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For over fifty years Peace Action has made strides towards ending the nuclear threat, to create a more peaceful economy, and to support nonviolent resolutions to international conflicts. Peace Action originated in two accomplished disarmament and antiwar organizations, SANE and the Freeze, that were founded during the Cold War and merged in 1987.
The 1950s 1957 The Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy is founded and launches its first ad in the New York Times. SANE's founders, inspired by Dr. Albert Schweitzer's "Call to Conscience" which stirred public action about the dangers of nuclear radiation, included Saturday Review editor Norman Cousins, American Friends Service Committee member Clarence Pickett, and poet Lenore Marshall, among others. The committee's mission was to "develop public support for a boldly conceived and executed policy which will lead mankind away from war and toward peace and justice."
1958
The USSR announces a unilateral halt to atmospheric nuclear tests and
the US responds with a one year testing moratorium. The National
Student Council for a SANE Nuclear Policy is organized. 1959
Steve Allen hosts founding meeting of Hollywood SANE. Members included
Marlon Brando, Henry Fonda, Marilyn Monroe, Arthur Miller, Harry
Belafonte and Ossie Davis. The 1960s 1960
SANE Rally in Madison Square Garden, NYC, attracts 20,000 to hear
Eleanor Roosevelt, Norman Cousins, Norman Thomas, A. Philip Randolph,
Walter Reuther, Harry Belafonte call for an end to the arms race 1961
SANE hosts an eight day, 109-mile march from McGuire Air Force Base in
New Jersey to UN Plaza. It is the largest of SANE's April Peace
Mobilizations, which are attended by more than 25,000 people.
International sponsors of SANE (including Martin Buber, Pablo Casals,
Bertrand Russell and Albert Schweitzer) petition President Kennedy to
maintain a moratorium on testing in the atmosphere. 1962
Dr. Spock is recruited as a national sponsor; a "Dr. Spock is worried"
ad appears in the New York Times, and is reprinted in 700 papers
worldwide. Graphic Artists for SANE is organized, including Jules
Feiffer, Ben Shahn, and Edward Sorel. SANE organizes a rally of over
10,000 on "Cuba Sunday" to express concern and outrage over the Cuban
Missile Crisis. SANE works for the first time to elect congressional
candidates "who come close to (SANE's) reasoned position" 1963
Dentists for SANE launch ad campaign -- "Your children's teeth contain
Strontium 90." SANE's Norman Cousins acts as an unofficial liaison
between President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Khrushchev on test ban
negotiations. The Partial Test Ban Treaty is signed in Moscow on July 25; President Kennedy sends personal thanks to Mr. Cousins and SANE. 1964
President-elect Lyndon Johnson sends a personal greeting to SANE's
Seventh Annual Conference, delivered by the Deputy Director of the US
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. 1965
The Vietnam War escalates: an early critic of armed intervention, SANE
organizes an Emergency Rally on Vietnam which attracts 18,000 to
Madison Square Garden, while a march on Washington in November draws
35,000. Vice-president Hubert Humphrey meets with SANE leaders Dr.
Spock, Sanford Gottlieb and Homer Jack three days after march "to
openly, responsibly, and frankly discuss their proposals" to end the
war. 1966
Rev. William Sloane Coffin and Norman Thomas co-chair SANE's "Voter's
Peace Pledge Campaign" to urge Congressional candidates to work for
peace in Vietnam. 1967
Dr. Spock helps organize the Spring Mobilization to End the War in
Vietnam. SANE becomes the first national organization to advocate
removal of President Johnson from office and joins the "Dump Johnson"
movement. 1968
SANE endorses Senator Eugene McCarthy for President. President Johnson
announces he "would not seek, nor accept the nomination of (his) party
for another term." 1969
SANE produces ads attacking anti-ballistic missiles (ABM): "From the
people who brought you Vietnam." SANE national conference on ABMs in
Washington features Nobel Prize winner George Wald, Yale psychiatrist
Dr. Robert J. Lifton, and Rep. George Brown (D-CA). The SANE Board
changes its policy on the war, and urges the US government to withdraw
unilaterally from Vietnam. SANE helps to coordinate a November march on
D.C.
