Building a Peaceful
World
by Dean Babst, David Krieger, and Bud Deraps*,
March 1993
Global Security Study #13
The end of the
Cold War and recent arms reduction agree ments are encouraging
signs for peace. In order to fur ther help in building a peaceful
world, this paper identifies five major peace forces. In this
paper, we attempt to show why these five modern forces are major
factors for peace and how they can be used by policy makers in
building a sustainable peaceful world. The five factors are equally
significant and closely interrelated and have a cumulative impact.
As with the force of gravity, we are
little aware of the forces for peace until they are called to
our attention. To better understand and use them we need to think
about them on a large-scale and long-term basis.
Peace Force No. 1 DEMOCRACY *
Democracy is a powerful force for peace because
there has never been a war between independent freely-elected
democracies.1 Therefore, if all of the countries of the world
became democracies, it is possible we could have a world without
war.
Not only do democracies not fight one another,
they fight many fewer wars than nondemocracies. All nations that
were independent from 1950 through 1991 and did not change from
democracy to nondemocracy or vice versa during the study period
were assessed. It was found that only 23 percent of the democracies
compared with 72 percent of the nondemocracies were involved in
foreign wars. It was also found that there were no internal wars
or coups in the democracies, while 90 percent of the nondemocracies
had internal wars or violent military coups.2
R. J. Rummel in his five volume study was able
to rigorously show further that not only do democracies not fight
one another but that democracies are far less violent than other
governments. He wrote, "Of the more than 119 million victims
of genocide, killed in cold blood in our century, virtually all
were killed by nondemocracies, especially totalitarian ones."
3
It is encouraging, therefore, to know that the
number of democratic countries in the world has grown from none
two centuries ago to a majority (89) now. In addition, there are
32 countries in transition. 4
Examples of how to help more countries become democratic:
- Providing economic aid to poorer countries
can im prove their economic well-being. In general, as the health,
ed u ca tion and economic well-being of a country's citizens
improve, the probability of the nation becoming a democracy
increases.5
- In a 1991 retreat, leaders of the 50-nation
Common wealth promised to promote democracy and just gov ern
ment. This is a weak commitment, and an effort should be made
to have all nations link foreign aid to the human rights records
of developing countries, as Britain and Canada have indicated
their intent to do. 6
- Former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto
proposes an association of emerging democracies. She suggests
that an association could share political experience to help
members develop democratic methods and exert moral pres sure
on nations that violate human rights. 7
- The U.S. Congress has created and funded the
Na tion al Endowment for Democracy, a quasi-private group, to
openly help the growth of democracies. This organization and
similar organizations have been more effective in helping countries
develop democractic governments than the covert and violent
activities of the CIA. 8
*Democracy, in the Studies cited here, includes
only independent countries whose legislative bodies and head of
government are elected by majority vote from two or more opposing
choices by secret ballot, where there is freedom of speech.
Peace Force No. 2 EQUITABLE COMMERCE
International trade and investments can be a force
for peace if they are based on long-term fairness and mutual trust.
If international trade is based on economic exploitation or is
based mostly on arms trade it can be a force for war as described
in the latter part of this section.
Modern mass marketing is a powerful force for peace
because such commerce is much more profitable when the world is
peaceful. Continental markets are much more ef fi cient for mass
marketing than small, divided ones. Modern commerce, because of
its highly technical nature, can require dependable, long-term,
large-scale commitments.
Most of us are unaware that prosperous modern day
living is dependent upon international trade and in vest ment
for a vast array of parts for use in agriculture, industry, medicine,
communication, and computers. For example, probably few people
are aware that British farmers only produce enough food by themselves
to support 12 million of Britain's 56 million people. 9 The research
costs and risks of creating and using new highly technical products
has become so great that companies look to long-term in ter na
tion al partnerships to carry out the work.
International investments, built on international
trade, are a further force for harmony. A vast number of large
and small businesses are involved in foreign investments and no
one likes to lose their investments. In order to illustrate how
large international investments have become, consider the amount
invested in the United States by 1990 by the fol low ing countries:
Britain, $108 billion; Japan, $83 billion; Neth er lands, $64
billion; Germany, $28 billion; France, $20 billion; and Switzerland,
$17 billion. 10
Paralleling the growth of modern commerce in the
world has been the development of vast regions that are at peace
with each other. For example, in the 1800s the growing area of
internal peace on the North American continent paralleled the
growth of railroads as they made mass marketing possible. The
growing zone of internal peace started in the Northeast and moved
south then westward as large scale trade grew.
