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BREAKING Over 60 Veterans Arrested in Capitol Protesting the Iran War — Peacefully

They came in uniform. Some on crutches. Some in wheelchairs. They stood at attention and folded a flag for the dead. Then Capitol Police zip-tied them all.

A note from the writer. I know what a folded flag means. When I saw the videos from Cannon Rotunda yesterday — disabled vets in formation, handing tulips to no one, waiting silently to be arrested — I knew this was bigger than a news story. This is people speaking the oldest truth in American life: war has a cost, and the people who pay it should be heard.

More than 60 U.S. military veterans were arrested inside the United States Capitol on Monday. They were not fighting police. They were not shouting threats. They were standing at attention, holding red flowers, and folding an American flag. Their message was simple: end the war on Iran.

The protest happened at noon on April 20, 2026, inside the rotunda of the Cannon House Office Building — the oldest House office building on Capitol Hill, directly south of the Capitol. Veterans and military family members stood in formation under the dome. Some wore fatigues; some wore civilian clothes; some were on crutches; others used wheelchairs.

Capitol Police gave the usual warning for civil disobedience. The vets did not leave. Officers moved in with zip-ties. At least 62 people were arrested, according to the Center on Conscience and War. This is a story about peace, protest, and a war that most Americans do not want.

At a Glance
DateApril 20, 2026 · Noon ET
LocationCannon House Office Building Rotunda
Protest nameVeterans Against Fascism
People arrestedAt least 62 (veterans & military family)
Organized byCoalition of 7 veterans groups
Symbolic itemsRed tulips, folded U.S. flag, banners
U.S. troops killed in war13 (as of protest date)
Day of the warDay 51 of Operation Epic Fury
Live · Ceasefire Countdown
Until the ceasefire expires
--Days
--Hours
--Minutes
--Seconds

Expires Wednesday, April 22, 2026 at 12:00 PM ET.

What Happened Inside the Rotunda

The scene was quiet at first. Around 60 veterans and family members walked into the Cannon Rotunda just before noon. They unfurled two banners. One read "End the War on Iran." The other read "We Can't Afford Another War."

Then they stood at attention, in formation, and did not move. Many were holding red tulips — a flower meant to honor Iranians killed by U.S. bombs. Others carried folded American flags, the kind used at military funerals.

Next came the flag-folding ceremony. If you have ever been to a military funeral, you know what this looks like. Two people pull the flag tight between them. Thirteen folds, into a triangle. Each fold is supposed to mean something. One is for life. One for belief in eternal life. One for the ones who gave theirs in service. On Monday, the fold honored 13 Americans — service members like Sgt. Declan Coady, 20, of Des Moines, Iowa, killed in a drone strike at the Port of Shuaiba in Kuwait on the first day of the war. He was one of four Army Reserve soldiers from the same Iowa-based unit lost in that single attack.

Thirteen Folds of the American Flag Each fold has meaning. Use the controls to step through — or click Play.
0 / 13
The flag begins as it flies — full, open, thirteen stripes and fifty stars.

Thirteen folds. Thirteen American troops killed so far in this war.

The veterans asked Speaker of the House Mike Johnson to come meet them. They wanted him to take the folded flag. They wanted him to promise not to fund more of the war. The Speaker did not come.

Capitol Police moved in. They warned the group. The veterans did not move. Then the arrests started. Videos posted by Reuters and shared across social media show officers zip-tying the protesters and walking them out of the rotunda. Some of the cuffed veterans were visibly disabled. Some were in wheelchairs. Not one of them fought back.

I have spent the last two decades wishing I could refuse to go.

Mike Prysner · Iraq War Veteran · Before His Arrest

Who Led the Protest

Mike Prysner, an Iraq War veteran who now leads the Center on Conscience and War, was among those arrested. He told reporters more than 100 troops have filed for conscientious objector status since the war began. Navy corpsman Tyler Romero, who filed in 2025, stood with the group to encourage others to use that legal path.

The Coalition Behind It

Seven veterans and military family groups organized the action together:

About Face: Veterans Against The War
Anti-war vets active since the Iraq War era.
Veterans For Peace
Est. 1985. Called the war "dangerous and illegal."
Center on Conscience and War
Legal help for conscientious objectors.
Common Defense
Progressive veterans' political action group.
Military Families Speak Out
Families of service members and fallen troops.
Fayetteville Resistance Coalition
Based near Fort Liberty (formerly Fort Bragg).
50501 Veterans
Veterans' arm of the national 50501 movement.

The War They're Protesting

The United States and Israel began strikes against Iran on February 28, 2026 — Day 51 of Operation Epic Fury as of the protest. A two-week ceasefire is set to expire April 22, 2026; President Trump has rejected an extension while pressing Iran on nuclear issues.

