the system is the problem

Upload: the-may-18-memorial-foundation

Post on 30-May-2018

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    1/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    THE SYSTEM IS THE PROBLEM*

    Presented by George Katsiafikas

    Alongside the current war against Iraq and hostile actions against North Korea, Bush

    and Co. are today waging wars in Afghanistan, the Philippines, and Colombia; they armIsrael and permit it to overrun and destroy Palestinian towns and cities; they are

    encouraging the revival of German and Japanese militarism; they are attempting tooverthrow the Chavez government in Venezuela; they have withdrawn from the

    International Criminal Court, scrapped the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the Kyoto protocols, refused to sign a new international protocol to the 1972 biological warfaretreaty, and dramatically increased military spending. Most ominously, Bush adopted a

    new first-strike strategic doctrine, replacing decades of US policies based ondeterrence and containment.

    When I say Bush and Co., I do not refer only to one man and his administration; it is thesystem that is the problem. No matter who sits in the White House, whether George

    Bush or Bill Clinton or someone else, militarism has long been and will surely remain atthe center of US foreign policy and economic development. The U.S. Congress has been

    little better than Bush: among other things, it rejected the nuclear test ban treaty signed by 164 nations and has fully endorsed Bushs foreign policy on every issue. With

    Congressional funding, the U.S. now has over 250,000 troops in 141 countriesand itis seeking new bases and attempting to install more troops in places like Uzbekistan and

    Tajikistan. In Northeast Asia, 100,000 US troops are stationed indefinitely.

    In a phrase, military madness defines the mentality of leading U.S. decision-makers. It

    would therefore by irresponsible to regard recent military threats emanating from theWhite House as empty gestures. The world desperately needs a viable peace movement

    capable of mobilizing millions of people across the globe in order to stop U.S. militarymadness before it gives rise to perpetual new wars. In the following remarks, I hope to

    clarify the historical character of this disease and recommend a possible cure.

    The Historical Pattern of Violence

    1

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    2/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    Before they became organized as nation-states, white European settlers in Americacommitted genocide to steal the land of indigenous peoples. Beginning in the sixteenth

    century, peripheral areas were rapidly assimilated into a capitalist world system based inEurope. Whether in what is now Mexico, Peru or the US, the pattern was generally the

    same: besides massacring tens of millions of Native Americans, European colonialistsenslaved tens of millions of Africans to build up their new empires. Estimates of the

    number of Africans killed in the slave trade range from 15 to 50 million human beings,with tens of millions more enslaved and harshly exploited. From its earliest days, the

    US practiced biological warfare. Lord Jeffrey Amherst, after whom towns inMassachusetts, New York and New Hampshire are named to this day, was celebrated

    because he devised a scheme to rid the land of indigenous people without risking whitelives. He gave Native Americans blankets carrying smallpox virus, thereby wiping outentire villages under the guise of providing assistance. In the century after the American

    Revolution, nearly all native peoples were systematically butchered and the fewsurvivors compelled to live on reservations. Have people in the US apologized for and

    renounced such violence? Unfortunately, the answer is no. Indeed, towns are still namedfor Amherst, and one of the fanciest restaurants near prestigious Amherst College istoday called the Lord Jeff.

    In a similar vein, white European settler-colonists purposely wiped out the buffalo, seeking to deprive native peoples in the plains of their primary source of food.

    Between.This early form of biological warfare was never renounced. In fact, Buffalo Bill

    staged a Wild West circus-style show for many years, touring not only the East Coastof the US but also in Europe, at times even including the great Sioux warrior chief,

    Sitting Bull.

    In 1848, the US annexed almost half of Mexico with the aim of expanding Anglo-

    Saxon democracy and Manifest Destiny. Even though dozens of US soldiers wereexecuted under orders of General Zachary Taylor for refusing to fight against Mexico,

    US expansionism accelerated. At the end of the nineteenth Century, as manufacturerslooked for international markets, the US (led by men experienced in the Indian wars)

    conquered the Philippines. Six hundred thousand Filipinos perished from the war anddisease on the island of Luzon alone. William McKinley, who went on to receive a

    Nobel Prize, explained that I heartily approve of the employment of the sternest

    measures necessary. The director of all Presbyterian missions hailed the slaughter of

    2

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    3/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    Filipinos as a great step in the civilization of the world. 1 For Theodore Roosevelt, themurders in the Philippines were for civilization over the black chaos of savagery and

    barbarism. In 1900, Senator Albert Beveridge of Indiana summarized the colonialistmentality: We are the ruling race of the worldWe will not renounce our part in the

    mission of our race, trustee, under God of the civilization of the world. One cannothelp but wonder precisely what idea of civilization he had in mind.

