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EDITORIAL: Creating An Alternative To War
Richard Deats
The United States is awash in patriotism. It is
a natural impulse to look for support in the wider community when
there is widespread grief, mourning, fear, and rage in the face
of the heinous events of September 11. The many acts of compassion
and the search for healing are of great importance in such a time.
But there is great danger when these appropriate feelings and actions
get channeled into an uncritical call to arms, massive military
appropriations, and a jingoism that harms the safety and well-being
of our Muslim and Middle Eastern neighbors here at home, and wages
war abroad.
To discuss these issues from a rationalmuch
less a faithperspective, meets with ridicule and even with
threats. Here at the FOR and in the peace movement generally, many
letters, phone calls, and media comments have been unusually hostile.
In the Washington Post (September 26), under the heading
"Pacifist Claptrap," Michael Kelly wrote that pacifists
are hopelessly naïve and "not serious people." He
charges pacifists as being on the side of the murderers and "on
the side of letting them murder again." And for this reason,
he says, we are objectively pro-terrorist, a position that is evil.
But what Kelly condemns is passive-ism, doing
nothing in the face of evil. This is hardly the approach of Mohandas
Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.; of Aung Sang Suu Kyi and the
Dalai Lama. Going to war is not the only response to evildoers.
In fact, meeting terror with terror sows the seeds of another generation
of terrorists. As Gandhi said, "An eye for an eye and a tooth
for a tooth leaves the world blind and toothless."
Nonviolence is not passivity. It is, rather, truth
force. Mao Tse Tung taught that power grows out of the barrel of
a gun and there are plenty (perhaps most) who still agree with him,
maintaining that you are only serious if you send in the tanks and
missiles and bombers.
But in the last half of the twentieth century
individuals, groups, and nations began learning the power of active
nonviolence"a force more powerful." Though "nonviolence
is as old as the hills," as Gandhi put it, it is really in
the last century that "people power" armed with truth
and relentless persistence (firmeza permanente is the Brazilian
term) spread across the world, overturning evil laws and entrenched
oppression, removing dictators and facing down enemy soldiers. They
werent always successful, of course. But neither were armed
responses to evil. Gandhi called his autobiography The Story
of My Experiments with Truth, and it is this daring to experiment
with truth that holds so much hope for the human experiment in general.
In response to the events of September 11 the
United States began building a coalition for war, enlisting nations
all over the world. Troops, ships, and planes were with mounting
determination deployed overseas. The response became clear: Violence
was met with counter-violence. The spiral of violence thus continues.
What if an equivalent amount of imagination and
resources was used for the building of a coalition for peace? This
could include bringing together law enforcement agencies of many
nations to amass the evidence of the terrorist network and to bring
this before the United Nations with the call for an international
tribunal. Such an approach would support UN Secretary General Kofi
Annans pledge that the UN, with treaties against terrorism
already in place, would and should spearhead a global effort to
rid the world of it. Eight Nobel Peace Laureates have called for
an international conference on terrorism (see p.xx) that could further
enhance a suitable response of the community of nations to the long-term
problem.
Those who say this approach will take too long
do not flinch when George Bush says this war against terrorism will
take many years. If we do not want the world to be a lawless place,
why dont wewho proclaim our love of democracy and law
and orderpursue a lawful way, rather than the way of
brute force? If bombing is the only way to deal with terror, why
didnt we bomb the terrorist network that produced Timothy
McVeigh? Why didnt the British bomb Belfast to get the IRA
when it terrorized England year after year? Lets not forget
that Libya was willing to give up the terrorists that blew up Pan
Am 103 when it was agreed that they would be tried by the World
Court in a third country.
If counter-violence would end terrorism, Israel
would long ago have ended the suicide bombers. But Prime Minister
Sharon, the tough general who promised peace and security if he
were elected, has brought neither. The connection between justice
and peace seems never to have occurred to him or to President Bush.
Anthony Lewis wrote in the New York Times
that "poverty and despair are the seedbeds of terrorism in
the Middle East." Let us turn serious attention to the conditions
that breed terrorism and enlist this coalition of nations to dry
up these pools of misery. As the African-American columnist William
Raspberry said, "Convince any large group of people that they
and their children can never hope to share in the affluence they
see around themconvince them that they have nothing to loseand
you predispose them first to indifference and then to open hostility
toward that affluence." And, as Vernon Jordan said, "Broadening
the base of freedom and prosperity should be a cornerstone of Americas
policy, not only because it might shrink the number of disaffected
who can be recruited for terrorism, but because it is the right
thing to do, the just thing, the moral thing."
Our need for security can be more adequately addressed
if nations are working peacefully together for the common good.
In the need to make the world more secure, less vulnerable to terrorist
acts, we of course must safeguard existing nuclear weapons and nuclear
power plants. This effort should include determined efforts to phase
them out throughout the world. We rightly worry about nations such
as Pakistan having nuclear weapons, but the US should take the lead
in efforts to rid the world, including ourselves, of these weapons.
John Paul Lederach (pp.4- ) has challenged the
US to do the unexpected. Rather than following the expected script
of an all-out military assault on the terrorists and their supporters,
pulling us further into a world of terrorist strikes and counter-strikes
and deepening misery, what if we heeded Kings warning that
our choice is either nonviolence or nonexistence?
And what might happen if faith communities pointed
the way by following the God of Nonviolent Love, finding ways of
overcoming evil with good, listening to and praying for ones
enemies, standing with the poor and dispossessed, and living in
the reality of the Beloved Community?
©2001 Fellowship of Reconciliation
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