The 1970s 1971 SANE helps to organize an April war protest attended by an estimated 200,000 to 500,000 people. 1972
SANE criticizes the ABM Treaty and SALT agreements for ignoring
offensive strategic weapons. Following Richard Nixon's re-election,
SANE advocates Congressional cut-off of funds for the Vietnam war.
1973
Vietnam War ends on April 30. SANE lobbies to have Congress end the
bombing in Cambodia, and leads a successful effort to pass the War
Powers Act. SANE takes on the military budget, and produces the
"America Has a Tapeworm" ad. 1974
SANE alerts the public to the dangers of "limited" nuclear war plans
and the connections between military spending and inflation. 1976
SANE's NYC conference on "The Arms Race and the Economic Crisis"
features Seymour Melman, Senator Dick Clark (IA), and George Rathjens.
SANE's Sanford Gottlieb testifies before the Democratic Platform
Committee and wins an economic conversion plank in the party platform. 1977
SANE works with the National Campaign to Stop the B1 Bomber, helping
achieve a 10 vote margin to suspend production and deployment of the
weapon; also winning an amendment barring funds for the Neutron bomb.
SANE produces "The Race Nobody Wins," narrated by Tony Randall. 1978 The Three Mile Island nuclear reactor suffers a partial meltdown. 1979
SANE builds a labor/peace alliance on reduced military spending and
economic conversion with Machinists Union President William
Winpinsinger. SANE lays the groundwork for a national STOP-MX Missile
Campaign. The 1980s 1980
The Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign, initiated by Randall Forsberg's call to "freeze and reverse the nuclear arms race," was born in the early 1980s. The Freeze was a grassroots-based confederation of groups spanning the country. Freeze leaders included Randall Forsberg, Pam Solo, and Randy Kehler. Elected officials such as Rep. Patricia Schroeder and Sen. Ted Kennedy helped to lead the movement in Congress. The Freeze's grassroots network pushed for nuclear reductions through ballot initiatives in towns and cities across the nation. The first of many nuclear freeze resolutions are approved in Western
Massachusetts. A referenda against MX missiles is approved in Nevada. 1981
President Reagan unveils plans for a record $200 billion military
budget along with unprecedented cutbacks in social programs. SANE
sponsors a major conference opposing the spread of Pershing II cruise
missiles in Europe. The Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign is founded in D.C. SANE wins the cancellation of plans for MX missiles in Utah and Nevada. 1982
The Kennedy-Hatfield freeze resolution is introduced in US Senate. One
million gather in New York City on June 12 - the largest peace and
disarmament march in US history. A sister rally draws 100,000 to the
Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. The SANE Political Action Committee
is formed; 16 of 32 SANE supported candidates win. More than 10 million voters approve freeze referenda in 8 states. 1983
The Nuclear Freeze resolution passes the US House of Representatives.