    Although Mark Twain and the Anti-Imperialist League stood in opposition to U.S.

    policy, imperial ambitions were far too strong. Between 1898 and 1934 US Marinesinvaded Honduras 7 times, Cuba 4 times, Nicaragua 5, the Dominican Republic 4, Haiti

    and Panama twice each, Guatemala once, Mexico 3 times and Colombia 4 times. In1915, over 50,000 Haitians were killed when U.S. troops mercilessly put down a

    peasant rebellion. 2 Marines were sent to China, Russia, and North Africain short,

    wherever the masters of US imperialism needed them.

    With the Great Depression of 1929, militarism became more than an instrument of colonial conquest: it emerged as the primary solution to stagnation in the worldeconomy. Since 1948, the US has spent more than $15 trillion on the militarymore

    than the cumulative monetary value of all human-made wealth in the U.S. -- more thanthe value of all airports, factories, highways, bridges, buildings, machinery, water and

    sewage systems, power plants, schools, hospitals, shopping centers, hotels, houses, andautomobiles. If we add the current Pentagon budget (over $346 billion in fiscal 2002)

    to foreign military aid, veterans pensions, the military portion of NASA, the nuclear weapons budget of the Energy Department and the interest payments on debt from past

    military spending, the US spends $670 billion every year on the militarymore than amillion dollars a minute. 3 The US military budget is larger than the worlds next 15

    biggest spenders combined, accounting for 36% of global military expenditures.

    Although the main problem is obviously the U.S., nearly two-thirds of global militaryspending today occurs outside the U.S. Japanese and German militarism are being

    revived, while in South Korea the military budget has increased by 12.7% for 2003 tomore than $14 billion.

    1 Noam Chomsky, The United States and Indochina: Far From an Aberration, in DouglasAllen and Ngo Vinh Long (editors), Coming to Terms: Indochina, the United States and theWar (Boulder: Westview Press, 1991) p. 165.2 See the illustrated book by Joel Andreas, Addicted to War: Why the US Cant Kick Militarism

    (Oakland: AK Press, 2002).3 Andreas, p. 39.

    3

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    4/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    American Militarism and Asia

    Unless we ignore geography, we must understand that Bushs axis of evil is entirely inAsia. This is no accident. Lest we forget history, it is in Asia where in the last half

    century the US slaughtered over 5 million people in regional wars so distant from theUS (and Russian) mainlands that historians refer to this period as the Cold War. In

    just three years, somewhere between three and five million people were killed in Korea,the vast majority of them innocent civilians. Although thousands of civilian refugees

    were massacred and the US employed biological weapons, 4 it still will not admit to nor apologize for these actions. Instead it moved the killing fields to Indochina, where it

    used more firepower than had been used in all previous wars in history combined,killing at least two million people and leaving millions more wounded or maderefugees. Chemical warfare, euphemistically called Agent Orange, was systematic and

    deadly: over 20 million gallons of Agent Orange were sprayed on Vietnam. For everyman, woman and child in South Vietnam, the US dropped more than 1000 pounds of

    bombs (the equivalent of 700 Hiroshima bombs), sprayed a gallon of Agent Orange, andused 40 pounds of napalm and half a ton of CS gas on people whose only wrongdoingwas to struggle for national independence. 5 The kill ratio per capita in these two Asian

    wars was about 1000 times that of wars in Central America and even higher than for themore than 200 other US military interventions during the Cold War.

    More here on Korea

    Biological warfareseveral pagesJeju, Yeosu, Gwangju responsibility

    Although to most Americans, all of the above events are forgotten or at best distanthistory, the obscenity of murder and mayhem visited upon the world by the United

    States continues unabatedat the very moment when US policy-makers plan for evenwider warsin which Asia will once again be in the crosshairs of UIS weapons.

    East Asias importance as a market for military goods has been increasing

    dramatically. After the end of the Cold War, when demand for such products leveled off in North America, Western Europe, and the former Soviet Union, arms suppliers looked

    4 International Scientific Commission on Biological Warfare in Korea and China, Report, 1952.available from [email protected]

    See my edited volume, Vietnam Documents: Vietnamese and American Views of the War (New York: ME Sharpe, 1992) p. 146.

