Anti-war protest gathers steam

WASHINGTON – Crowds protesting the war in Iraq surged past the White House on Saturday shouting “Peace now!” in the largest anti-war protest in the nation’s capital since the U.S. invasion in 2003.

The rally stretched through the day and into the night, a marathon of music, speechmaking and dissent on the National Mall. Police Chief Charles Ramsey, noting that organizers had hoped to draw 100,000 people, said, “I think they probably hit that.”

Speakers from the stage attacked President Bush’s policies, but he was not at the White House to hear them. He spent the day in Colorado and Texas monitoring hurricane recovery efforts.

In the crowd were young activists, nuns whose anti-war activism dates to Vietnam, parents mourning their children in uniform lost in Iraq, and uncountable families motivated for the first time to protest.

Connie McCroskey, 58, came from Des Moines, Iowa, with two of her daughters, both in their 20s, for the family’s first demonstration. McCroskey, whose father fought in World War II, said she never would have dared protest during the Vietnam War.

“Today, I had some courage,” she said.

While the protesters were united against the war, their political beliefs varied. Paul Rutherford, 60, of Vandalia, Mich., said he is a Republican who supported Bush in the last election and still does – except for the war.

“President Bush needs to admit he made a mistake in the war and bring the troops home, and let’s move on,” Rutherford said.

His wife, Judy Rutherford, 58, called the removal of Saddam Hussein “a noble mission” but said U.S. troops should have left when claims that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction proved unfounded.

“We found that there were none, and yet we still stay there, and innocent people are dying daily,” she said.

More than 1,900 members of the U.S. armed forces have died since the beginning of the war in March 2003.

In Washington, a few hundred supporters of Bush’s Iraq policy lined the protest route near the FBI building. The two groups shouted at each other, a police line keeping them apart. Organizers of a pro-military rally today hoped for 10,000 people.

Ramsey said the day’s protest unfolded peacefully under heavy police presence. Police reported three arrests for minor offenses.

Demonstrations also took place in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle, as well as foreign cities.

A crowd in London, estimated by police at 10,000, marched in support of withdrawing British troops from Iraq. Highlighting the need to get out, protesters said, were violent clashes between insurgents and British troops in the southern Iraq city of Basra.

In Rome, protesters held up banners and peace flags outside the U.S. Embassy and covered a sidewalk with messages and flowers in honor of those killed in Iraq.

Cindy Sheehan, the California mother who drew thousands of demonstrators to her 26-day vigil outside Bush’s Texas ranch in August, won a roar of approval when she took the stage in Washington. Her 24-year-old son, Casey, was killed in Iraq last year.

“Shame on you,” Sheehan said, directing that portion of her remarks to members of Congress who backed the war. “How many more of other people’s children are you willing to sacrifice?

She led the crowd in chanting, “Not one more.”

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