U.S.
Bases Out Now!

TELL BUSH AND CONGRESS: NO U.S. MILITARY BASES IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC AND POLAND!

We need funds for peoples needs, not for war and occupation.

Sign the Petition!

The Pentagon is planning to build U.S. missile bases and radar stations in the Czech Republic and Poland. A majority of the population in both countries is opposed to this dangerous military escalation. I stand in solidarity with them in opposing this reckless warlike move.

In both countries there is an effort to ram through the decision to allow the U.S. bases despite thousands of petitions, mass calls for a national referendum and wide protests. Millions of people are concerned about the opening of a new cold war and a new arms race.

President Bush has just submitted the largest military budget in history. U.S. military spending surpasses $1 million a minute – every day of the year. Desperately needed social programs for health, education, housing and the environment are being cut, to pay for a brutal war in Iraq, new bases and new threats of endless war.

I support the right of the people of the Czech Republic and Poland to oppose U.S. bases on their soil.

I support their just and democratic demand for a national referendum on this issue.

We need funds for peoples needs, not for war and occupation.

No to bases:
Join the Campaign Against the Expansion of U.S. militarism

Growing opposition to U.S. militarism is having an impact on the Pentagon's aggressive war plans far beyond Iraq.

An example of the changing mood can be seen in the mass movement opposing proposed new U.S. bases in the Czech Republic and Poland.

In recent polls a clear majority of the population of those countries is opposed to U.S. bases there. By an overwhelming majority, people are demanding the right to decide on this dangerous escalation in a national referendum.

Thousands have signed their names to petitions and participated in rallies and demonstrations demanding "No to the Bases."

The petition in Czech Republic states that the bases "would serve to reawaken the Cold War in Europe and could reignite a new arms race. It is unthinkable that a democratic country should make such a decision of such long-range impact, as the acceptance of foreign military bases on its soil, without an open debate. Neither the government nor the Parliament has the mandate to make such a decision alone."

More than 40 organizations are part of the No to the Bases Campaign formed last July in the Czech Republic.

The approval of the bases seemed a forgone conclusion when the U.S. military started surveying for sites in Poland and Czech Republic four years ago. The missile shield would consist of radar sites and large missile interceptor silos. The radar would have the ability to monitor almost the entire territory of Russia.

Opening a new Cold War

The Pentagon claims that the missile shield is intended as a protection of the U.S. and Europe from missile attacks by what it slanderously calls "rogue states," such as Iran or North Korea. But the project deals with intercontinental ballistic missiles, which neither North Korea nor Iran even possess. The overwhelming consensus is that the bases are an ominous part of the growing ring of U.S. and NATO bases surrounding Russia.

Russia's President Putin at the Munich Conference on Security Policy on Feb. 10 warned of U.S. efforts to open a new Cold War and a new arms race. He denounced the Pentagon's plans to encircle Russia and place missile sites in Central Europe. The 250 participants at the meeting in Germany included more than 30 defense and foreign ministers.

President Putin said, "The process of NATO expansion has nothing to do with modernization of the alliance or with ensuring security in Europe." He also criticized the "almost uncontained, hyper use of force in international relations."

Outside, as many as 6,000 anti-militarist demonstrators protesting NATO expansion surrounded the building where the conference was underway. More than 3,500 police were used to prevent the protesters from exercising their rights.

On Feb. 7, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Peter Pace, speaking to the U.S. House of Representatives, escalated the threats: "I think we need the full range of military capabilities. We need the ability for regular force-on-force conflicts because we don't know what's going to develop in places like Russia and China, in North Korea, in Iran and elsewhere."

Belarus, a country of 10 million people located between Russia and Poland, recently expressed its opposition to the expansion of the U.S. dominated NATO military alliance as a clear violation of the NATO pledge not to expand an inch further east if Soviet troops were withdrawn from the East European countries that made up the Warsaw Pact. Nikolai Cherginets of the National Assembly of Belarus was speaking about its southern neighbor Ukraine and Georgia's move towards joining NATO.

In violation of NATO's 1990 agreement, NATO has expanded into 10 countries that were formerly part of the Warsaw Pact or into republics that were formerly part of the Soviet Union. The new members of NATO are Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. All of these countries have become military satellites of the U.S. and economically dependent on the imperialist West.

Most of these countries have been forced by their relations with the U.S. military alliance to participate in sending troops to Iraq and/or Afghanistan.

Ukraine's possible admission to NATO would bring Russia's Black Sea naval base and much of the former Soviet armaments industry within arm's reach of the U.S. dominated military alliance and it would expand NATO to Russia's southwestern border. Along with Ukraine and Georgia, Croatia, Albania and Macedonia are on the list of countries waiting to join NATO.

The Pentagon has also moved its largest sea-based missile defense radar in the Pacific from Hawaii to the Aleutian Islands, close to Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula.

In December 2001 Washington unilaterally withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty that it had signed 30 years earlier in order to begin testing a new generation of missiles. These are the weapons that the U.S. wants to put in place in the Czech Republic and Poland.