Having a large area, such as the North American
continent, with no battles within any of its parts is new to the
long history of the world. For instance, prior to the current
long peace, the United States fought nearly 2,000 battles in its
first hundred years. And now there have been no battles fought
on the North American continent for more than 100 years. 11
The large zone of peace in North America was no
accident. It is significant that ethnic and religious groups that
are fighting one another in various parts of the world generally
are not fighting one another where they live together in more
economically developed areas, e.g. North America, Western Europe,
Australia.
Since World War II, there has been an explosive
increase in global trade. World trade has increased more than
10 times.12 As world commerce has grown, the number of countries
at peace with each other has grown accordingly. Countries at peace
with each other for the past 40 years or longer include Canada,
the United States, Mexico, Costa Rica, Japan, Tai wan, Australia,
New Zealand and the countries of Western Europe. All of these
countries have developed a high level of commerce among themselves.
A peaceful world can be built with the already
large number of countries with no wars between them. These countries
do not even have a threat of war between them. Where they share
a common border, the borders are unarmed and they share in a well-established
common defense system.
Examples of how to increase the growth of equitable
commerce:
- Most wars since World War II have occurred
in developing countries where the people have few of the necessities
to sustain life and are desperately poor. Some modern large-scale
farming uses vast land-holdings to operate. To meet this need,
giant corporations have acquired many small farms leaving local
people with little. For example, in Honduras 67 percent of the
population are limited to only 12 percent of the arable land.
Nearly 61 percent of the population is malnourished.13 In such
situations, if large corporations fail to understand and meet
local needs, the danger of civil unrest and war is increased.
- Economic depressions can drive desperate people
in severely depressed countries to support leaders who promise
extreme measures, e.g. Hitler. Current efforts to help the Soviet
Union economically reflect this concern.
- International trade agreements can help build
friendly relations between countries if they are fair. Hostility
is generated if the agreements are not fair, like allowing com
panies in some countries to sell for less by ignoring uncon
trolled pollution of the environment, paying starvation wages,
maintaining unhealthy and unsafe plants. 14
- Howard Brembeck in his book, The Civilized
Defense Plan, tells how nations can collectively use international
trade sanctions and/or incentives to cooperatively build security
systems against threatening nations. 15
Peace Force No. 3 WORLDWIDE COMMUNICATION
A shrinking world allows the public to better
observe, un der stand, and respond to global dangers. Today, what
seems commonplace, such as daily watching and par tic i pat ing
in world events, would not have been possible a few decades ago.
Due to rapid growth in the number of television sets, communication
satellites, computers, fax machines and tele phones, significant
events around the world can be seen, heard, or read about daily
by hundreds of millions of people. Jet airplanes allow travel
to most places in the world within hours, making it easier to
talk directly to others.
Turner Cable News Network (CNN), with its reporters
throughout the world, provides TV news to millions of people around
the globe, around the clock. It gives everyone the same basis
for discussion by providing the same information at the same moment.
CNN has compelled rivals to increase live coverage of international
news. This situation allows viewers greater opportunity to form
their own opinions of world events.16 World news, however, can
still be misleading at times, such as during the Gulf War when
large-scale slaughter was shown mostly as a video game.
The worldwide communication growth pace is in creasing.
For example, starting November 1991 World Ser vice Tele vi sion
(sponsored by BBC) began beaming news daily into 38 Asian countries
with a combined population of 2.7 billion. 17 In India people
bought six million TV sets in 1988, up from only 150,000 a decade
before. 18
Examples of how global communication can be a force
for peace:
- The world can see and act against common security
threats. Acts of aggression, such as Iraq's invasion of Kuwait,
can be seen by hundreds of millions of people throughout the
world. This allows nations to respond to aggressive acts early.
For example, more than 100 nations quickly joined in supporting
political and economic sanctions, through the United Na tions,
against Iraq. This was the largest number of nations in history
to support economic sanctions at one time. 19
- The world is an open stage. It is increasingly
difficult for autocratic leaders to keep their people isolated
from world events. For instance, the efforts of the leaders
of the 1991 Soviet coup to control information failed. The Soviet
people kept informed of events through cellular phones, fax
machines, satellite television, international broadcasts and
pocket radios, as well as computers reproducing messages for
the public.
