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What next for Britain’s anti-war movement?
After a year of vibrant Palestine protests, LINDSEY GERMAN calls all campaigners to this weekend’s mass meeting of the anti-war movement in London
Protesters during a pro-Palestine march organised by Stop the War Coalition and Palestine Solidarity Campaign in central London

THERE has never been a more pressing time to discuss war and peace. The Stop the War Coalition’s Anti-War Convention, taking place in London this Sunday, is exactly the place to do so.

We have built a mass movement over Palestine over the past year and now are at a point when we should discuss what next: how do we advance the movement, what more should we be doing, and how do we shift our government?
 
We have witnessed over a year of genocidal attacks on Gaza by Israel, with no sign of them letting up as northern Gaza is ethnically cleansed. The Middle East war has spread with the bombing and invasion of Lebanon by Netanyahu, Yemen bombed by both Israel and the US, and the recent escalation with Iran.
 
In Ukraine, Nato’s proxy war with Russia continues with huge loss of life, and it is widely acknowledged that, despite the bluster and rhetoric from Keir Starmer and other Western leaders, talks to make some sort of peace cannot be far off.
 
But peace at what price in Ukraine and the Middle East? The election of Donald Trump will mark absolutely no break with US imperialism’s policy on Israel and the Middle East, given Trump’s support for settlements and his threat to attack Iran.

Both he and outgoing President Biden may feel they have an interest in producing some sort of ceasefire over Gaza, although we can be certain that this will not be in terms that bring any lasting benefit to the Palestinians.
 
While Trump claims that he will bring a settlement to the Ukraine war, this too will not result in an end to war: eastern Europe will be full of Nato troops, European defence spending is being hiked to even greater levels, and conflict with China looms. Trump’s likely appointment of China hawks to key foreign policy positions makes this clear.
 
All these issues will be discussed at the convention, with speakers including writer Michael Rosen, Palestinian Ghada Kharmi, TSSA general secretary Maryam Eslamdoust, campaigner against the arms trade Andrew Feinstein, Stop the War’s Andrew Murray and John Rees.
 
The war’s impact on many other areas of society, including civil liberties and the growing Islamophobia. We have sessions looking at racism and the far right and at state repression of protest, with speakers including Taj Ali, Mohammed Kozbar, lawyer Michael Mansfield and suspended Soas student Haya Adam.
 
The wars in Africa, linked to both historical and current imperialism, will be discussed by Fathi el-Fadi and Tokumbo Oke, while journalists Peter Oborne and Matt Kennard will lead a discussion on the collusion of the Western press over Gaza.

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