Originally published by the Wisconsin Muslim Journal
Milwaukee Veterans For Peace’s 18th Armistice Day celebration Monday in Milwaukee City Hall rotunda featured internationally renowned peace activist Retired Colonel Ann Wright and a call to stop the genocide in Gaza.“More people have resigned from the U.S. government over complicity with the genocide in Gaza than over any other wars,” Wright told the Wisconsin Muslim Journal in an interview before the event. She listed 15 officials who recently resigned from the State Department, the Department of Interior, the Department of Education, the White House and the military because of U.S. support of Israel’s military’s assault on Gaza, which has killed more than 43,000 Palestinians in the past year.
Yet, there is no outcry from most Americans, perhaps because “most of our media is just a mouthpiece for U.S. government policies,” Wright said. “The few independent voices out there like Democracy Now and The Intercept don’t reach the mainstream of the United States. Most Americans are left watching the nightly news programs and they justify the war.
A career Army officer and U.S. diplomat, Wright famously resigned in protest from the U.S. State Department in 2003 on the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. In a letter to then Secretary of State Colin Powell, she wrote:
Since then, Wright, now 78, has been among the anti-war movement’s most influential spokespersons. She is an advisory board member of Veterans For Peace, International Peace Bureau, World BEYOND War, Gaza Freedom Flotilla and No to NATO. She is a CODEPINK board member.
“There’s nothing I’d rather be doing,” she told WMJ.
During a two-day whirlwind of speaking engagements in Milwaukee, arranged by Milwaukee Veterans For Peace, Wright detailed the growth of U.S. military bases around the world and its distribution of armaments to countries engaged in current wars, particularly the Ukraine and Israel.
For each speaking engagement, she wore a Veterans For Peace t-shirt bearing the slogan: “Veterans Against Genocide” in black, white, green and red, the colors of the Palestinian flag.
Reclaiming Armistice Day
Veterans For Peace, a global organization of military veterans and allies who promote peace, has been working to reclaim November 11 as “Armistice Day,” a day dedicated to ending war once and for all, and celebrating peace, its website states.
Armistice Day was an international holiday observed each year on Nov. 11 to commemorate the end of World War I, “the war to end all wars,” noted Milwaukee Veterans For Peace member Bill Christofferson, who helped organize the ceremony at City Hall. In an interview with WMJ, he explained Armistice Day initially celebrated what was thought to be a lasting peace.
“It was all about encouraging world peace,” Christofferson said. With the name change, Veteran’s Day became “a day to celebrate militarism, where every veteran is a hero. Veterans Day parades feature soldiers in uniform and sometimes military equipment,” glorifying the military.
“Since 2008, Veterans For Peace in the U.S. started a program to reclaim Armistice Day for its original intent,” he said. “We are all veterans who have seen and experienced war. Our role is to educate people about the real effects of war so that nobody else will have to experience them.”
A crowd of 90 people attended Milwaukee Veterans For Peace Armistice Day commemoration, plus others joined online, Christofferson said in his event recap. The ceremony began with Veterans For Peace’s traditional 21-Flower Salute to victims of war. Members of the audience walked to the front of the rotunda and placed flowers in a vase as a bell chimed.
“Colonel Ann Wright, a career Army officer and U.S. diplomat who resigned over the U.S. invasion of Iraq, warned of the threat to peace posed by the continued spread of U.S. military bases, now numbering 900 around the world,” he wrote. “She urged people to take action to confront elected officials, and to risk or invite arrest to see firsthand the need for reform of our justice system.”
This year, Veterans For Peace is calling for “an Armistice—a permanent ceasefire—in Palestine, Lebanon and throughout the Middle East,” its website states. “Today, the looming threats of climate catastrophe and nuclear annihilation have been overshadowed by Israel’s horrific ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza,” it continues.
Becoming a dissenter
Wright grew up in Bentonville, Arkansas, and earned Master’s and Law degrees at the University of Arkansas, where Bill and Hillary Clinton were instructors. She also has a Master’s degree in National Security Affairs from the U.S. Naval War College.
She served 29 years in the U.S. military, 13 as an active-duty soldier and 16 in the Army reserves, retiring as a colonel.
After Wright was released from active duty, she joined the State Department. For the next 16 years, she served as a foreign diplomat in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. She was on the team that reopened the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, in December 2001, after the fall of the Taliban to U.S. forces.
“I spent most of this last year in Washington, D.C., lobbying Congress every single day to challenge the huge amounts of weaponry we’re giving to Israel,” Wright told WMJ. “While the genocide in Gaza is right now on the hands of the Biden-Harris administration and the U.S. Congress, the Democrats and the Republicans are equally responsible.”
Sandra Whitehead is an educator, nationally award-winning journalist and author of Lebanese Americans, published by Marshall Cavendish. She is blessed with a loving family–her husband Abdulaziz Aleiou and three children, Ali, Aisha and Adam.