- Worldwide communication can help the growth
of democracy. An understanding of freedom is being spread to
people who are not now free because TV allows them to see people
in other countries experiencing freedom. As businessmen, government
leaders, students and tourists travel between countries, they
can observe various types of freedom and techniques of self-government.
- The global public can respond together to worldwide
dangers, e.g. ozone depletion, global warming, radiation fall
out, etc.
Peace Force No. 4 REDUCING MILITARISM
Militaristic nations, those with an excessive
arms build-up, are far more likely to go to war. Newcombe and
Klaassen found, from 1950 to 1978, that nations with the greatest
military expenditures as a percentage of per capita income were
30 times more likely to be involved in an international war than
other countries. 20
Iraq illustrates how a nation's excessive arms
build-up can be a warning signal. In 1984, long before Iraq invaded
Kuwait in 1990, Iraq was spending a far larger part of its national
income for the military (42 percent) than any other country in
the world. 21 "Between 1981 and 1988, Iraq purchased an estimated
$46.7 billion worth of arms and military equip ment from foreign
suppliers, the largest accumulation ever of mod ern weapons by
a Third World country." 22
Military forces have established an influential
political base throughout the developing world. They represent
the largest single element in most government bureaucracies and
the largest financial resource. They provide the visible trappings
of prestige for political leaders, civilian or military: the req
ui site honor guards, jet aircraft, helicopters, etc. They have
a direct line to the world of wealth and business, the arms-producing
corporations that are both beneficiaries of government lar gesse
and contributors to political power. And they deal in matters
of national security which can be made secret and inaccesible
both to the public and to any of the usual checks and balances
within the government. Countries under military control have suffered
three times as many wars and 19 times as many deaths as in the
rest of the Third World countries. 23
Examples of how reducing militarism can help the
growth of peace:
- The less money developing countries spend on
weapons the more chance they have to improve their standard
of living, education, and health as well as to become a democracy.
In a detailed comparison of 142 countries, it was found that
when military spending is high, socio-economic well-being lags.24
In much of the developing world, military expenditures are almost
four times the investment for health care and twice that for
education.25
- Among 142 countries in 1987, the United States
was number one in military expenditures, military technology,
military bases, military training of foreign forces, military
aid to foreign countries, naval fleet, combat aircraft, nuclear
reactors, nuclear warheads and bombs and nuclear tests, while
at the same time, the U.S. ranked 18th in infant mortality rate,
13th in maternal mortality rate, and 18th in population per
physician.26
- While democracies do not fight one another,
some de moc ra cies have strong militaristic tendencies. In
the last decade, seven of the world's ten top merchants of offensive
weapons, mass destruction weapons parts and weapons fa cil i
ties were Western democracies. In 1990, the U.S. was the world's
top weapons supplier. Since World War II there have been over
170 wars and conflicts, mostly involving countries which rely
on foreign suppliers for their military needs. 27 De moc ra
cies can do much for peace by reducing their sale of arms.
Peace Force No. 5 COOPERATIVE SECURITY
Robert McNamara, former U.S. Secretary of Defense
from 1961-1968, said "[W]e should strive to move toward a
world in which relations among nations would be based on the rule
of law, a world in which national security would be supported
by a system of co op er a tive security, with conflict resolution
and peace-keeping functions performed by mul ti lat er al in sti
tu tions - a reorganized and strengthened United Nations and new
and expanded re gion al organizations, in clud ing an Asian counterpart."
28
The role of the U.N. is being forced to change
from keeping peace to making peace, as more conflicts continue
to erupt, more aid is delivered and more elections are monitored.
With 13 current U.N. peacekeeping operations and over 52,000 U.N.
troops and police officers on site, the added costs are threatening
the U.N.'s continued scope of operations, unless delinquet members
pay back dues immediately and make provisions to adequately fund
the expanding needs. Also since in the past many worthy peacekeeping
resolutions were vetoed by the major powers, the limination of
this provision should be seriously coonsidered in the light of
present day conditions.
Randall Forsberg writes, "The end of the Cold
War represents a turning point for the role of military force
in international affairs. At this unique juncture in history,
the world's main military spenders and arms producers have an
unprecedented opportunity to move from confrontation to cooperation.
The United States, the European nations, Japan, and the republics
of the former USSR can now replace their traditional security
policies, based on detterence, nonoffensive defense, nonproliferation,
and multilateral peacekeeping. In fact, they have already taken
early steps in this direction."