Thirteen American service members have been killed; Iranian civilian casualties are harder to verify but reported in the thousands.

Most Americans oppose how the war is being fought. Recent polling:

American Opinion on the Iran War

Oppose U.S. military action against Iran
53%
Quinnipiac, March
Oppose sending U.S. ground troops
74%
Quinnipiac, March
Disapprove of Trump's handling of the conflict
61%
Pew Research
Say initial decision to use force was wrong
59%
Pew Research

These are not fringe numbers. The veterans in Cannon were standing with majority sentiment — and using civil disobedience to force Congress to confront it.

Why Veterans Protesting Matters

Veterans carry moral authority on war because they have already paid its costs. Monday's action followed other Capitol Hill protests in recent weeks, including the removal of a Marine Senate candidate whose arm was broken during a hearing disruption — part of a sustained push by anti-war veterans' groups.

The Cannon Rotunda sits inside the building where members have their offices. Reaching it means clearing security and walking past staff — as close as many citizens get to the people who fund conflicts.

This is the most important historical moment of our lifetime.

Tyler Romero · Navy Veteran · Conscientious Objector

What Are They Being Charged With?

Capitol Police arrested protesters under D.C. Code § 22-1307 — Crowding, Obstructing, or Incommoding — the same misdemeanor statute used for most peaceful demonstrations inside congressional office buildings.

  • Misdemeanor, not a felony
  • Maximum penalty: 90 days in jail and a fine
  • Typical outcome: citation, same-day release, fines
  • Jail time is rare for first-time offenders
Statute
D.C. Code § 22-1307
Crowding, Obstructing, or Incommoding
Level
Misdemeanor
Max Jail
90 days
Typical Outcome
Citation & fine
Release
Same day
Police give a verbal warning first; arrests follow only if demonstrators refuse to disperse.

The veterans expected arrest — that is the point of civil disobedience: break a minor law to spotlight a larger moral claim.

What Comes Next

By Monday evening, organizers said those arrested had largely been processed and released with citations. The larger question is Wednesday, when the ceasefire expires — and whether Congress will use its war powers as the Constitution envisions.

Civic Impact

What This Means for You

1

Peaceful protest is still a right

The First Amendment protects dissent. Civil disobedience is an American tradition — especially when veterans lead it.

2

Congress has war powers it is not using

Only Congress may declare war. Your House member and senators can vote to end or authorize fighting.

3

Service members can legally object

Conscientious objection is a recognized path; groups like CCW offer free legal help.

4

Public opinion matters — eventually

Majorities oppose how this war is being waged; sustained pressure shapes what leaders do next.

5

You can contact your representative

Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121. Ask how your member will vote on war powers and funding.

The Civic Lesson

People who served this country came to Capitol Hill in uniform, folded a flag, and asked to be heard. They were peacefully arrested — not because the system failed, but because civil disobedience is designed to be seen.

Whether you agree with them on the war, the deeper civic test is whether we keep paying attention — and whether Congress answers the constitutional questions only it can.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many veterans were arrested at the Capitol?
At least 62 people were arrested, according to organizers. The group included around 60 veterans and military family members in total. Some estimates put the broader crowd at up to 120 people.
Where did the Iran war protest happen?
Inside the rotunda of the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill at noon on Monday, April 20, 2026. Cannon is the oldest House office building and sits directly south of the Capitol.
What groups organized the protest?
Seven veterans and military family groups: About Face: Veterans Against The War, Veterans For Peace, Common Defense, the Center on Conscience and War (CCW), the Fayetteville Resistance Coalition, Military Families Speak Out, and 50501 Veterans.
Why did the veterans hold red tulips?
The red tulip honors Iranians killed by U.S. strikes. Veterans also held a flag-folding ceremony for the 13 American service members killed so far.
Were the veterans peaceful?
Yes. They stood at attention, held banners, chanted, and folded a flag. They did not resist arrest; some were disabled or used wheelchairs.
What charges do the arrested veterans face?
D.C. Code § 22-1307 — a misdemeanor with up to 90 days in jail. Most protesters are cited, released the same day, and pay a fine.
Is the Iran war still going on?
A two-week ceasefire is set to expire Wednesday, April 22, 2026. President Trump has rejected an extension. The war began February 28, 2026.
What does this protest mean for American civic life?
It shows peaceful civil disobedience in a democracy — and veterans' unique moral voice on when America should fight.

Sources

  1. Center on Conscience and War — centeronconscience.org
  2. The Hill — thehill.com
  3. Common Dreams — commondreams.org
  4. Al Jazeera — aljazeera.com
  5. D.C. Law Library — § 22-1307
  6. U.S. Capitol Police — 2018 mass citation press release
  7. Military Times — 13 U.S. troops killed (April 2026)
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