August 11, 2005
U.S.: Mothers Take Different Approaches To Honor Military Sons
by Andrew F. Tully
Cindy Sheehan (R) of Gold Star Families for Peace walks with war veteran Dennis Kyne near the president's ranch
![]()
Since the beginning of his month-long vacation in Crawford, Texas, U.S. President George W. Bush has had an unwelcome guest. Cindy Sheehan, who lives about 3,000 kilometers away in California, has been camping out near his ranch, demanding a face-to-face meeting with the president. Her son, a soldier in the U.S. Army, was killed in Iraq last year. Since then she has founded an antiwar group called Gold Star Families for Peace. In America, "Gold Star families" are those that have lost a relative in combat. Bush already has sent some aides to speak with Sheehan, but she is not satisfied, and says she won't leave until Bush himself appears. RFE/RL spoke by phone with Sheehan, as well as with another mother who has formed a group for the families of military service people.
Washington, 11 August 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Sheehan said she needs to hear from President Bush himself why the United States invaded Iraq more than two years ago. She also wants to know why he insists that the deaths of more than 1,800 U.S. troops have not been in vain.
If she succeeds in meeting Bush, it will be her second meeting with the president. She was among several grieving families who met last year with the president at a military installation near the northwestern U.S. city of Seattle.
It was two months after her son's death -- and came in the middle of his reelection campaign. She told RFE/RL that to her, Bush seemed unconcerned by the families' plight.
"I just don't think he [Bush] was really there. I felt he was very disconnected from what we were doing there," Sheehan said. "I believe it [the meeting] was a political ploy so he could, during the campaign, say, 'You know, I meet with families [of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq],' and, 'I feel their pain.' 'It's hard work for a president to send his troops off to fight in a war.' He just used our meetings as a political tool."
Sheehan said she didn't challenge Bush during that meeting. At that time, she said she knew nothing about reports disputing claims that Saddam Hussein had illegal weapons -- the reason Bush cited for invading Iraq.
She also said she was simply too traumatized by her son's recent death to question or contradict the president.
"The first time [I met with Bush] I was deeply in shock and grief, and I wasn't as informed as I am now," Sheehan said. "I'm not a mother in shock any more. I'm still a grieving mother, but now I'm an angry mother."
Sheehan said she is now convinced that her son died, in her words, "needlessly." And she said Bush shouldn't keep saying her son and other American troops died for a noble cause, and that for their sake America should continue the mission in Iraq.