SANE, working to link peace and civil rights, participates in 20th
Anniversary Mobilization commemorating the historic civil rights march
on Washington DC. Hollywood for SANE is revitalized, and publishes an
ad in Variety magazine signed by over 250 celebrities including Jack
Lemmon, Burt Lancaster, James Earl Jones, Sally Field, Jean Stapleton,
Shirley MacLaine, Anne Bancroft and Ed Asner. 1984
SANE's door canvass reaches over 250,000 households and recruits 10,000
new activists by early 1984; membership tops 100,000. President Reagan
announces that Washington is ready for "mutual compromises" with
Soviets to resume arms control negotiations. SANE's weekly radio
program, "Consider the Alternatives," is on 140 stations. Despite a
Reagan landslide, 106 of the 167 House and Senate candidates endorsed
by SANE PAC go on to win. The MX missile program is killed. 1985 SANE and Freeze activists intensify participation in direct action protests at Nevada nuclear test site. 1986
The Chernobyl nuclear accident spreads radiation worldwide. Sane and
the Freeze Campaign begin to merge. SANE/FREEZE opens an International
Office in New York City. The US House of Representatives limits nuclear
testing, Strategic Defense Initiative funding, and other weapons
programs. 1987
The Reagan/Gorbachev summit marks the signing of the Intermediate
Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. SANE/FREEZE holds its founding Congress in
Cleveland OH; Jesse Jackson's speech draws more than 1,000. SANE/FREEZE
joins the International Peace Bureau, a Nobel Peace Prize winning
coalition for disarmament organizations. 1988
Massive radioactive contamination causes Department of Energy (DOE)
nuclear weapons sites to close; SANE/FREEZE launches "Keep Them Shut!"
campaign.
The 1990s 1990 SANE/FREEZE helps lead an historic public resistance to US military buildup in the Persian Gulf. 1991 SANE/FREEZE coordinates anti-Gulf War marches in Washington, DC, helping to mobilize 500,000 protesters.
SANE/FREEZE launches a campaign against conventional arms with an
international conference in New York City, co-sponsored by the
Riverside Church Disarmament Program. 1993 SANE/FREEZE becomes Peace Action. 1994
Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) and Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-OR) introduce
Peace Action crafted legislation - the Arms Trade Code of Conduct - to
restrict US weapons sales to dictators and human rights abusers. 1995
Peace Action presses for completion of a test ban at the 25th
anniversary review conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
and leads a national dialogue over the 50th Anniversary of the
Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. 1996
Peace Action wages Peace Voter '96, the organization's largest
nationally coordinated campaign since the mid-eighties; over one
million Peace Voter Guides are distributed. President Clinton signs the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. Peace Action joins human rights groups
to stop major weapons sales to Indonesia and Turkey. 1997
The US Senate ratifies the Chemical Weapons Convention. Indonesia
withdraws its request for US fighter jets due to "unwarranted
criticism" of their human rights record. The International Campaign to
Ban Landmines (of which Peace Action is a member) wins the Nobel Peace
Prize. Peace Action celebrates its 40th Anniversary with gala events in
Boston, New York and Washington DC; honorees and speakers include Rep.
Ronald V. Dellums, Sen. Tom Harkin, Judy Collins, Peter Yarrow, Randall
Forsberg, Jane Alexander, William Sloane Coffin and Rep. Cynthia
McKinney 1998
Peace Action expands its fledgling Student Peace Action Network to over
100 campuses across the nation. Peace Voter '98 reaches 4 million
voters. 1999
Peace Action organizes against "cruise missile humanitarianism" by
opposing the NATO bombing of Kosovo and helps to found the National
Coalition for Peace and Justice, a body uniting most of the major peace
groups in the country. Also in 1999, Peace Action commemorates the
bombing of Nagasaki by staging the largest demonstration in the history
of Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. The demonstration was
led by Actor Martin Sheen.
The Next Millenium 2000
Peace Voter 2000 mobilizes voters in 39 House and 10 Senate races to
bring peace issues to the elections. Televison ads are run in 17 major
media markets in 12 states and over 2 million voter guides are
distributed throughout the country. 2001
The devastating terrorists attacks of September 11, 2001 shake the
country. Peace Action responds to the war on terrorism and the bombing
of Afghanistan with a call for Justice not War. 2002
Peace Action plays an important role in the movement against war on
Iraq and participates in two national coalitions: Win Without War and
United for Peace. Peace Acton affiliates around the country become
local leaders for grassroots anti-war efforts and mobilize tens of
thousands for national demonstrations against the war. 2003
Peace Action launches the Campaign for a New foreign Policy, a major
initiatve to build grassroots support and congressional pressure for a
US foreign policy based on human rights and democracy, nuclear
disarmament and international cooperation. |