    4

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    5/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    to other markets. US arms exports rose from $8 billion in 1989 to $40 billion in 1991,while British arms exports rose nearly 1000% from 1975 to 1995 (when they reached

    $4.7 billion). In 2001, global military spending (conservatively estimated) rose two percent to $839 billion, 2.6% of world GNP or about $137 for every man, woman and

    child on the planet. According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies:Between 1990 and 1997, East Asias share of global defence imports by value almost

    tripled, from 11.4% to 31.7%. In 1988, only 10% of US arms exports went to the region.By 1997, this had increased to 25%. 6 Within East Asia, South Koreas share of military

    spending in 1997 ($14.8 billion) was nearly as large as the combined total spending of Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. 7 In the wake of the Asian financial crisis,

    military buildups were delayed, but Malaysias recent purchase of three Frenchsubmarines for $972 million, South Koreas decision to acquire 40 F-15s for $4.23

    billion and its rapidly increasing military budget are indications of military spending

    taking off in the region. According to Kim Kook Hun, a Major General and director of the South Korean Defense Ministrys arms control bureau, 7 of 17 countries in the

    world with nuclear weapons or weapons programs were in the Asia/Pacific region, aswere 16 of 28 with missile programs, 10 of 16 with chemical weapons and 8 of 13 with

    biological weapons. 8

    Even more alarming is the revival of Japanese militarism. Its annual military

    spending is now second only to that of the U.S., amounting to some five trillion yen(about $40 billion), and the international deployment movement of its military (banned

    since 1945) has resumed. In April 2002, Ichiro Ozawa, leader of Japans second largestopposition party, stated that Japan could easily make nuclear weapons and eventually

    become stronger than China. Shinzo Abe, deputy chief cabinet secretary, publiclyexplained that Japan could legally possess small nuclear weapons, while YasuoFakuda, chief secretary of the Japanese cabinet, said that Tokyo could review its ban on

    nuclear weapons. Rather than reaping a peace dividend with the end of the Cold War,East Asia is poised for what could become a regional nuclear arms race and massive

    buildup of conventional military forces.The need for global peace movements is strongly indicated by the above dynamics.

    Without massive and militant peace movements, political elites will be unconstrained touse military spending in order to prevent global stagnation, aggrandize national power 6 Tim Huxley and Susan Willett, Arming East Asia (International Institute for StrategicStudies/Oxford University Press, 1999) p. 23.7 Ibid, p. 15.8

    Michael Richardson, Fears spread that other Asia nations will seek nuclear arms,International Herald Tribune , June 6, 2002, p. 5.

    5

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    6/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    and enrich large defense contractors. One countertrend can be found in the Filipinoexample of expelling the US from its huge base at Subic Bay, an important trendsetter

    for anti-militarism movements. But as we watch US troops conducting militaryoperations in the Philippines today, we must reflect upon the urgent need to cure the

    disease of military madness, beyond temporarily addressing the symptoms. To bestrategically effective, popular movements will have to inject a long-term vision into

    moments of crisis. Seemingly necessary for the dynamism of the existing world system,militarism is a scourge that squanders humanitys vast resources and threatens to destroy

    hard-won popular gains and victories. The impetus for militarism resides in thecapitalist world economic system, and it is there that peace movements must focus if a

    cure for the disease is to be found.

    The Imperial Crusade

    The key recognition here is that the real axis of evil is composed of the World TradeOrganization, World Bank, and International Monetary Fund. Like their predecessors in

    the colonial world, these global institutions masquerade as bringing people morefreedom and rights. Free trade, IMF bailouts and World Bank assistance,

    however, too often mean more poverty for people at the periphery of the world system not more freedom. Historically there is an inverse relationship between the expansion

    of prosperity and democracy in the core of the world system and growth of poverty anddictatorship in the Third World, a dialectic of enslavement meaning that greater

    progress in Europe and the US spells increasing misery in the periphery.

    Conventional wisdom holds that increasing core democracy should mean more

    enlightened policies towards the Third World and improvement in the conditions of lifefor all human beings. One exponent of such conventional wisdom is Francis Fukuyama,

    who argues that we have reached the end of historythat contemporaryEuropean/American political institutions are at the desired endpoint of human

    development. Fukuyama believes that the battle of Jena in 1806 (when Napoleondefeated the Prussian monarchy) marks the consolidation of the liberal-democratic state,and that the principles and privileges of citizenship in a democratic state only have to

    be extended. For Fukuyama, there is nothing left to be invented in terms of

    6

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    7/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    humanitys social progress. 9

    For Fukuyama, the spatial extension of the principles of the French Revolution meansthat the rest of the world will likewise experience human progress. Evidence abounds,

    however, that the extension of those principles has resulted in just the opposite --increasing dependency and poverty for the Third World. The American and French

    revolutions helped propel the nascent world system centered in Europe into aframework of international domination, concentrating military power in nation-states

    and accumulating the worlds wealth in the hands of giant corporations and banks. Theworldwide penetration of the economic and political system produced by the American

    and French revolutions has, to be sure, resulted in rapid economic development andsome of the most important forms of political liberty that our species has enjoyed. For amajority of its people, the U.S. is arguably the freest society in the world. The

    dialectical irony of history means that it is simultaneously a white European settler colony founded on genocide and slavery as well as on freedom and democracy. But one

    must ask: what are the costs of living in such a society? Slavery in the Third World?Ecological devastation? Military madness?

