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Keeping Hope Alive
The War Has Started, But The Peace Movement Has Not 'Lost'

By Bill Hartung

March 23, 2003, Published by CommonDreams.org

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0324-08.htm

As promised, President Bush started his war with Iraq last
week. The United States has marched off to war despite the
fact that the majority of the world's people oppose it,
despite the fact that the Bush administration could not
secure explicit authorization from the UN Security Council,
and despite the fact that many Americans are supporting the
war under false pretenses.

Roughly 44% of Americans think Saddam Hussein was behind the
9/11 attacks and over half of Americans think Iraqi citizens
were among the 9/11 hijackers. There were no Iraqi
hijackers, but there were 15 Saudi citizens. But other than
a few hard-line associates of Richard Perle, no one among
the American political elite is suggesting that we overthrow
the House of Saud.

You can be forgiven if, like me, you were a bit depressed to
hear that the war had started. Haven't we been down this
road before? But this is no time to go into a funk. It's
time to sustain and build the peace movement, and engage in
a full-throated debate about the meaning of this war.
Otherwise, as Michael Klare has noted, this could be the
first of many resource-driven wars for regime change.

At a panel discussion I attended last week, Stanley Crouch,
a syndicated columnist and cultural critic, suggested that a
major problem facing the anti-war movement is that 'the war
might not last more than a few weeks.' Therefore, how can
people expect to build the kind of opposition that was built
during Vietnam, which dragged on for years and years?

Crouch's analogy is insightful, but the solution to the
dilemma he poses has to do with re-defining the problem. To
be effective, the anti-war movement cannot limit itself to
being against the war with Iraq – it must be against the
'war without end' doctrine of military first strikes,
nuclear sabre-rattling, and aggressive unilateralism of
which the war in Iraq is just the opening act.

The chances of preventing George W. Bush – a true believer
in the cleansing powers of military force if there ever was
one – from going to war with Iraq were always small. But
look what the global anti-war movement accomplished. We
forced the Bush administration to take the issue to the UN;
we turned out millions of people in the largest coordinated
anti-war demonstrations in history; we helped embolden swing
states like Guinea, Cameroon, Mexico, Chile, Angola and
Pakistan to resist U.S. bullying and bribery at the UN
Security Council; we put the future of entire governments at
risk when they attempted to side with the United States
against the will of their own people.

That doesn't sound to me like a peace movement that is
'losing.' That sounds to me like a peace movement that may
have lost the first skirmish, but is poised to win the
larger struggle to put the doctrine of aggressive
unilateralism back in the trash bin of history, where it
belongs.

For the next few weeks, anti-war voices may be muted in the
mainstream media as our loyal press corps covers the Iraq
war as if it were a sporting event, focusing solely on
tactical issues and 'who's winning,' not on whether it was
necessary to go to war to disarm Iraq in the first place.

As the Win Without War coalition has noted, other options
were available that would have allowed the Bush
administration to save face and back off from the war. As
chief UN inspector Hans Blix had pointed out, even if Saddam
Hussein had bent over backwards and turned cartwheels to
cooperate in disarmament, it would have taken a minimum of
two to three months to accomplish that. The Bush folks could
have pressed a resolution for Iraq to disarm within three
months or face 'serious consequences.' The resolution could
have included concrete benchmarks for disarmament to be
achieved along the way – not the kind of phony benchmarks
that the Blair government was promoting at the last minute,
but practical, achievable ones that would have given a
rhythm and focus to the disarmament process. Three months
later, we would either have had a disarmed Saddam Hussein,
or a Bush administration with a much broader coalition for
using force.

The Bush administration decided not to take this route
because for them, this war has never been about disarming
Saddam Hussein. It has been about projecting U.S. power into
the Persian Gulf in a way that administration true believers
think will enhance U.S. political, military, and economic
interests and create a safer, and ultimately more
democratic, Middle East. Why we should trust the crowd that
can't even abide democracy in Florida to bring democracy to
Baghdad, Riyadh, and Teheran is one of those great
unanswered questions that you are not likely to hear asked
on 'The O'Reilly Factor,' or CNN, or anywhere outside
perhaps 'The Daily Show with Jon Stewart' on Comedy Central.

So, what should the peace movement do now? First and
foremost, we shouldn't give up. We should maintain all of
the energy and creativity that has resulted in the mass
mobilizations, the vigils, the mass faxes and phone calls to
Congress, the growing civil disobedience against the war,
the campus teach-ins, and the whole rich festival of
democratic activity that has gotten us this far.

While 'General Chung' and 'General Woodruff' (my friend
Lee's nicknames for CNN's Connie Chung and Judy Woodruff
when they're in full metal war coverage mode) ooh and aah
over the smart bombs while ignoring the dumb policies that
made the dropping of the bombs come to pass, we need to
change the subject. We can ask some of the questions that
the media is afraid to bring front and center (not that they
are NEVER asked, just that they don't get the time and
attention they deserve).

Even if everything goes perfectly in Iraq from President
Bush's point of view – a quick, 'clean' war in which Saddam
Hussein is deposed and disarmed – will America or the world
will be any safer the day after the war ends? Will we be
less vulnerable to terrorist attacks? Will it be less likely
that some tinpot dictator will get hold of a nuclear
arsenal? Will the poverty, ignorance, and ideological fervor
that are fueling war and terrorism be diminished?

My short answer to these questions is no, no, no and no
again. We're not going to build a safer world by pushing
aggressive unilateralist policies at the expense of
diplomatic, economic, and security cooperation. We're not
going to be in a better position to 'roll up' Al Qaeda
networks after a war with Iraq. We're not going to be in a
better position to recruit systematic allied cooperation to
thwart the nuclear weapons programs of North Korea and Iran.
We're not going to be in a better position to revive the
U.S. and global economies and replace the visions of strife
and victimhood that pervade so much of our global polity
with visions of hope and prosperity.

The next 'regime change' that needs to happen after the one
in Baghdad should not be in Teheran or Pyongyang – it should
be in Washington. It won't come through force of arms, it
will come through what one recent documentary called 'a
force more powerful' – non-violent, democratic activism.

For those folks who think the peace movement has 'lost,' I
say, get back to me in November or December of 2004
(depending upon whether we need another 'recount' this time
around). I'm going to be busy for the next twenty months
trying to take my country back from the prophets of
aggressive unilateralism.

[William D. Hartung is a Senior Research Fellow at the World
Policy Institute and the author of 'The Hidden Costs of War'
(Fourth Freedom Forum, 2003). He can be reached at
[EMAIL PROTECTED], and his project's web site is
www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms/.]

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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
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sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
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major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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