Veterans for Peace takes positions on a number of issues which generally oppose the military policy of the United States,
NATO, and its allies against nations such as
Iran,
Russia,
Palestine and
Syria.
Veterans affairs Members and chapters actively participate in efforts to save
VA healthcare and defend veterans rights; to provide counseling through the GI Rights Hotline to active duty military needing assistance; and providing alternative information to counter military recruiters in the schools. In April 1986, VFP protested the judicial execution of
David Funchess, a Vietnam War veteran who was
electrocuted in
Florida for a double murder despite exhibiting signs of severe
post-traumatic stress disorder from his service that may have affected his moral culpability in the murders he committed. VFP set up a round-the-clock vigil at the Florida Vietnam War Memorial in the days leading up to Funchess's execution. Members of VFP called Funchess a "forgotten man" and protested that neither Florida Governor
Bob Graham nor the state and federal courts had taken Funchess's PTSD into enough consideration when refusing to commute his death sentence to life imprisonment.
Central America In the 1980s, VFP opposed US-sponsored wars in
Central America. On Easter Sunday, Apr 19, 1987, VFP members marched on President Reagan's Western White House in California, and Vice President Bush's vacation home in
Kennebunkport, Maine, protesting U.S. intervention in Central America. In 1988, many VFP members participated in the
Veterans Peace Convoy which was intended to truck medical and humanitarian aid to the suffering children of Nicaragua. Though the convoy was stopped by U.S. Customs and Treasury officials in Texas at the Laredo border checkpoint, on June 15, 1988, the vehicles were off-loaded into containers at a Texas port facility and about 95% of the cargo reached its destination in Nicaragua. In July 1988, VFP member Joe Ryan, an environmental scientist, of Tallahassee, Florida, established VFP's
Nicaragua Environmental Science Project. Ryan spent two years working in Nicaragua training pollution control teams how to correct water contamination problems. The project was credited with significantly reducing the nation's infant mortality rate. Also in July 1988, VFP member Randy Parent of Caribou, Maine, drove a truckload of smelting and casting equipment to Guatemala where he established the
Pro-Tierra Machine Tool Project to train members of several indigenous tribes how to make farm tools for the 100,000 members of the Pro-Tierra land reform movement. VFP regularly sends
election observers to
Guatemala,
Honduras,
Nicaragua and
El Salvador.
War on terror In the immediate aftermath of
9/11, VFP called for restraint while agreeing that: "...the hijacked airplane attacks on the World Trade Towers and the Pentagon a grievous assault upon innocence; a cause for outrage, sadness and disbelief....At this critical point, we believe it is essential to recognize that terrorists do not represent, nor are representative, of any community or country as a whole. We must not allow terrorism the power to create fear, suspicion and hatred -- or to direct our nation's domestic and foreign policies. We must not surrender to the cycle of retaliatory violence these angry people would push us into. Instead, we must come together and support each other, with faith and trust." Veterans For Peace seeks to protect
civil liberties that they believe are threatened by the
Patriot Act and other similar legislation.
War in Iraq and Afghanistan When the U.S. government threatened
invasion of Iraq, VFP conducted
public forums, met with elected representatives and participated in marches to express its opposition. As the war began, VFP gathered in
Washington, DC, with other veterans groups for Operation Dire Distress. The organization participated in the
Bring Them Home Now campaign and supports the
Iraq Veterans Against the War. Local chapters continue to conduct educational forums, demonstrations, and ongoing Iraq memorial displays such as
Arlington West (portrayed in the documentary
Arlington West: The Film) to remember the growing human cost of the war, to end the
occupation, and to bring U.S. troops home. VFP Chapter 14 in
Gainesville, Florida has for the last eight years installed a display of small
headstone replicas along a one-mile stretch of road in town which they call the Memorial Mile. Rows of 4 "tombstones" and columns of about -mile long represent every person killed since the beginning of
war in Afghanistan to the very day of installation. Every single marker can be located for a friend or loved one to visit, and often remembrances or flowers are left by friends and relatives. From Sat. Morning to Monday evening on
Memorial Day weekend VFP members and volunteers guard the memorial in shifts. The community has welcomed this tribute to the fallen service men and women and Chapter 14 continues to do this until all the troops come home.
