We Can Stop This
War Before It Begins:
Statement at the European Parliament
by David Krieger*, October 22, 2002
Thank you for inviting me to speak today. I have
come here to urge you all, individually and collectively, to do
everything in your power to oppose a US war against Iraq –
a war that can have no good end. I believe that we have within
our reach the ability to stop this war before it begins.
If we succeed, we will save the lives of innocent
Iraqis who have suffered enough, and also the lives of young American
soldiers, who enlisted in the military with the primary purpose
of obtaining the resources to go to college. We will also prevent
the creation of thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of new terrorists,
whose activities will undoubtedly affect Europe as well as the
United States.
AMERICA DOES NOT SPEAK WITH ONE VOICE
The Bush administration would have the world believe
that America speaks with one voice on the issue of war against
Iraq. John Negroponte, the US Ambassador to the UN, recently said,
referring to the Joint Congressional Resolution authorizing the
president to use force, "This resolution tells the world
that the United States speaks with one determined voice."
Nothing could be further from the truth. Large
and growing numbers of Americans are saying "Not in our name."
They are saying it in full-page ads in major newspapers and they
are saying it in the streets.
They are making their voices heard and their presence
felt. It is reminiscent of the period of the Vietnam War. The
difference is that this war has not yet begun in earnest, which
is not to say that the sanctions and the bombing in the no-fly
zones have not already taken a large toll of victims.
Only a few months ago, most Americans were not
paying serious attention to the possibility of war. Now they are,
and they are showing up in protest marches by the thousands. The
number will swell to hundreds of thousands, even millions, if
the bombs begin to fall on Baghdad.
One recent ad in USA Today concludes: "Let
us not allow the watching world today to despair of our silence
and our failure to act. Instead, let the world hear our pledge:
we will resist the machinery of war and repression and rally others
to do everything possible to stop it."
Let me give you the example of the member of Congress
from my district, Lois Capps. Just one month ago she was undecided
on this issue, perhaps because the Democratic leadership in the
Congress has been so timid with a few notable exceptions such
as Senator Robert Byrd. Many of Capps’ constituents spoke
to her in opposition to the war. When it came time for the vote
on the war resolution, she was one of 133 members of the House
of Representatives who voted No, along with 23 Senators.
She stated: "I have not yet seen or heard
any convincing evidence that Saddam Hussein is an immediate threat
to our national security. Military action should always be a last
resort, and we should work in concert with our allies and the
U.N. to exhaust every possible diplomatic and economic solution
to this problem. At this time I do not believe that the case has
been made that force is the only option left to us."
I am here to ask your support in rallying the European
Parliament to stand together with the growing number of Americans
who are saying an increasingly clear and powerful No to this war
-- Not In Our Names.
CHILDREN OF IRAQ
The Bush administration is attempting to paint
the face of Saddam on the people of Iraq. The children of Iraq
deserve more from us. We must not accept the simplistic and militaristic
solutions of the Bush administration -- Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz,
Perle and others -- who have their own agendas for war, including
oil, dominance and revenge.
If you visit the web site of the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation, you will find photographs of the children of Iraq,
children who will become the collateral damage of this war just
as they have been the collateral damage of US-led sanctions that
have taken some one million lives. You will also find at this
web site letters from Iraqi students to American students. These
children do not deserve to be painted with the face of Saddam.
PREEMPTIVE WAR
Mr. Bush has put forward a doctrine of preemptive
war. It is actually not a new doctrine, but it is dangerous and
aggressive unilateralism at its most extreme.
Preemptive war was once called "aggressive
war," and was described as a "Crime against peace"
in the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals. Such war violates
Article 6 of the Nuremberg Charter. It includes "planning,
preparation, initiation or waging a war of aggression."
At stake is the entire post World War II international
order, including the United Nations system itself.
A DEFINING MOMENT FOR THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM
The Bush administration has already cajoled the
US Congress to authorize preemptive war. This authorization is
false because it is illegal. Congress cannot give the president
the power to commit illegal acts, and war against Iraq cannot
be legal unless it is properly authorized by the United Nations
after all peaceful means have failed. We are far from that point.
There are only two circumstances in which force
is authorized under the United Nations Charter. First, there is
self-defense, but this only comes into effect when a country is
under attack or an attack is imminent, and then only until the
United Nations Security Council becomes seized of the matter.
In the case of Iraq, there is not a current or imminent attack
and the United Nations Security Council is already seized of the
matter.
The second circumstance in which force is authorized
under the UN Charter is when the Security Council determines that
all peaceful means of resolving a conflict have failed. The Security
Council has not made this determination in the case of Iraq, despite
the Bush administration’s efforts to push it in this direction.
