Thousands of anti-war protesters have marched through the US capital to call for the immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq, on the seventh anniversary of the US-led invasion.
Demonstrators rallied near the White House and across the city centre on Saturday in a march sponsored by a coalition of anti-war groups, led by military veterans and activists.
The protesters chanted anti-war slogans and waved signs that read "We need jobs and schools, not war", as they called for an end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"This is a disgrace that this country, seven years after the invasion of Iraq, is still in that country and is upping things in Afghanistan," Maria Allwine, one of the protesters, told the Reuters news agency.
"It is wrong. Innocent people die," she said.
Protesters arrested
Police arrested at least eight people at the end of the march after the group laid mock coffins at a fence outside the White House.
Police said the protesters had defied orders to clear the pavement in front of the White House, and said they faced charges of failure to obey a lawful order.
The exact number of protesters was unclear but the rally drew a smaller crowd than the tens of thousands who marched against the war in 2006 and 2007under the administration of George Bush, the former US president.
"Obama policies in Iraq and Afghanistan are as criminal as Bush's," Mathhis Chiroux, a member of a group called the Iraqi Veterans Against the War, said, referring to Barack Obama, the US president.
"The US machine produces war regardless of who is president. We are killing innocents," the AFP news agency quoted him as saying.
Demonstrations were also held in the US states of New York and California among other places on Saturday.
Despite the protests, some analysts criticized the US media for failing to highlight awareness of the seventh anniversary of the start of the Iraq war.
PHOTO CAPTION
Demonstrators march during an anti-war protest in Washington, DC.
Al-Jazeera