Support for the U.S. is evaporating as millions see the violence and brutality of the U.S. occupation of Iraq and watch with growing apprehension the threats of new and wider wars. According to polls in both the Czech Republic and Poland, up to two-thirds of the population oppose the U.S. bases. Both countries, however, are governed by pro-U.S. center-right coalition governments that support the U.S. base proposal.

In the Czech Republic the right wing Civic Democratic Party heads a weak coalition government cobbled together after the country had been without any government for eight months following an election impasse. No political party had sufficient numbers to form a government.

One of the first acts of the new government was to announce that it wants to host the new missile shield system popularly referred to as the "Son of Star Wars." But the new officials lacked the authority to even enforce a ban on a demonstration of 2,000 "No to the Bases" activists who marched through downtown Prague on Jan. 29.

In Poland, Defense Minister Radoslae Sikorski was forced to resign after saying that Poland would take Russia's concern over the U.S. bases into consideration. Sikorski had also opposed placing at risk the 1,000 Polish troops who will be part of the NATO forces sent to Afghanistan.

Opponents of U.S. bases also criticize the extra-territoriality of the bases, which will become sovereign U.S. territory. Tens of thousands of U.S. forces stationed around the world are not subject to local laws. What actually goes on at a U.S. base, what weapons are stockpiled or are tested, what operations are planned are all secret and not discussed with host countries.

Opposition to U.S. bases has given impetus to a growing political movement that has moved millions of people into militant confrontations with the Pentagon from South Korea and the Philippines to Vieques, Puerto Rico. Even in Italy, on this coming Feb. 17, thousands are expected in a national demonstration to protest the expansion of the U.S. base of Camp Ederle in Vicenza.

The simple democratic demand for a national referendum on the placement of a new generation of weapons and bases in the Czech Republic and Poland is an important struggle against wider U.S. wars and military expansion.

Join the campaign - sign the petition -- No to U.S. bases in the Czech Republic and Poland! We need funds for peoples needs, not for war and occupation.

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Statement from the Citizens Initiative No to Bases in the Czech Republic:


P E T I T I ON to hold a referendum concerning the location of a National Missile Defense base of the United States of America in the Czech Republic

The United States wishes to constructe a military base in the Czech Republic, which is supposed to protect the US against attack by balistic missiles. However, this base would not protect the Czech Republic. On the contrary, it would subject us to the risk of a nuclear attack in the event of a conflict. The base would be part of the National Missile Defense pogramme of the United States.(NMD), which plays a key role in the military and politicak strategy of the United States. If such a base is built, the Czech Republic will become an integral part of the global strategy of the United States without any possibility to effect US policies and without any guarantee that the interests of our population will be taken into account in an eventual crisis situation. This is unacceptable from our perspective. The news of the plans to locate a base in the Czech Republic have been trickling down to the public for two years now. We are particularly concerned that our government, political representatives and most of the media have to this day done everything possible to keep the negotiations with the US secret and suppress any public debate about the issue. All this is happening just 15 years after the last Soviet soldiers left occupied Czechoslovakia. The presence of the military forces of a foreign state and its missile bases on our soil was a result of the Cold War and it also led to the further exascerbation of the Cold War.

The current attempt to place a base here, this time from the other direction, would serve to reawaken the Cold War in Europe and could reignite a new arms race. It is unthinkable that a democratic country should make a decision of such long-range impact, as the acceptance of a foreign military base on its soil, without an open debate. Neither the government nor Parliament has the mandate to make such a decision alone. This is a question which requires the input of the broad public because the population will have to live with the effects of such a base long after the current Parliament finishes its term and all the current polititians are retired. The only responsible way to make such serious decision is by referendum.

Therefore, we request that the constitutional authorities of the Czech Republic call a nationwide referendum asking the following question:


Do you agree with the construction and existence of a National Missile Defense base of the United States of America in the Czech Republic?

The petition commission is made up of the following individuals:
Štěpán Steiger, Katovická 408, 181 00 Praha 8
Petr Kužvart, Za Zelenou liškou 967, 140 00 Praha 4
Jan Májíček, Vondrousova 1197, 163 00 Praha 6
Arie Farnam, Na Skuhrovci 788, 251 64 Mnichovice
Rudolf Převrátil, Mikovcova 591/12, 120 00 Praha 2
The legal representative of the commission is:
Rudolf Převrátil, Mikovcova 591/12, 120 00 Praha 2, rudolf@prevratil.cz

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News:

Poles Oppose US Missiles, 75% Want Referendum

from http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-04/01/content_5920420.htm

Xinhua News Agency April 1, 2007

Majority of Poles in favor of referendum on U.S. anti-missile shield

WARSAW - About 75 percent of Poles advocate a national referendum on the installation of the U.S. anti-missile shield in this country, Polish television reported Friday.

The results of a poll show that nearly three quarters of those surveyed thought that the decision whether to install the U.S. anti-missile shield should be decided through a national referendum. About 24 percent of Polish people oppose the move, while three percent didn't express an opinion.

Some 49 percent of the Polish people oppose the installation of the U.S. anti-missile shield, while 37 percent approve the idea.

Polish Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski has said several times that the government does not plan to hold a national referendum to decide whether to install the U.S. anti-missile shield within its territory, since the United States proposed to resume negotiations on the issue early this year.

 

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