->  SNETNEWS  Mailing List


NATO: Beyond Collective Defense, Part Three
New Rules For a New World
by Steve Farrell

Alexander Hamilton observed:  It ...seems to have been reserved to the people of this
country...to decide the important question, whether societies of men are really capable
or not of establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether they are 
forever
destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and force.

Indeed, the successful rise of these United States as an Independent nation, capstoned 
with
its inspired Constitution, was a pivotal moment in history which displayed before the 
world
an unmatched era of liberty - an era in which common men did uncommon things, where
religious liberty and other inalienable rights became the weightier matters of the 
law, where
laissez faire sent standards of living (for both rich and poor) spiraling upward, and 
where the
right to vote meant that taxes, laws, and wars would be levied or executed only by the
consent of the governed. Finally man was set free to charter his personal destiny.

Collectively, it meant another thing: We  assumed among the Powers of the Earth,  wrote
Jefferson,  the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature s 
God
[entitled us].

We became a sovereign nation.

As a sovereign, our national course - like our individual course - became ours to set. 
Our
independence, in this regard, was sacred. This was so, because the state was nothing 
more
than the collective manifestation of the individual right to life, liberty, and 
property. The state s
power was delegated; sovereignty resided in the people, and the state s job was to 
protect
that sovereignty - or in other words protect our rights.

With this in mind, in international affairs, a premium was attached to prohibiting any 
tampering,
or even of setting up relationships and organizations which might by their nature 
tempt tampering
with sovereign rights.

Neutrality was the answer. That is, friendly and commercial relations with all, 
entangling
political, economic, or military alliances with none.

Even common non entangling treaties which established and recognized foreign embassies,
general trade rules, clarification of fishing rights, and mutual extradition policies, 
demanded
defined limits.

What limits? Alexander Hamilton in Federalist 33, explained: Any treaties  not 
pursuant to
the Constitution,  are  merely acts of usurpation,  and  not the supreme law of the 
land.

Clear enough?

Sovereignty, then, was sacred and guarded via political and economical neutrality
(not isolationism - which never existed in this melting pot nation whose doors have 
ever been
open to the world) But it didn t stop there. In regards to other peoples sovereignty, 
the founders
feelings were the same.

Founder Thomas Paine explained in Common Sense:  Our Independence with God's blessing
we will maintain against all the world; but as we wish to avoid evil ourselves, we 
[must not]
inflict it on others.

Offensive war, even in the name of liberty, was morally  murder  and politically  
tyranny.

Who but a  ruffian,  he asked, would - like the old world state run religions  force  
men to be
free and thus moral? These were inseparable principles, both dependent upon inner 
conviction,
intelligence, wisdom, and self restraint. No one could justly and successfully impose 
these
upon human beings.

That is until now, because now the rules have changed.

New Rules For A New World

During NATO s 50th Anniversary celebration, in a speech which can only be defined as
NATO s Manifesto for the 21st Century, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, in 
consultation
with U.S. President Bill Clinton, laid down what he described as  new rules  for a  
new world.

This was important, for the old rules, he admitted, rejected NATO s offensive war 
against
Sovereign Yugoslavia.

The old rules which Mr. Blair in consultation with Mr. Clinton, said NATO now rejects 
are:

1. We must reject Laissez-faire. This he said was  at the top...of a new economic role 
for
Government. We don't believe in laissez-faire (free enterprise).

2. We must reject Isolationism.  We are all internationalists now,  he said.  We live 
in a world
where isolationism has ceased to have a reason to exist...The United States and others 
[have]
finally realized standing aside [is] not an option.

3. We must reject the old notion that defensive wars are the only just wars.  This is 
a just
war, based not on any territorial ambitions but on values

4.  The principle of non-interference (in the internal affairs of nations) must be 
qualified in
important respects.  From this moment forward, there are number of things, which can  
never
be regarded  as purely internal matters,  but rather  threats to international 
security:  Some
examples: Conflicts, acts of genocide, expulsion of ethnic [groups], minority rule, 
human rights
violations, environmental problems, disarmament issues, financial instability in Asia, 
poverty
in the Caribbean, and economic woes in Russia...

Did he miss anything?

Oh yes, massive financial aid and technical advice to Russia, and for Kosovo, 
Montenegro,
Macedonia, Albania and Serbia, he stated:  We will need a new Marshall plan,  after 
the war.
(See NATO part II)

5. We must reexamine the legitimacy of sovereignty: It is time for nations to accept  
the
judgements of international organizations even when you do not like them.

Five old rules, then, that NATO rejects: Laissez-faire, isolationism, limiting NATO to 
defensive
war, non-interference into internal affairs, and sovereignty.

Which doesn t speak well as an introduction as to what NATO s new rules might be.

He mentioned a few: A new push to implement  free trade  under the ponderous
WTO - a paradox... The obligation of NATO members to implement the Kyoto protocol
(the global warming treaty.) And the expected use of the war crimes tribunal against 
Serbia -
a tribunal with a history of hunting down Nazi s and Pinochets, while ignoring Soviet 
and
Chinese communist mass murderers. Call it, equality before the law, under the New 
Rules.

