Anti-War Thinking: Acknowledge Despair, Highlight Progress on Moral Preemption
06/04/2003
- Opinión
It is difficult not to feel despair and powerlessness at
this awful juncture. Millions in the world fought with
all their hearts and minds to avoid violence in Iraq.
Inevitably, when bombs fall, there is a deep and
emotional void that is opened. Many will pray. Others
will simply reflect. Countless numbers will continue to
take to the streets. But all will worry over the extent
of destruction to come and the scope of its
repercussions.
We have seen dark moments before. Slavery, the holocaust,
the Vietnam War - man's inhumanity to man is not to be
underestimated. In the fight against apartheid, we saw
times that seemed the world had come to an end. The
nation wept in 1993 with the assassination of Chris Hani,
the widely popular leader who many thought would succeed
Nelson Mandela as head of the African National Congress
(ANC). Violence clenched South Africa. The constitutional
negotiations between the ANC and the whites-only National
Party were broken nearly beyond repair. This was the
lowest point of our struggle. But faith prevailed, as did
the moral fortitude of average people to do what is
right. With it, apartheid ended.
In today's moment of deep anguish over the war, it is
important to recognize the reasons for hope and pride,
both in the United States and across the globe. Never in
history has there been such an outpouring of resistance
from average people all around the world before a war had
even begun. Millions took a stand. This doctrine of moral
and popular preemption must be sustained.
Countless nations, many of them quite impoverished,
listened to the majority voices of their own citizens
opposing the war. These governments opted not to take the
huge sums offered to support the military effort, but
instead chose to heed the sentiments of their citizens.
In these contexts, this was a considerable step forward
for democracy. A first step to personal healing is to
acknowledge the depth of the devastation that many of us
feel. We should not pretend it does not exist. But, we
must also look forward. The energies mobilized recently
must not dissipate. They should be channeled and
broadened. This is the beginning, not the end, of
heightened vigilance. With war, domestic civil liberties
face their greatest threat. We must not squelch the right
to protest under the pressures of patriotism. World
attention has in the past months fixated on the desire
for a diplomatic and United Nations solution.
If we want lasting peace and security in the Middle East,
if we want international law to hold any meaning, we must
begin to require that UN resolutions are applied
uniformly across all countries. We must begin to focus
our energies in that direction. In Iraq, we must watch to
see that the promises for a truly functioning democracy
are honored, that the long-term and expensive commitment
for rebuilding is provided.
* Archbishop Desmond Tutu won the Nobel Peace Prize in
1984. Ian Urbina is associate editor at the Middle East
Research and Information Project.
(Source: Earth Action)
https://www.alainet.org/fr/node/107337
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