Halt business With Pentagon
By Consumers For Peace
07/12/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- - Twelve major suppliers of petroleum products to
the Pentagon, including ExxonMobil, Shell, BP and Valero, have been
asked by a group of peace organizations and activists, including
Cindy Sheehan and Howard Zinn, to stop doing business with the U.S.
military until all U.S. troops and mercenary forces are out of Iraq.
ConsumersforPeace.org today sent letters calling for a Pentagon
boycott by the following firms that comprised the top ten suppliers
of petroleum and petroleum products to the U.S. military in fiscal
year 2004 or 2005. This is a list of their total sales to the
Pentagon for that period, based on information provided by the
Defense Energy Support Center:
BP - $2.2 billion
Royal Dutch Shell - $2.07 billion
ExxonMobil - $1.3 billion
Valero Energy - $898 million
Bahrain Petroleum Co. - $576.8 million
Kuwait Petroleum Corp. - $541.8 million
Ssangyong Oil (Korea) - $498.1 million
Motor Oil (Hellas) (Greece) - $426.4 million
Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. - $276.5 million (2004)
Merlin Petroleum Co. - $226.1 million (2005)
International Oil Trading Co. - $214 million
Refinery Associates of Texas - $121.3 million
"As you may know," the letters state, "the invasion and occupation
of Iraq by the United States and other coalition forces are
violations of international law." The letters continue:
"Additionally, the U.S. has committed numerous war crimes, such as
its destruction of cities, bombing of civilians, use of uranium
munitions, use of white phosphorus as a chemical weapon and
torture."
The letters refer to a 2004 peer-reviewed Lancet study in noting
that "over 100,000, and possibly far more, Iraqis have been killed
in the invasion and occupation."* The letters also say that the
"devastation of Iraqi civil society is beyond calculation."
The letters also cite U.S. and other Coalition casualties and
register "grave concerns about U.S. violations of international law
" with respect to conduct at Guantanamo, in Afghanistan and toward
Iran.
The authors ask the oil companies to stop doing business with the
U.S. military: "In view of the illegality of what is happening in
Iraq and the enormity of the suffering being caused by this illegal
conduct, we ask [each of the above listed firms] to stop selling
petroleum products and services to the U.S. military until all U.S.
military and mercenary forces leave Iraq."
*The Lancet study - "Mortality before and after the 2003 invasion of
Iraq: cluster sample survey" - made "conservative assumptions" per
the authors and did not include data from the city of Falluja. The
authors wrote that the mortality figures would have been "far more"
if Falluja had been included. It was published nearly two years ago
and hence covered only the first 18 months or the war and
occupation. The Lancet study is available online at http://www.traprockpeace.org/iraq_lancet_october_2004.pdf
A February, 2006 article - "The Iraq War: Do Civilian Casualties
Matter?" by Les Roberts, lead researcher of the Lancet study, is
available at
http://web.mit.edu/cis/pdf/Audit_6_05_Roberts.pdf
The letter is signed by:**
Nick Mottern, Director, Consumers for Peace
Charles Jenks, Chair of Advisory Board, Traprock Peace Center
Cindy Sheehan, co-founder of Gold Star Families for Peace and mother
of Casey Sheehan, who died in Iraq;
Hadi Jawad, co-founder, Crawford Peace House
Valley Reed, Dallas Peace Center
David Swanson, co-founder, AfterDowningStreet.org;
Kelly Dougherty, co-founder Iraq Veterans Against the War;
Dahr Jamail, indepdendent journalist;
Kathy Kelly, co-founder, Voices for Creative Nonviolence;
Howard Zinn, author and professor emeritus at Boston University;
Anthony Arnove, author of Iraq: the Logic of Withdrawal;
Hans-Christof von Sponeck, former UN Assistant Secretary General who
resigned in protest as the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq;
Lindsey German, Convener, Stop the War Coalition (UK);
Sharon Smith, author of Subterranean Fire: A History of
Working-Class Radicalism in the United States;
Sunny Miller, Executive Director, Traprock Peace Center;
Tim Carpenter, Executive Director, Progressive Democrats of America;
Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, NYU, national coordinating committee
member, Campus Antiwar Network;
Sara Flounders, Co-director, International Action Center;
Don Debar, WBAI New York producer;
Gayle Dunkelberger, Katonah, New York;
Rev. Diane Baker, Dallas, Texas;
Jim Goodnow, Dallas, Texas;
Nada Khader, Executive Director, WESPAC Foundation
Jean Campbell, Moderator, The World Dreams Peace Bridge
Kwame Mahdi, Peekskill, NY
Khury Peterson-Smith, Campus Antiwar Network and student
representative to Occupation Watch mission to Iraq;
Dave Zirin, author of What's My Name, Fool?;
Carolyn Fuller, Senior Analyst/ Programmer, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology;
Deepa Kumar, Assistant Professor Journalism and Media Studies,
Rutgers University;
Alan Maass, Editor, Socialist Worker newspaper;
Snehal Shingavi, PhD candidate, UC Berkeley and a founding member of
the Campus Antiwar Network;
Judy Linehan, Military Families Speak Out mother of Iraq War
Veteran;
Paola Pisi, professor of religious studies (Italy) and editor of
uruknet.info;
Sanford Russell, veteran and moderator of BoycottUS yahoo group;
Dave Stratman, Editor, NewDemocracyWorld.com;
Dennis Kyne, Gulf War veteran and activist;
Dorinda Moreno, IndyIraqAction, Elders Of The 4 Colors 4 Directions
Natylie Baldwin, Mt. Diablo Peace & Justice Center;
Dr. Thomas Fasy, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine;
Thomas F. Barton, editor of “GI Special;”
Ward Reilly, SE National Contact - Vietnam Veterans Against the War,
Veterans for Peace, Baton Rouge;
Charlie Jackson, Texans for Peace;
Tom Feeley, Editor of
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/
Gabriele Zamparini, independent filmmaker, writer and journalist;
co-producer of
www.thecatsdream.com
**affiliations are for identification purposes only
For more information, see
http://www.consumersforpeace.org contact: Nick Mottern,
Director, Consumers for Peace.org (914) 806-6179
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