Friday, August 31, 2007

Stop Stop-Loss - Our Man on the Mall

From Bellingham, Washington to Washington D.C., Evan Knappenberger has carried his message a lone way.

Evan Knappenberger with Adam Kokesh on Day Three of Tower Guard Vigil in D.C.
Evan Knappenberger, left, with Adam Kokesh
(Photo Credit: By Haraz N. Ghanbari — Associated Press Photo)



VIGIL ON THE MALL
Veteran Questions Ethics of War Policies

By Sylvia Moreno
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 29, 2007; Page B06

Evan Knappenberger is like many young post-Sept. 11 Army enlistees who went from high school into the military for patriotic reasons. He wanted to spread democracy, to topple Saddam Hussein, "to do something to affect the world in a good way," the freckled 22-year-old says.

Today, Knappenberger is a disillusioned Iraq War veteran, four months out of the military and on a one-man mission as a peace activist campaigning against Defense Department policies that he believes unethically support the continuation of the war.

He is not so much protesting as standing guard against the Pentagon's so-called "stop-loss" and "inactive reserve" policies, both designed to maintain troop strength in light of failed recruitment goals. His platform is a makeshift six-foot-tall guard tower that he erected Sunday next to the Washington Monument. There, outfitted in his battle dress uniform, Knappenberger is holding a vigil for seven nights and eight days. ...(more)

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