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ZMag: Five Reasons Not to Go to War [WTC] By Michael Albert, Stephen R. Shalom 29/9/2001 2:38 am Sat |
http://www.zmag.org/fiveargs.htm By Michael Albert and Stephen R. Shalom
In the wake of the horrific attacks of September 11, many people find
their feelings of sadness and shock mixed with anger and calls for war.
But war would be horribly wrong for at least five reasons.
1. Guilt hasn't yet been proven. As the New York Times acknowledged, "Law enforcement officials ...
appear to have little solid evidence tying Mr. bin Laden's group to the
attacks" (NYT, 20 Sept. 2001). If we believe in law and justice, when
crimes are committed we don't advocate that victims who have a strong
hunch about culprits impose punishment. We demand proof. We reject
vigilantism. We reject guilt by association. This is elementary and
uncontestable, except when fear and the drums of war cloud
consciousness. In the case of September 11, though an Islamic or
Middle Eastern connection seems clear, there are many extremist groups
that might have been responsible. To rush to punitive judgment, much
less to war, before responsibility has been determined violates basic
principles of justice. Guilt should be proven, not suspected.
2. War would violate International Law.
International law provides a clear recourse in situations of this sort:
present the matter to the Security Council, which is empowered under
the UN Charter, the fundamental document of contemporary
international law, to take appropriate action. The Security Council has
met and unanimously denounced the terrorist attacks, passing a strong
resolution. But the Security Council resolution did not -- despite what
Washington might claim -- authorize the use of force, and especially
not a unilateral use of force. The resolution ends by saying that the
Council "remains seized of the matter," which, as former UN
correspondent Phyllis Bennis notes, is "UN diplo-speak" meaning that
"decision-making remains in the hands of the Council itself, not those
of any individual nation." To be sure, the UN Charter allows countries to
act in self-defense which would permit the United States to shoot
down a terrorist plane, for example. But it has long been clear UN
doctrine that self-defense does not allow countries to themselves
launch massive reprisal raids -- precisely because to allow such reprisals
would lead to an endless cycle of unrestrained violence.
3. War would be unlikely to eliminate those responsible for the
September 11 attacks. If bin Laden is indeed the evil genius responsible for the September 11
attacks, is it credible that he and his top aides would be so bumbling as
to wait around for the U.S. military to exterminate them? We know they
have already abandoned their training camps (NYT, 19 Sept. 2001).
They may have relocated themselves to some unknown caves in the
Afghan mountains, they may have moved into various Afghan villages,
blending in with the population, or they may even have left the country
entirely. Are U.S. bombers and cruise-missiles really going to find bin
Laden and unknown associates? It's doubtful that Washington has
good intelligence as to their whereabouts; when the U.S. launched
cruise missiles at bin Laden in 1998 -- with the advantage of surprise
-- its information was out of date and he was already gone. It's likely to
be even harder to find him and his lieutenants now. War is hardly the
most effective way to pursue the perpetrators and they are hardly likely
to be its primary victims. 4. Huge numbers of innocent people will die.
It was precisely the fact that the September 11 attacks killed large
numbers of civilians that made the attacks terroristic and so horrific. If it
is immoral to slaughter thousands of Americans in an effort to disrupt
the U.S. economy and force a change in U.S. policy, it is no less immoral
to slaughter thousands of Afghans in an effort to force the Taliban to
change its policy. The United States is moving large numbers of
warplanes and missile-launching vessels into the region, yet there are
hardly any military targets in Afghanistan for them to attack. It is
inevitable that civilians will bear the brunt of any major campaign --
civilians who, in their vast majority, probably are ignorant not only of
the recent terrorist assault on the U.S., but probably even of bin Laden
himself. Ground forces might be less indiscriminate, but it's hard to
imagine that Washington's military plans won't involve the massive
application of force, with horrendous human consequences. While the
image of bombers flying over Afghanistan and bombing a people whose
average lifespan is about 45 years of age and who are suffering terrible
deprivation already -- not least due to the Taliban, which the U.S.
helped create and empower -- is horrifying enough, it is important to
realize that death and deprivation come in many forms. Even without
widespread bombing, if the threat to attack the civilian population or
outright coercion of other countries leads to curtailment of food aid to
Afghanistan, the ensuing starvation could kill a million or more Afghans
by mid-winter. Is this the appropriate response to terror?
5. War will reduce the security of U.S. citizens.
What drives people to devote -- and even sacrifice -- their lives to
anti-American terrorism? No doubt the causes are complex, but surely
deep feelings of anger and frustration at the U.S. role in the Middle
East is a significant factor. If the United States goes to war some
terrorists will probably be killed, but so too will many innocent people.
And each of these innocent victims will have relatives and friends whose
anger and frustration at the United States will rise to new heights, and
the ranks of the terrorists will be refilled many times over. And the new
recruits will not just come from Afghanistan. To many Muslims
throughout the Middle East, war will be seen as an attack on Islam --
and this is one reason that many of Washington's Islamic allies are
urging caution. Significantly, the New York Times reports that the
"drumbeat for war, so loud in the rest of the country, is barely audible
on the streets of New York" (NYT, 20 Sept. 2001). Their city suffered
unbearable pain, but many New Yorkers know that the retaliatory killing
of people in the Middle East will not make them any safer; on the
contrary, it is likely to lead to more, not less terror on U.S. soil, and in
any event, would inflict the same pain on still more innocent people.
The dynamic of terror and counter-terror is a familiar one: it leads not
to peace but to more violence. Israel's response to terrorism hasn't
brought Israelis more security. Nor has retaliatory terrorism made people
more secure elsewhere. Indeed, it is quite likely that the perpetrators of
the terror attack on the United States would like nothing more than to
induce a massive U.S. military response which might destabilize the
whole region, leading to the creation of millions of holy warriors and the
overthrow of governments throughout the Islamic world. Whether bin
Laden's al-Qaeda or some other extremist group or groups is
responsible, war might play right into their hands, reducing the security
of us all. |