The following by Mary Catherine Bateson is the sanest article I have yet
read on what America's strategy should be in the following years. It comes
from a series of responses called "What Next?"  from <www.edge.org>.

<<<<
END ECONOMIC SANCTIONS
Mary Catherine Bateson

America has long been spared the most painful experience of modern warfare:
massive civilian casualties. The terrorist attack on September 11 has
taught us what most other nations learned earlier in the century, that no
one is safe. Pearl Harbor was a military target and American civilians were
safe in their homes and communities through two world wars. 

We have also been spared that other less dramatic experience of modern
warfare, the destruction of infrastructure, with all the dislocation,
privation and economic disruption that follow. In earlier wars, the U.S.
infrastructure was ramped up, not destroyed, but today significant parts of
it are at risk. The terrorist attack has newly taught us how dependent we
are on a complex and interconnected infrastructure and the economy is
reeling, but we have yet to understand the implications of these new
experiences. 

The first lesson to learn and act on is not that terrorists are uniquely
evil but that all targeting of civilians is immoral. This includes the
destruction of infrastructure, which is equivalent to the Biblically
prohibited poisoning of wells, the material basis, of survival and the
disruption caused by economic sanctions. Economic disruption creates
unemployment and lost savings in industrialized nations; in the third world
it can create famine and uncontrolled epidemics. The casualties are real. 

One of the problems with calling our new effort against terrorism a "war"
is that it legitimates punishing ordinary people for the crimes of leaders
they did not choose. We must not express our anger by retaliating against
populations or writing off the "collateral casualties" caused either by
bombing or blockade. America learned from the smoldering enmities that
followed the civil war and World War I that peace is not founded on
vengeance, a lesson expressed in the Marshall Plan. America needs to
combine that earlier insight with this new and painful sense of
vulnerability. 

The appropriate expression of this understanding would begin with the
lifting of US economic sanctions in all those places where they have
deliberately and apparently bloodlessly eroded the material basis of
survival without changing government policies, such as Cuba and Iraq. Above
all, Afghanistan, with whose civilians we say we are not at war. Only
weapons and weapon building materials should continue to be blocked (and
these should be reduced world wide). 

The "wells" that need to be protected from poison today include
infrastructure of all kinds: transport, water purification plants, public
health, electricity and basic industry and food production; protecting
these includes maintaining communications and education. An appropriate
next step would be to join with our allies in the coalition against
terrorism in the creation or restoration of essential infrastructures
worldwide, especially in the poorest countries which U.S. economists have
taken to writing off. 

The second lesson is the urgent need to take seriously the full meaning of
globalization. Globalization offers huge benefits and huge dangers, and is
in any case probably irreversible short of calamity. Today we must add
skillful, disciplined terrorism to a list of dangers that includes new
infectious diseases transported rapidly around the planet, as well as the
dangers of human and environmental exploitation that have been emphasized
by the anti-globalization movement. Yet globalization at its best goes far
beyond economic interest and must combine respect for the distinctiveness
of cultural traditions, religions, and bioregions with the awareness of a
radical degree of interdependence and mutual responsibility. 

Hard as it seems to realize, America's self interest can no longer be
distinguished from that of other nations � not just our traditional allies
but our rivals and even our enemies. Recognizing this, the United States
must reengage with international efforts like those for arms control and
against global warming, as a nation among nations rather than perpetually
demanding to be treated as an exception. We need to recognize that we are
vulnerable in our homes � and that our home depends on the health and
goodwill of the entire planet.
>>>> 

___________________________________________________________________

Keith Hudson, General Editor, Calus <http://www.calus.org>
6 Upper Camden Place, Bath BA1 5HX, England
Tel: +44 1225 312622;  Fax: +44 1225 447727; 
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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