Economists Allied for Arms Reduction letter to President Bush

September 20, 2001
The Honorable Joseph Biden, Chairman
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
United States Senate

Dear Senator Biden:

In the wake of the terrible events of September 11 in New York and
Washington and rapid moves toward war since then, we write to ask that
you hold immediate public hearings on the impending conflict and its
diplomatic, military, security and economic implications.

We share with all Americans the horror and outrage provoked by these
attacks. Yet we know that horror and outrage are poor guides to policy.
Declarations of war by themselves cannot bring victory, let alone peace
and security, back to the United States. Revenge as such is an unworthy
national goal. Counter-attacks affecting mainly innocent civilians will
be counter-productive. We cannot purge evil from the world, and we must
not contribute to evil in poorly- conceived spasms of retaliation. We
must instead seek effective means toward realistic ends: national
defense, justice, physical and economic security, and sustainable peace.

While some of the most important questions are operational, we believe
that even at this stage there are issues that can and must be raised in
a public forum. These include:

*What do we know about the nature of the networks behind these attacks,
and the experience of dealing with such networks in the past? What is
the effective role of military action in this context? What are the
appropriate roles of more effective intelligence work, police activities
and internal security measures?

*How can the United States best restore domestic security? What new
agencies, missions and actions are required? In this respect the
recommendations of the U.S. Commission on National Security for the 21st
Century, co-chaired by former Senators Gary Hart and Warren Rudman, are
pertinent and deserve a wider hearing than they have received. What
steps can be taken to improve our economic security and to reduce both
our vulnerabilities and the sources of conflict?

*What are the premises underlying administration policy? Are they shared
by our allies in this cause? What involvement will we seek and what
support will our allies provide to actions we may take? What does the
administration estimate to be the cost of their policy, and what
economic policy measures do they anticipate to be required?

*What is the role of international authority in this crisis,
particularly the United Nations Security Council and the General
Assembly? How should this crisis reshape our commitment to the United
Nations and to an effective framework of collective security?

*What are the nuclear dimensions of the threat facing us, including Iraq
and Pakistan, and what steps can be taken to reduce these threats or to
prevent them from emerging in future? We are very concerned that
measures not destabilize Pakistan, placing that country's nuclear
facilities in hostile hands. Has the administration taken this risk
sufficiently into account?

* Finally, how can we best salvage some value from this tragedy,
particularly closer cooperation with other nations, including Russia and
China, in the fight against terrorism, in the struggle for control of
weapons of mass destruction, and in the pursuit of peace?

In weighing these questions, the American nation has one unconquerable
advantage: open government. We have the ability to judge the
consequences of alternative courses of action before we take
irreversible acts. We should not abandon this responsibility now. We
face a long-term threat; we must respond to it deliberately and
effectively; action is not required within a matter of days or weeks.
Having suffered a crime against humanity, we need the continuing support
of humanity as we go forward against individuals or states who may be
implicated. There is thus no reason to defer automatically to the
judgment of the most impatient and belligerent among us. You, as
Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, are the steward of
one of the most important venues for free and open discussions. We have
listened to your voice in recent days with respect for your caution,
common sense, and reasoned judgment. We ask that you take the lead in
raising essential questions as soon as possible, for no doubt very
trying days lie ahead.

Yours sincerely,
Kate Cell, General Director
On behalf of James K. Galbraith, Chair and
Board Members of Economists Allied for Arms Reduction

Signatories:

Trustees of the Board
Oscar Arias*, President of the Arias Foundation for Peace and Human
Progress
Kenneth J. Arrow*, Stanford University
William J. Baumol, Director, Starr Center for Applied Economics
Barbara Bergmann, American University
Walter Isard, Cornell University
Lawrence R. Klein*, University of Pennsylvania
Robert S. McNamara, former President, World Bank
Franco Modigliani*, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Douglass C. North*,, Washington University
Robert J. Schwartz, founding trustee
Jacob Sheinkman, Amalgamated Bank of New York
*Nobel Laureate

Directors of the Board
James K. Galbraith, Chair. University of Texas at Austin
Jurgen Brauer, Vice Chair. Augusta State University
Michael D. Intriligator, Vice Chair. Director, Burkle Center for
International Relations
Richard F. Kaufman, Vice Chair. Bethesda Research Institute
John Tepper Marlin, Treasurer. Chief Economist, Office of the
Comptroller of New York City
Lloyd J. Dumas, University of Texas at Dallas
Andrew S. C. Ehrenberg, South Bank Business School, London
Dietrich Fischer, Pace University
David Gold, Rutgers University
Richard Jolly, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex
Judith Reppy, Director of Peace Studies Center, Cornell University
John Steinbruner, Director, Ctr. For International & Security Studies,
University of MD
Dorrie Weiss, UN NGO Committee on Disarmament

Reply via email to