Three Arguments
Against the War
by Russell Mokhiber
and Robert Weissman
Unspeakable acts of violence were committed on September
11. The perpetrators of the horrific attack of September 11
must be brought to justice, using the instruments of domestic
and international law. The unconscionable slaughter demands
prosecution.
But bombing a desperately poor country under the yoke of a repressive
regime is a wrongheaded response. The U.S. bombing of Afghanistan
should cease immediately.
It is a policy that will diminish U.S. security, ignores overriding
humanitarian concerns, and precludes more sensible approaches
to achieving justice and promoting security in the United States
and around the world.
1. The policy of bombing
increases the risk of further terrorism against the United States.
This is an uncontested claim.
The Bush administration along with virtually every commentator
acknowledges that the U.S. bombing and military response is
likely to worsen the possibility of additional terrorism on
U.S. soil.
The recent Congressional leak that so outraged the White House
involved a Washington Post report that an intelligence official,
responding to a senator's question, "said there is a '100
percent' chance of an attack
should the United States strike Afghanistan, according to sources
familiar with the briefing."
The horror of September 11 allows for no satisfactory response.
But surely the United States must not act to increase the risk
of terrorism.
No matter how great one's outrage at September 11, no matter
how intense one's desire to "do something" -- it doesn't
make sense to pursue a course of action that intensifies the
very problem the Bush administration says it is trying to solve.
And the increased risk of terrorism will not be short-lived.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld says the war against terrorism
will take years to win. Former CIA chief James Woolsey and others
have talked about a two- or three-decade war. That's coming
from proponents of the U.S. military action, people who view
terrorism as something that can be defeated, rather than as
a tactic assumed by weak and disgruntled parties.
2. The bombing is intensifying
a humanitarian nightmare in Afghanistan.
"The terrorist attacks of 11 September, in terms of
security and access within Afghanistan, have created the potential
for a humanitarian crisis of massive proportions," according
to the UN's World Food Program (WFP).
The WFP estimates 7.5 million people are in danger of starvation
in Afghanistan.
The U.S. threat of military response to September 11, and now
its bombing, has made a horrible situation worse. The WFP has
predicted nearly two million additional people will need food
assistance due to the disruptions caused by the expectation,
and now the reality, of a U.S. military response.
"It is now evident that we cannot, in reasonable safety,
get food to hungry Afghan people," says Oxfam America President
Raymond C. Offenheiser, "We've reached the point where
it is simply unrealistic for us to do our job in Afghanistan.
We've run out of food, the borders are closed, we can't reach
our staff and time is running out."
After September 11, relief agencies pulled their staff out of
Afghanistan, though the WFP has managed to continue to deliver
some food supplies via Afghani staff.
But aid agencies warn that time is running out to deliver food
supplies. By mid-November, heavy snows block key roads, making
it impossible to move trucks into many areas of the country.
"If WFP is to meet its target of delivering 52,000 tons
of food aid each month to millions of hungry people inside Afghanistan,
it urgently needs to fill-up its warehouses before the region's
harsh winter sets in," said Mohamed Zejjari, WFP assistant
executive director and director of operations.
Oxfam has called for a pause in the bombing on humanitarian
grounds. "We just don't know how many people may die if
the bombing is not suspended and the aid effort assured,"
Offenheiser says.
Here the humanitarian imperative is aligned with the most narrowly
defined U.S. national interest. No action can better serve to
reduce the risk of future terrorism than providing sufficient
food aid to the suffering Afghanis.
3. There are better ways
to seek justice.
If law is to have meaning, it must constrain and guide our
actions in the times of greatest stress and challenge, not just
when it is convenient.
Reviewing the principles of international law, Michael Ratner
of the Center for Constitutional Rights, urges the United States
to:
* Convene a meeting of the UN Security Council.
* Request the establishment of an international tribunal with
authority to seek out, extradite or arrest and try those responsible
for the September 11 attack and those who commit or are conspiring
to commit future attacks
* Establish an international military or police force under
the control of UN and which can effectuate the arrests of those
responsible for the September 11 attacks and those who commit
or are conspiring to commit future attacks. It is crucial that
such force should be under control of the UN and not a mere
fig leaf for the United States as was the case in the war against
Iraq.
A fair trial of bin Laden -- one perceived as fair not just
in the United States but around the world -- is essential to
avoid turning him into a martyr and worsening the spiral of
violence.
Opponents of the war should not be content to be a dissenting
minority. While there are many compelling arguments against
the war, it is critical to emphasize those with the best prospect
of moving the U.S. public and policymakers.
The widespread U.S. public support for military action against
Afghanistan is based in part on a desire for a modicum of justice
and for action to reduce the risk of future terrorist action.
These are both vital goals, but both -- especially reducing
the risk of future terrorism -- can be better achieved through
peace than war.
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate
Crime Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington,
D.C.-based Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate
Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy
(Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999; http://www.corporatepredators.org)
(c) Russell Mokhiber
and Robert Weissman
Focus on the Corporation is a weekly column written by Russell
Mokhiber and Robert Weissman.
Focus on the Corporation is distributed to individuals on the
listserve corp-focus@lists.essential.org. To subscribe to corp-focus,
send an e-mail message to corp-focus-request@lists.essential.org
with the text: subscribe. The above article, as with all Focus
on the Corporation columns, was first posted at
http://www.corporatepredators.org.
Postings on corp-focus are limited to the columns. If you would
like to comment on the columns, send a message to russell@essential.org
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