[Mb-civic] Mom Protesting Iraq War Meets Bush Aides

Jef Bek jefbek at mindspring.com
Sat Aug 6 19:08:51 PDT 2005


Associated Press

Mom Protesting Iraq War Meets Bush Aides

By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer

August 6, 2005 

The angry mother of a fallen U.S. soldier staged a protest near President
Bush's ranch Saturday, demanding an accounting from Bush of how he has
conducted the war in Iraq.

Supported by more than 50 demonstrators who chanted, "W. killed her son!"
Cindy Sheehan told reporters: "I want to ask the president, 'Why did you
kill my son? What did my son die for?'" Sheehan, 48, didn't get to see Bush,
but did talk about 45 minutes with national security adviser Steve Hadley
and deputy White House chief of staff Joe Hagin, who went out to hear her
concerns.

Appreciative of their attention, yet undaunted, Sheehan said she planned to
continue her roadside vigil, except for a few breaks, until she gets to talk
to Bush. Her son, Casey, 24, was killed in Sadr City, Iraq, on April 4,
2004. He was an Army specialist, a Humvee mechanic.

"They (the advisers) said we are in Iraq because they believed Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, that the world's a better place
with Saddam gone and that we're making the world a safer place with what
we're doing over there," Sheehan said in a telephone interview after the
meeting.

"They were very respectful. They were nice men. I told them Iraq was not a
threat to the United States and that now people are dead for nothing. I told
them I wouldn't leave until I talked to George Bush."

She said Hagin told her, "I want to assure you that he (Bush) really does
care."

"And I said if he does care, why doesn't he come out and talk to me."

Sheehan arrived in Crawford aboard a bus painted red, white and blue and
emblazoned with the words, "Impeachment Tour." Sheehan, from Vacaville,
Calif., had been attending a Veterans for Peace convention in Dallas.

The bus, trailed by about 20 cars of protesters and reporters, drove at
about 15 mph toward Bush's ranch. After several miles, they parked the
vehicles and began to march, in stifling heat, farther down the narrow
country road.

Flanked by miles of pasture, Sheehan spoke with reporters while clutching
two photographs, one of her son in uniform, and the other, a baby picture,
when he was seven months old.

She said she decided to come to Crawford a few days ago after Bush said that
fallen U.S. troops had died for a noble cause and that the mission must be
completed.

"I want to ask the president, `Why did you kill my son? What did my son die
for?" she said, her voice cracking with emotion. "Last week, you said my son
died for a noble cause' and I want to ask him what that noble cause is?"

White House spokesman Trent Duffy said response that Bush also wants the
troops to return home safely.

"Many of the hundreds of families the president has met with know their
loved one died for a noble cause and that the best way to honor their
sacrifice is to complete the mission," Duffy said.

"It is a message the president has heard time and again from those he has
met with and comforted. Like all Americans, he wants the troops home as soon
as possible."

The group marched about a half-mile before local law enforcement officials
stopped them at a bend in the road, still four to five miles from the
ranch's entrance. Capt. Kenneth Vanek of the McLennan County Sheriff's
Office said the group was stopped because some marchers ignored instructions
to walk in the ditch beside the road, not on the road.

"If they won't cooperate, we won't," Vanek said.



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