Mumia Abu-Jamal, won support from the conference for her fight to regain her job.

Other speakers addressing important domestic issues were Gerry Condon of Veterans for Peace; Glen Ford of Black Agenda Report; Imani Keith Henry of The Equality for Flatbush (N.Y.) Project (E4F); Cheri Honkala of the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign; climate change author and activist Antonia Juhasz; and John Parker, a leader in the Los Angeles ballot initiative to win a $15 minimum wage.

As in past UNAC conferences, Muslims fighting for social change played important roles. These included Malik Mujahid of the Muslim Peace Coalition and Chairman of the Parliament of World’s Religions; Sharmin Sadequee of the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms; Manzoor Cheema, founder of Muslims for Social Justice; as well as members of Project SALAM, which works on issues of pre-emptive prosecution of Muslims. Joe Iosbaker, a member of the Antiwar Committee-Chicago, himself a target of FBI repression, spoke about the case of Palestinian-American political prisoner Rasmea Odeh.

The “Free Political Prisoners” panel heard about the cases of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui of Pakistan; Simon Trinidad of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia); and Puerto Rican nationalist Oscar Louis Rivera, who for four years was a U.S. prison cellmate of Fernando Gonzalez, one of the Cuban 5.(click here for the message Rivera wrote to Gonzalez in solidarity with Cuba)

Also speaking on this panel was attorney and former political prisoner Lynne Stewart. Pam Africa spoke about the 30th anniversary of the bombing of the MOVE commune in Philadelphia and the continuing case of U.S. political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal. The conference endorsed MOVE's May 13 rally on the anniversary of the bombing.

National& international speakers, culture & resolutions

Other speakers at the conference included former U.S. Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney; Born King Allah of the Nation of Gods & Earths; “Addicted to War” author Joel Adreas; Palestinian author and activist Susan Abulhawa; Johnny Achi of Arab Americans for Syria; Abayomi Azikiwe of the Pan-African News Wire; William Camacaro of the Alberto Lovera Bolivarian Circle; Dr. Ghias Moussa of the Syrian American Forum; and U.S-based Honduran activist Lucy Pagoada-Quesada, among others.

International speakers included Elizabeth Byce of the New Democratic Party of Canada, Socialist Caucus; Chris Nineham of the U.K. Stop the Wars Coalition; and Elsa Rassbach of the German National Drone Campaign, which is demanding the closing of the Satellite Relay Station at the U.S. Air Base Ramstein and the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) in Stuttgart. A Yemeni family that lost members from a US drone strike has filed a law suit against the German government to be heard on May 27 for allowing Ramstein to be used; U.S. solidarity protests have been called.
A statement of solidarity to the conference was received from the Mobilization Against War & Occupation (MAWO) in Vancouver, Canada.

Also addressing the conference were central UNAC leaders Judy Bello of the Upstate (N.Y.) Coalition to Ground the Drones & End the Wars; Ana Edwards and Phil Wilayto of the Virginia Defenders for Freedom, Justice and Equality; Bernadette Ellorin of BAYAN USA; Sara Flounders of the International Action Center; Joe Iosbaker of the Committee to Stop FBI Repression; Margaret Kimberley of Black Agenda Report; Jeff Mackler of Bay Area UNAC; and UNAC Co-Coordinators Marilyn Levin and Joe Lombardo.

People's culture was represented by the Hip Hop duo Rebel Diaz, the Filipino dance group Potri Ranka Manis and Syrian poet Avin Dirki.  The conference was opened with a poem by Raymond Nat Turner of Black Agenda Report. 

A full list of speakers can be found at the conference website: http://UNACconference2015.org.

From education to action

The Action Resolution passed at the final conference session included a call for coordinated antiwar and social justice actions in October; support for Black Lives Matter and other anti-racist, pro-women and pro-LGBTQ groups calling for actions on May 21; support for a call for a national presence on Sept. 19 in Richmond, Va., to defend slavery-related sites threatened by for-profit development; support for the “Fight for $15 and a Union” movement; support for international actions planned to protest the expected and tragic failure of the U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP 21 or Conference of Parties) set for Paris, France; and a resolution supporting Iran’s Red Crescent ship taking humanitarian supplies to challenge the U.S. and Saudi Arabian blockade of Yemen, among others.


The conference was live-streamed by GoProRadio.com, enabling many more people who were not able to attend to follow the proceedings.  Much of the conference can be seen on video from GoProRadio.com  and provided below.

Videos of many of the sessions can be found at:  http://nepajac.org/conferencevid.htm

All in all, the conference was unique for the antiwar movement. Not only was it the most diverse antiwar conference in memory, it also helped bring the antiwar movement together with the other developing movements for social change. In doing so, it identified our common enemy and our determination to fight together for justice and peace.

