The full Senate has begun debate on the supplemental spending bill to provide nearly $75 billion more to fund the war in Iraq. The debate resumes this Wednesday morning. Two preliminary amendments were voted on Tuesday evening. The vote on the full bill can happen at any time now. Call your Senators now to tell them to vote against the supplemental spending bill..
Contact information for your Senator can be found here
Illionois Residents can call
Richard Durbin, Minority Whip (D - IL), (202) 224-2152
Barack Obama (D - IL) (202) 224-2854.
In lightning quick speed, the Senate Appropriations Committee has approved the Emergency Supplemental Spending Bill which provides an additional $74.4 billion in funding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The bulk of this will be for the war in and occupation of Iraq. Even an anemic effort to amend the bill to establish a Congressional committee to oversee how the funds are spent was defeated in the Committee.
The full Senate is expected to vote on the bill April 11.
Tell your Senator today to vote against the Supplemental Spending Bill. Do not delay!
Contact information for your Senator can be found here.
Related Links
By Mike Ferner
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C.
Dear Congressman Jones,
Your remarks condemning Richard Perle at the April 6 House Armed Services Committee hearing show your heart has clearly been touched by the senseless tragedies spilling from this war. Your words give encouragement to those of us who long to see our country get out of Iraq and end the death and suffering of countless thousands, including our fellow citizens. Your words give us hope that perhaps your heart and your mind will be open to knowing truths you could not earlier recognize.
You told Perle that you were “incensed” that he had earlier assured Congress of the need for war; that as a result of the war you have signed more than 900 condolence letters to the kin of fallen soldiers, including those of a Marine who left a wife and three children.
Bells Toll in Opposition to the War in Iraq
Chicago, Illinois - On April 5, four anti-war activists were arrested at Senator Richard Durbin’s office in Chicago for their opposition to the war. The Senate Appropriations Committee is to consider a spending bill on April 6 to provide nearly $80 billion more to fund the war in Iraq. They sought a pledge from Senator Durbin to vote against the bill.
Senate Appropriations Committee to “Mark Up” Funding Bill on April 6
On April 6 at 2:00 p.m. Eastern Time, the Senate Appropriations Committee will meet to “mark-up” the Emergency Supplemental Spending Bill which would provide upwards of $80 billion in additional funds for the U.S. war in Iraq. Contact members of the Committee as well as your own Senators to tell them to vote “No”.
Click here to contact members of the Appropriations Committee. Click here to contact your own Senators. Click here for a complete list of members of the Senate Appropriations Committee with their Washington, DC office phone numbers.
Following is a model letter which you could send to your Senator or from which you might derive talking points to include in your own letter.
We urge you to vote against the proposed Supplemental Spending Bill which is pending before the U.S. Senate. We urge you to publicly state your oppostion to this bill, both verbally and in writing. Now is the time to begin to end the U.S. war against and occupation of Iraq.
Our country has waged economic and military warfare against the people of Iraq for the past 15 years. It is time for this war to end. It is time to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq; to cancel the “odious debt” incurred by Saddam Hussein; to pay reparations to Iraqis injured by the U.S. war against Iraqi people; and to fully fund the reconstruction of Iraq as Iraqis exercise self-determination and rebuild their country in a manner which benefits the ordinary Iraqi and not the interests of the U.S., the World Bank, the IMF or other international forces.
By Cliff Kindy
Christian Peacemaker Teams
Recently world media carried the story about the U.S. shooting of an Italian kidnap victim and her security guard. At the same time, a Bulgarian soldier died as U.S. forces opened fire from a checkpoint. These stories made the news, but the regular incidents of Iraqis injured in similar circumstances often remain unpublicized.
An Iraqi friend asked me to visit his cousin. Lafta Rahim, 39, who has four children, was at home in his bed. Immediately his smile drew me as we met. Then I noticed contraptions on his body. His upper left arm had an 8-inch rod parallel to the bone, attached with six pins and two clamps. His lower right leg had a similar rod, this one with five pins and five clamps. Bullets had shattered both bones.
Lafta told his story.