Impeachment of George W. Bush In 2005 and 2007, VFP called for the
impeachment of
President Bush. In a letter sent to each member of the U.S.
House and
Senate, Veterans For Peace stated that "this administration's war on Iraq, in addition to being increasingly unpopular among Americans, is an unmistakable violation of our Constitution and federal law which you have sworn to uphold. In our system, the remedy for such high crimes is clear: this administration must be impeached."
Israel-Palestine Veterans For Peace issued a statement on
Israel's 2006 invasion of Lebanon condemning the targeting of civilians by both sides and the "unjustified and totally disproportionate use of force and violence by the IDF (
Israel Defense Forces)." In 2009 it issued a statement against
Israel's attacks on Gaza condemning attacks on civilians both sides and stating "Bombings, rocket attacks, blockading medical supplies and military invasions will not lead to peace and security but will perpetuate the cycle of death, destruction, fear and insecurity among the people of all countries, including the U.S." VFP was a sponsor for the Boston March for Palestine which demanded to "Free Palestine! No war on Iran or Syria! and Boycott Israel!" along with the Boston Coalition for Palestinian Rights and the Palestine Task Force of United for Justice with Peace. Members of the Palestine Working Group support remembrance of Al Nakba, and have made visits to Gaza and participated in "efforts to break the blockade of essential supplies to the area, including the Gaza Flotilla".
War against Iran VFP agrees with the Iranian complaint that
NATO seeks to "surround and threaten the nation of Iran". In 2012, the group stated that "Iran does not have a nuclear bomb. The U.S. intelligence agencies unanimously confirm this and say that Iran has not made the decision to build a nuclear weapon. Yet Iran has three neighbors that possess nuclear arsenals—
India,
Israel, and
Pakistan." VFP endorsed
United for Peace and Justice position against a War against Iran.
Drones Veterans For Peace joined
Code Pink,
World Can't Wait and Afghans For Peace to protest Drones in Chicago in 2012. On their national calendar, April 2013 was marked as the "No Drone" action month. Chapters across the nation held actions, protesting the use of drones.
NATO VFP has called for the dissolution of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as a "NATO has always been a war-making institution lacking in accountability to the peoples of the nations it claims to represent." VFP states that NATO has waged wars of aggression against Yugoslavia, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya. VFP states that NATO maintains nuclear weapons in violation of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. They back Russia's protest that Russia is threatened by missile base construction on its borders. VFP cites Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Mubarak as examples where NATO did not address human rights abuses by dictators who supported NATO, and charges that NATO supports "Israel's expansionist agenda". to secure justice and compensation for the Vietnamese victims of
dioxin-contaminated
Agent Orange and other herbicides that were sprayed over more than 1/8 of the land of southern
Vietnam,
Laos and
Cambodia during the American portion of the
Vietnam War.
School of the Americas Each year VFP members from across the country go to
Fort Benning,
Georgia, to demonstrate for the closing of the Army's controversial
School of the Americas, a training center for thousands of soldiers from
Latin American countries which VFP identifies as having "long records of
human rights abuses".
Korea After revelations of the
massacres of civilians by U.S. soldiers during the
Korean War, VFP sent several fact-finding delegations to investigate these allegations and bring the hidden history of that war before the public. They continue to work for an end to that conflict through their Korea Peace Campaign.
Vieques The VFP has
actively supported the end of the U.S. Navy's use of the
island-
municipality of
Vieques, Puerto Rico for bombing target practice. VFP continues to support current efforts for cleaning up the environment.
Colombia VFP sent fact-finding delegations to
Colombia and educated Americans about US military involvement, the murder of union leaders by
para-militaries and other human rights abuses, including the use of harmful chemical defoliants in the
war on drugs. ==Government monitoring and infiltration==