Veterans Stage Capitol Protest for Climate Justice

August 4th, 2022 - by Veterans for Peace

Veterans For Peace Risk Arrests for Climate Justice

Veterans for Peace

(August 3, 2022) — Veterans For Peace members and supporters were just arrested demanding President Biden and Congress take immediate action on the climate crisis.

VFP is currently in Washington D.C. to bring attention to how US militarism fuels the climate crisis. Our members were arrested outside of the Capitol  building, blocking the street, to demand President Biden and Congress to Declare a Climate Emergency NOW and Cut the Pentagon Budget! Here is a full list of our demands:

We Demand that the President and Congress:

  • Stop the U.S.-driven wars and all military weapons sales, shipments and support to nation states engaged in open armed conflict.
  • Require the U.S. military release a full report on their greenhouse gas emissions.  The United States military does not publicly and regularly report its overall fuel consumption or greenhouse gas emissions—despite requirements laid out in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2021. DoD is estimated to emit more CO2 than over 120 separate countries.
  • Declare a Climate Emergency NOW–and use all the resulting Presidential powers including stopping the granting of new resource extraction permits and leases, e.g., drilling on public lands and pipeline construction, and strengthening of standards including air quality and methane emissions.
  • Cut the Pentagon Budget- Military spending should be reduced by at least $200 billion annually, freeing up $2 trillion or more over the next decade for domestic and human needs priorities. With those spending cuts, the Pentagon’s budget would remain more than enough to keep America safe at a level well above our nation’s post-World War II historical average.
  • Prioritize investing in communities in the U.S. impacted by the military and climate change and in the Global South including paying the US’ climate debt.
  • Prioritize diplomacy over the threat of military force, beginning with negotiations for a global Climate Emergency Treaty and the renegotiation of lapsed nuclear arms treaties between U.S. and Russia.

Why we felt the need to put our bodies on the line:

  • “As a retired research geologist I fear the climate crisis.  As a veteran, I know our military fuels this crisis and they have no accountability for their actions. It is too late for more talk, we need immediate action.”  -Jim Rine, US Army, 1970-73
  • “We’ve passed the point of return for our climate and our world.  I am here because I know that we must do everything we can to mitigate the worst of what is to come.  We must not sit back in apathy and hopelessness.  The time to act is NOW.”  -Stephanie Atkinson, US Army Reserve, 1984-1990
  • “One of the ways I atone for my actions when I was in the military in Iraq, before I new any better, was to work towards a better world.  I want future generations to have a chance to live in a world that is not on fire.”  -Jules Vaquera, US Air Force, OIF Veteran, 2000-2006

Veterans demand justice for military burn-pit victims.

Vets Arrested for Demanding Action on Climate Crisis

Veterans for Peace

WASHINGTON, DC (August 3, 2022) — On Wednesday, August 3rd, seven military veterans and supporters were arrested near the US Capitol Building. Members of Veterans For Peace, an organization of over 120 military veteran chapters worldwide, gathered at the foot of the Capitol demanding more robust action on addressing the climate crisis.

Veterans For Peace Demands that the President and Congress:

  • Stop the US-driven wars and all military weapons sales, shipments and support to nation states engaged in open armed conflict.
  • Require the US military release a full report on their greenhouse gas emissions. The United States military does not publicly and regularly report its overall fuel consumption or greenhouse gas emissions—despite requirements laid out in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2021. DoD is estimated to emit more CO2 than over 120 separate countries.
  • Declare a Climate Emergency NOW–and use all the resulting Presidential powers including stopping the granting of new resource extraction permits and leases, e.g., drilling on public lands and pipeline construction, and strengthening of standards including air quality and methane emissions.
  • Cut the Pentagon Budget- Military spending should be reduced by at least $200 billion annually, freeing up $2 trillion or more over the next decade for domestic and human needs priorities. With those spending cuts, the Pentagon’s budget would remain more than enough to keep America safe at a level well above our nation’s post-World War II historical average.
  • Prioritize investing in communities in the US impacted by the military and climate change and in the Global South including paying the US’ climate debt.
  • Prioritize diplomacy over the threat of military force, beginning with negotiations for a global Climate Emergency Treaty and the renegotiation of lapsed nuclear arms treaties between US and Russia.

Testimonials
“The military has done next to nothing to reduce their carbon footprint, either ignoring the climate mandate completely or just focusing on creating more advanced weapons systems that can continue to operate under worsening climate conditions. From the burn pits to nuclear waste to water contamination in Hawai’i, the US military is responsible for an unprecedented amount of climate disasters. It is past time for Congress and the President to hold the US military accountable for their catastrophic effects on the planet.”
— Garett Reppenhagen, Executive Director of Veterans For Peace, US Army, Cavalry/Scout Sniper, OIF Veteran.

“I chose to risk arrest today because as a Marine who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, I saw firsthand the devastation that the military has wrought on countries around the globe, including just 48 hours ago when the US military issued yet another drone strike on Afghanistan. The US spends unprecedented amounts of money on an ever-expanding US military, using veterans like me as pawns in their justifications for more money. We need to be reducing US militarism and redirecting that money towards climate solutions like renewable energy and resources that meet human needs.”
— Chris Velazquez, OIF/OEF Veteran, 2004-2010

“As a retired research geologist I fear the climate crisis. As a veteran, I know our military fuels this crisis and they have no accountability for their actions. It is too late for more talk, we need immediate action.”
— Jim Rine, US Army, 1970-73

“As a lifelong resident of Hampton Roads, Virginia, which has the largest naval institution in the world, I’ve seen the domestic environmental harm the military causes in my own backyard. From the dumping of jet fuel into wetlands in Virginia Beach to the contamination of our waterways from shipyards, it’s important to recognize all impacts of incessant militarism and say no to the military’s war on the climate.”
— T.J. Thompson, US Navy, 1998-2004, deployed to South America, Mediterranean Cruise and the invasion of Iraq

“It is totally irresponsible for our government to spend billions of dollars funding wars abroad that accelerate the climate crisis while people are suffering at home without housing or food.”
— Jeff Parente, US Marine Corps, 2006-2014, OIF Veteran

“The money needed to avoid the worst results of climate change, as well as many other social issues that lack adequate funding, is the wasteful and bloated military budget. Not only that, the US military is the greatest contributor to mounting ecological catastrophe.”
— Joshua Farris, US Army, 2000-2004, OIF veteran

“We’ve passed the point of return for our climate and our world. I am here because I know that we must do everything we can to mitigate the worst of what is to come. We must not sit back in apathy and hopelessness. The time to act is NOW.”
— Stephanie Atkinson, US Army Reserve, 1984-1990

“As a veteran I have seen first hand the waste of the US military. I have also watched Congress say that they care about veterans and active duty members of the military as an excuse to enrich lobbyists and military contractors, while defunding any military benefits. Since leaving the military I have become a land conservation advocate and I believe I have a responsibility to speak out against US militarism and the pollution that the military creates.”
— Mike Marion, US Army Corps of Engineers, 1988-90, Panama

“One of the ways I atone for my actions when I was in the military in Iraq, before I knew any better, was to work towards a better world.  I want future generations to have a chance to live in a world that is not on fire.”
—Jules Vaquera, US Air Force, OIF Veteran, 2000-2006