About UNAC

Founded in 2010, UNAC is now the largest antiwar coalition in the United States, with nearly 120 member organizations opposing U.S. wars in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, South America and the Caribbean.

UNAC's unifying principles are opposition to all U.S. wars, interventions, sanctions, blockades or interference in the internal affairs of other countries; opposition to the wars at home, as addressed at this conference; support for the right of oppressed peoples to self-determination; promotion of mass actions as the primary, but not only, method of struggle; independence from the two major political parties; and a democratic decision-making process.

(Click here for a message read at the conference to the Cubans and his former cell mate Fernando Gonzalez of the Cuban 5 by Polical Prisoner Oscar Louis Rivera.

 

For more information on UNAC, go here: http://UNACpeace.org

 

For videos of much of the conference, go here: http://nepajac.org/conferencevid.htm

 


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No Olympics in Boston - Dave Zirin and Kade Crockford

When: Tuesday, June 2, 2015, 7:00 pm to 9:30 pm
Where: 
Hope Central Church • 85 Seaverns Avenue • Boston
Dave Zirin - Author and Sports Columnist for The Nation on "The Olympics: More Than a Game"
and
Kade Crockford, ACLU (Director of Technology for Liberty Project) on "Surveillance, Displacement and Other Olympic 'Legacies' Boston 2024 Won't Tell You About"
on June 2 at 7 PM, Hope Central Church
What Boston 2024 Means for Housing Rights
Panelists from Black Lives Matter - Boston & Safe Hub Collective
Boston Homeless Solidarity Collective
CityLife/Vida Urbana
Moderated by Chris Faraone of Dig Boston


Upcoming Events: 

Ukraine Crisis: Origins of Conflict and Prospects for Peace

Sunday, June 7, 2015, 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
6 for potluck, 7pm for Ukraine discussion
 
Place: house party, Newtonville. RSVP required: contact Jane at gbjonah@AOL.com
The situation in eastern Ukraine is tragic and dangerous, with suffering and casualties for the people and the potential for US/NATO confrontation with Russia. Understanding the crisis requires knowledge of history and geopolitical strategic relationships.
Paul Christensen, political scientist at Boston College, will describe post Soviet history of Russia and Ukraine and how US interventions contributed to the rise of Putin. He will look at US policy including sanctions, and possible solutions such as confederation or autonomy. Discussion will follow.
Prof. Christensen is adjunct associate professor of political science at Boston College, with Ph.D. from Princeton University. He has studied social movement politics in Russia and the Soviet Union, and conducted research in Donetsk region in the 1990s.
Sponsored by Newton Dialogues on Peace & War, cosponsored by United for Justice with Peace 
Upcoming Events: 

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Impressions of Iran today

Wednesday, June 3, 6pm - First Church in Cambridge, 11 Garden St, Hastings Room

Massoudeh.headAn informal report-back on Modern Tehran
Massoudeh Edmond
An informal conversation with Arlington artist Massoudeh Edmond, who recently returned from her first trip in more than a decade to visit her family in Tehran. Join us to hear about modern Tehran and engage in conversation about the significances of these changes.   Snacks provided.
Massachusetts Peace Action – Mid-East Working Group


Upcoming Events: 

What Next for the Nuclear Abolition Movement?

When: Thursday, June 4, 2015, 7:30 pm
Where: First Church in Cambridge - Hastings Room • 11 Garden St • Harvard T • Cambridge

Report from the NPT Review Conference and Discussion on the Way Forward

with
Joseph Gerson, Peace & Disarmament Coordinator, American Friends Service Committee
John Loretz, Program Director, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War
Moderator: Elaine Scarry, Professor, Harvard University
Thursday, June 4, 2015, 7:30 pm
First Church in Cambridge, 11 Garden St Hastings Room
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference ended on May 22 without producing a final statement, due to the US, UK and Canada declining to permit a conference to be convened on a Middle East WMD Free Zone as demanded by Egypt and others.  The nuclear powers declined to commit to any practical plans to negotiate disarmament, and in response, 107 non-nuclear nations signed a Humanitarian Pledge which seeks to open a new diplomatic path towards nuclear weapons abolition.
We will hear from two leaders of the nuclear abolition movement, Joseph Gerson and John Loretz, who will give their perspectives on the outcome of the NPT review conference and the strategies and next steps they propose for the nuclear disarmament movement.  The discussion will be moderated by Elaine Scarry, author of Thermonuclear Monarchy.
In Massachusetts, activities on the 70th anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing (August 6, 2015) will be organized by peace groups, faith congregations, and youth.  We will briefly outline these plans and ask for your help in carrying them out.   (http://masspeaceaction.org/events/hiroshima-nagasaki-call-2015)
Massachusetts Peace Action – 617-354-2169 – info@masspeaceaction.org 
Upcoming Events: 

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