Since the end of the Cold War, coun tries are be
gin ning to put more em pha sis on work ing through the United
Na tions. It is encouraging that the percentage of Americans who
think the U.N. is doing a good job has risen from 28% in 1985
to 78% in December 1991.31
Examples of how to increase cooperative security:
A great stride forward in civility, human rights
and co op er a tive security will occur as nations together create
an In ter na tion al Criminal Court addressing these concerns.
The atrocities committed by Saddam Hussein and those in the former
Yugoslavia have rekindled interest in such a court. A working
group of the U.N. International Law Commission has recently released
a report in which it rec om mends that an International Çriminal
Court 'be es tab lished by a Statute in the form of a treaty.'
32 The value of an International Criminal Court would be its clear
message that the in ter na tion al community is committed to enforcing
in ter na tion al law, and that all individuals, no matter how
high their position, will be held accountable for crimes under
in ter na tion al law.
Continued emphasis should be given to the U.N.
resolution declaring the l990s the Decade of In ter na tion al
Law. This resolution embraces four main purposes: (a) to promote
acceptance and respect for principles of in ter na tion al law;
(b) to pro mote means and methods for the peaceful settlement
of disputes between States, in clud ing resort to and full respect
for the International Court of Justice; (c) to en cour age the
progressive development of in ter na tion al law and cod i fi
ca tion; and (d) to encourage the teaching, study, dissemination
and wider ap pre ci a tion of international law. 33
The increased use of cooperative security will
be assisted by the further growth of the other peace forces described
in this paper. The more nations work together in cooperative security,
the less will be the burden for all countries involved and the
more secure will be each cooperating country.
Ultimate Goal
In order to build a sustained peaceful world,
we need to consider the basic requirements of humanity. Dr. Hanna
Newcombe, in a comprehensive paper, describes the fol low ing
basic needs of humanity.
- The world's population has to be balanced with
a sustainable healthy global environment.
- All people need democractic governments with
basic freedoms assured. If all countries in the world were freely
elected democracies, a world without war is possible.
- A decent standard of living and quality of
life is needed for all people, including those in the poorest
countries. It is difficult to build a prosperous and peaceful
world if there are gross inequalities between people.
Dr. Newcombe points out that there are upper limits
to the world's physical resources and some sharing will be required.
She says, however, there are no limits in the mental realm, and
scientific advances can help us meet our long-term basic needs.
34
Conclusion
It is sometimes said that due to hate, fear, greed
and corruption there will always be war. The fact that the North
American continent, with nearly 300 million people living together
from all parts of the world, has had no wars between any of its
people for more than 100 years demonstrates that war is not inevitable.
Up until the end of World War II there was never a year free of
war in Europe 35 and since then there has not been a war in Western
Europe. Yugoslavia is in Eastern Europe.
This paper discusses five major forces that make
for peace and the ways we can improve them so that we can better
build a peaceful world. Much more research needs to be done. The
amount of money spent on peace-fostering research by the U.S.
government has been less than one percent of what has been spent
on research to make weapons more deadly.36 The amount spent in
the world for peace research is similarly small compared with
the amount spent upon weapons de vel op ment.
There remains a serious need for more research
in the area of building a peaceful world. The more rigorously
it can be demonstrated through research how peace-fostering activities
and institutions add to our security, the more likely there will
be more funds to support these activities and institutions.
*Dean Babst is a retired government scientist and Coordinator
of the Accidental Nuclear War Prevention Project of the Nuclear
Age Peace Foundation; David
Krieger, an attorney and political scientist, is President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation; Bud Deraps is a member of
the Board of Directors of the Lentz Peace Research Laboratory,
St. Louis, Missouri.
Acknowledgments
For valuable suggestions to earlier drafts of
this paper, we wish to thank: Dr. William Eckhardt, Lentz Peace
Research Laboratory, Dunedin, Florida;. Jennifer Glick, Fourth
Freedom Forum, Goshen, Indiana; Charles W. Jamison, Esq., Santa
Barbara, California; Dr. Hanna Newcombe, Director, Peace Research
Institute, Dundas, Canada; Dr. R. J. Rummel, Professor of Political
Science, Univ. of Hawaii, Honolulu; Dr. Leonard Starobin, Editor,
World Peace Report, Elkins Park, Penn ylvania; Dudley Thompson,
Grass Val ley, California.
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