But the key, to really understanding what Mr. Blair means by New Rules, requires a 
glance
at the UN Charter.  If we want a world ruled by law and by international co-operation 
then we
have to support the UN as its central pillar,  he says. Which is our last stop in this 
discussion.

U.N. Charter - Against Liberty

First of all, Blair s point of reference is accurate as defined by the North Atlantic 
Treaty.
The treaty legally requires NATO to  refrain  from acting  in any manner inconsistent 
with
the purposes of the United Nations.  and in general, commits the  parties to this 
treaty,  to
  [affirm] their faith in the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United 
Nations.

What are those purposes and principles?

A brief side by side comparison with a few American principles of liberty will only 
top off this
demonstration of how far NATO and the UN are from our perspective on liberty.

1. Representative Government. Representation to Americans means the right of adults to
elect those who serve us in government. Of all the irritations which led to the 
American Revolution,
the King of England s insistence that America be represented by those he appointed, 
rather
than those whom the colonists elected, was the greatest.

By Contrast, the United Nations Organization, while claiming to be acting in the 
interest of
democracy, has not one official elected by the people, in all of its myriad s of 
posts. All are
by appointment.

Even worse, members of the General Assembly possess absolutely no power to make laws,
but only to  consider...discuss...advise...or make suggestions to the Security Council.
(See Articles 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, and 18.) Article 12 even prohibits unsolicited 
recommendations
from the General Assembly  while the Security Council is exercising in respect of any 
dispute
or situation the functions assigned to it.

The only actual power the General Assembly does possess is it power to approve the 
budget.
But then it s easy enough to say yes, every time, when the U.S. subsidizes most of it, 
when
they are not accountable to their people, and when according to Article 25, all 
members of the
General Assembly  agree to accept and carry out the decisions of the Security Council.

Yes, the 185 nations of the United Nations General Assembly, are not elected by their 
people,
have no voting power to make laws, declare war, etc, but they are required to  accept 
and carry
out the decisions of the 11 members of the Security Council.  Most especially, the 
United States,
Russia, China, France, and Great Britain - who are permanent members and hold the 
power of
an absolute veto.

Democracy anyone?

2. Separation of Powers. James Madison, father of the Constitution defined tyranny as 
the
 concentration of all powers judicial, legislative, and executive, in one body.  Our 
Constitution,
therefore, separated the three functions, established checks, balances, and specific 
limitations
on their powers, and even divided the Legislative body into two Houses - one 
representing the
people and the other the states.

Forget that at the UN. The General Assembly (article 25), the World Court via the 
absolute veto
(article 27), the armed services (articles 39-51), and all regional arrangements 
(articles 52-54),
are subject to, controlled, and regulated by the 11 members of the Security Council. 
If this is
not tyranny, than what is?

3. Human Rights. Several books could be written on the radical U.N. Universal 
Declaration
of Human Rights, all the addendum s that followed, its new Children s Bill of Rights - 
and all
the dangers they pose. But a brief comparison of the two most fundamental differences 
will
have to suffice.

** The American Declaration of Independence reads:  We hold these truths to be 
self-evident,
that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain 
unalienable
rights.  That is rights come from God not government.

**  To secure these rights, government are instituted among men. That whenever any 
government
become destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish 
it.  That is
governments do not possess the power to abridge rights, but only to protect them.

Consistent with these two principles, the American Bill of rights does not grant 
rights but
rather prohibits the federal government from making laws which might deny those rights.

The U.N. s Universal Declaration of Human Rights is on the opposite end of the 
political
spectrum on this issue too. **Reference to God is never given.

**Laws can be made to circumvent rights. Article 29, verse 2 reads:  In the exercise 
of his
rights and freedoms, everyone shall be subject only to such limitations as are 
determined by
law  The very same stipulation was in the Soviet Constitution and is in the  new  
Russian
Constitution.

**And the clincher - verse 3:  These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised 
contrary
to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.

There go your rights!

In fact,  there go your rights  is the absolute best summary of what the United 
Nations and
its regional arrangement NATO, ultimately will accomplish for the world.

They represent an internationalist philosophy which claims to be in favor of  
strengthening
democratic institutions,  yet despises laissez-faire, neutrality, national 
sovereignty, democratic
and republican principles, and God-given rights.

No wonder then that NATO deems it just to invade a sovereign nation, destroy its 
economic
capacity, drive hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children into the wilderness 
to
starve, blames it all on somebody else, and plans to, after the war is over, set up 
shop with
a permanent standing army, imposing peace and  democracy,  while sticking the United
States taxpayers with the bill. Yes, for a war they were never permitted to declare or 
deny,
through their representatives in Congress.

It all makes sense, for it all fits into the new rules for a new world. A set of rules 
you and
I could do without.

|==============================|
The better the society, the less law there
will be. In heaven,  there will be no law; in
hell there will be nothing but law, and due
process will be meticulously observed.
        ~G. Gilmore - Age of American Law
|==============================|


-> Send "subscribe   snetnews " to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
->  Posted by: "PRRG" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Reply via email to