Conflicts in the Middle East
 You Tell Us
 Message Boards

 News: Headlines

 Fight For Your Rights




  Powell To Make U.S. Case Against Iraq On Wednesday
  Bush Says Secretary Powell Will Link Iraq And Al Qaeda
  Allow Your Voice To Be Heard
  Arms Inspectors Call Iraq Uncooperative, Ask For More Time
  Fat Joe, 3 Doors Down, Godsmack Speak Out About War In Iraq
  Thousands Protest Prospect Of War; Bush Complains About Iraq's 'Re-Runs'
  Gulf War I Anniversay
  Can You Be Drafted To Fight In Iraq?
  Colin Powell To Saddam Hussein: 'We Are Not Deceived'
  More Than 100 Entertainers Urge Bush Not To Invade Iraq
  Everything You Wanted To Know About Saddam Hussein
  Let The Inspections In Iraq Begin — Again
  UN Approves Resolution Against Iraq
  Is War With Iraq Necessary? Arguments For And Against
  Who Is Colin Powell?
  Who Is Tommy Franks?
  Who Is Donald Rumsfeld?
  Who is Condoleezza Rice?
  What is the Selective Service?

More Than 100 Entertainers Urge Bush Not To Invade Iraq

Matt Damon
Photo: Universal

R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe, Matt Damon, Kim Basinger and Samuel L. Jackson, along with 100 other celebrities, have signed a letter urging President Bush not to go to war with Iraq.

"We feel that military action in Iraq will allow the terrorists to fan the flames of anti-American sentiment and further destabilize the Middle East," one of the letters signatories, actress Janeane Garofalo ("Reality Bites"), told CNN.

The letter's contents were announced in a press conference Tuesday (December 10).

"War talk in Washington is alarming and unnecessary," reads the letter, which was put together by Artists United to Win Without War, a new group founded by former "M*A*S*H" star Mike Farrell, who will soon star as much-maligned former Enron executive and Bush pal Ken Lay in a TV movie called "The Crooked E."

"We are patriotic Americans who share the belief that Saddam Hussein cannot be allowed to possess weapons of mass destruction," the letter continues. "We support rigorous United Nations weapons inspections to assure Iraq's effective disarmament."

Laurence Fishburne, David Duchovny and Ethan Hawke, along with the traditionally outspoken Alec Baldwin, Harry Belafonte, Tim Robbins, Susan Sarandon, Barbra Streisand and Martin Sheen, also signed the letter. They were joined by a former U.S. envoy to Iraq and a retired admiral.

"We've got the United Nations doing exactly what they were designed to do — what we want them to do," retired Rear Adm. Eugene Carroll, who now serves as deputy director of the Center for Defense Information think tank, insisted to CNN. "For God's sake, let's take 'yes' for an answer and end this march to war."

White House press secretary Ari Fleischer reportedly responded that, "the president agrees that violence is not the answer in Iraq, and that's why he hopes Saddam Hussein will disarm."

Letter signatory and Emmy-winning actor Ed Asner, star of the 1970s TV series "Lou Grant," accused Bush of using a possible war for political gain. "If he defuses it he'll look like a wuss to the hard-liners and the fundamentalists," Asner told one news service. "He's already lost the left, and it's 50-50 on the center, and he'll likely lose some of the right [without an invasion of Iraq]."

By Ryan J. Downey


Do you think the U.S. should attack Iraq without the backing of the Security Council? Vote in the MTV News poll.

Share your thoughts in You Tell Us.
 Back to Conflict In The Middle East





Celebs In Politics
MTV News Video Report


© 2007 MTV NETWORKS. © AND TM MTV NETWORKS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. TERMS OF USE, USER CONTENT SUBMISSION AGREEMENTCOPYRIGHT POLICY  and  PRIVACY STATEMENT/YOUR CA PRIVACY RIGHTADVERTISING OPPORTUNITIES E-COMMERCE ON THIS WEBSITE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY MTVN DIRECT INC.