Mr. Bush also places the UN in jeopardy by his
threats to act unilaterally if he decides it is necessary. One
former US diplomat recently referred to the Bush administration
as "hectoring radical unilateralists." He means by this
that the approach of the administration is that of a bully. We
must stand up to this bully in the name of peace, justice and
international law.
Senator Robert Byrd, a wise octogenarian and a
hero on this issue in the US Senate, said: "S.J. Resolution
46 would give the president blanket authority to launch a unilateral,
pre-emptive attack on a sovereign nation that is perceived to
be a threat to the United States.... This is an unprecedented
and unfounded interpretation of the president's authority under
the Constitution of the United States, not to mention the fact
that it stands the Charter of the United Nations on its head."
HYPOCRISY
The Bush administration is more inclined to practice
hypocrisy than democracy. The administration's hypocrisy takes
many forms. The most pronounced forms are Nuclear hypocrisy, Compliance
hypocrisy and Criminal Justice hypocrisy. In each of these areas
the Bush administration practices a clear double standard.
Nuclear Hypocrisy
Joseph S. McGinnis, Acting Head of the US delegation
to the First Committee of the UN, recently stated when introducing
a resolution (L.54) on Compliance with Arms Limitation and Disarmament
Agreements:
"The US believes that every country in the
world should be a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
the Biological Weapons Convention and the Chemical Weapons Convention.
We also believe that every country that has signed and ratified
these agreements should comply fully with their provisions, and
that States Parties must hold each other accountable and take
appropriate steps to deter violations."
The US has been in standing violation of its Article
VI obligations for nuclear disarmament since the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) entered into force in 1970.
The Bush administration has shown no inclination
to comply with obligations of the 1995 and 2000 NPT Review Conferences.
It has failed to submit the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty to the
Senate for ratification, pulled out of the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty and entered into a fraudulent Strategic Offensive Reduction
Treaty (SORT) that will reduce some of the currently actively
deployed strategic nuclear weapons but will not make these cuts
irreversible. Rather, this treaty will allow for the deactivated
weapons to be placed in storage, where they will actually be more
likely to be available to terrorists.
The Bush Nuclear Posture Review calls for retaining
nuclear weapons in perpetuity, calls for contingency plans to
use nuclear weapons against at least seven countries, indicates
a willingness to use nuclear weapons against chemical or biological
weapons attacks, and outlines plans for more useable nuclear weapons
such as bunker busters.
Further, the Bush administration has formed alliances
with Pakistan and India, although both have developed nuclear
arsenals. The administration has never even raised the issue of
Israel having developed a nuclear arsenal, despite long-standing
calls for a Middle East Nuclear Weapons Free Zone, including in
Security Council Resolution 687, the resolution that laid down
the terms of Iraqi disarmament.
Regarding biological weapons, the Bush administration
sabotaged six years of negotiations to add an inspection and verification
protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention. The Bush administration
also forced the resignation and replacement of Jose Bustani, the
head of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
(OPCW). They disliked Bustani because he had encouraged Iraq to
sign the Chemical Weapons Convention and become part of its inspection
regime, a step that would have made military action against Iraq
even less justifiable.
Compliance Hypocrisy
The Bush administration is ready to go to war with
Iraq to achieve compliance with UN Security Council resolutions.
Yet, there are many other violations of Security Council resolutions
by other nations, including US allies Israel and Turkey, for which
the US shows little or no concern.
Additionally, the Bush administration has indicated
a willingness to engage in diplomatic efforts to seek a peaceful
solution to the recent revelation by North Korea that it is developing
nuclear weapons.
Criminal Justice Hypocrisy
Bush has withdrawn the US signature from the International
Criminal Court and has sworn that US leaders will never be subject
to the Court’s jurisdiction, yet he has threatened to bring
Iraqi leaders to an International Tribunal should they use weapons
of mass destruction if attacked by the US.
CONCLUSIONS
-- The international community must stand firm
in rejecting a US initiated preemptive war against Iraq.
-- The states of the European Union can help lead
the way in preventing the Bush administration from standing the
international system on its head with its plans for preemptive
war. They can also engage in the hard work of negotiations and
diplomacy to find a peaceful solution to the current compliance
issues with Iraq and with other countries currently out of compliance
with Security Council Resolutions and other multinational treaties
such as the NPT.
-- Double standards in the international system
must be ended, and a single standard must be applied to all, even
the sole remaining superpower.
*David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. His latest book is Choose
Hope, Your Role in Waging Peace in the Nuclear Age.
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