    The dynamic of increasing political democracy in the North coinciding with intensifiedexploitation in the South has a long history. French colonialists in Vietnam provided a

    particularly graphic example when they placed a copy of the same statue of liberty thatFrance gave to the U.S. (the one now in New York harbor) atop the pagoda of Le Loi in

    Hanoi. Le Loi was the national leader who in 1418 had helped defeat the Mongols whenthey invaded Vietnam. Today he is still regarded as a national hero, a man whose

    mythology includes Hoan Kiem (Returned Sword) Lake, where the golden turtle thatgave him the magical sword he used to drive the Mongols out subsequently reappearedto reclaim the sworda story not unlike that of King Arthur in British folklore. The

    placing of a statue of liberty on Le Lois pagoda certainly was an affront to theVietnamese, one symbolizing how the spatial extension of the principles of the French

    Revolution can be brutally offensive to the Third World.

    French colonialism was indeed brutal and deadly: Indochinese recall that dead human beings fertilize each tree in the countrys vast rubber plantations. During the great war against fascism, French exploitation of Vietnam was intensified. In a famine from 1944

    to 1945, at least a million and a half and possibly two million Vietnamese starved to

    9 See his article The End of History, Foreign Affairs 1988, p. 5.

    7

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    8/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    death in the North (where the population was under 14 million), at the very time riceexports to France were fueling its liquor industry -- a blatant disregard for human life in

    the midst of the war against fascism. In American popular culture, President JohnKennedy is often associated with the word Camelot and remembered for his beautiful

    wife. Tragically, it was heone of the most liberal U.S. presidents in history -- whoordered massive use of Agent Orange in Vietnam. Similarly, the strongest French

    imperial expansionists were staunch anti-clerical progressives who regardedthemselves as ideological heirs of the French Revolution. They were enlightened

    liberals, much like John Kennedy and members of his administration wereenlightened liberals who believed they were carrying forth in the tradition of the U.S.

    revolutionary heritage and Manifest Destiny. As Minister of Education, Jules Ferrydefied the Catholic Church in France by making education universal, secular, andobligatory but he was later the first French prime minister to make intensification of

    colonialism his overriding platform. Ferry believed that it was Frances duty to civilizeinferior people, and on May 15, 1883, a full-scale expedition was launched to impose a

    protectorate on Vietnam. 10 Conservatives in France objected to this colonial expansion.As Vietnam disappeared, subsumed under the names of Tonkin, Annam, and CochinChina, even the identity of Vietnamese people was attacked as the French referred to

    them as Annamites. Here we can see the spatial expansion of the liberal values of theEnlightenment and the French Revolutionvalues that became the basis for Frances

    civilizing mission (Mission civilisatrice) just as the American Revolution was later turned into Manifest Destiny. It was the same French troops, bringing with them

    civilization, who in 1885 burned the imperial library at Hue, which contained ancientscrolls and manuscripts and was a repository for thousands of years of oriental wisdom.

    In 1831 Alexis de Tocqueville, a disciple of the French Revolution and author of thefamous book Democracy in America, watched in Memphis, Tennessee the triumphant

    march of civilization across the desert, as he put it. As he observed 3,000 or 4,000soldiers drive before them the wandering races of the aborigines, that is, those Native

    Americans who were lucky enough to survive Jacksonian democracy (named after aman who ordered his men to exterminate bloodthirsty barbarians and cannibals),

    Tocqueville was duly impressed that Americans could deprive Indians of their libertyand exterminate them, as he put it, with singular felicity, tranquility, legally,

    philanthropically, without shedding blood, and most importantly without violating a

    single great principle of morality in the eyes of the world -- the European world, one10

    See Greater France, A History of French Overseas Expansion by Robert Aldrich (New York:St. Martins, 1996) p. 98.

    8

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    9/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    should say. It was impossible, Tocqueville said, to kill people with more respect for the laws of humanity. 11 Fukuyamas spatial extension of the liberal principles of the

    French and American revolutions could not be more eloquently enunciated.

    In the name of civilization and liberal democracy, the British destroyed thecommunal ownership of village land in India, structures that had sustained local culture

    for centuries, a communal tradition surviving invasions by Persians, Greeks, Scythians,Afghans, Tartars, and Mongols but which could not, as Fukuyama would insist, resist

    the perfection of the liberal principles of the British state. Under British enlightenment,large estates developed and peasants were turned into sharecroppers. In 1867 the first

    fruits of British liberalism appeared: in the Orissa district of India alone, more than onemillion people died in a famine. Such famines were hardly indigenous to India, with itsbackward traditions (according to European values), but were brought by the

    enlightened liberalism of European democracy, through the spatial extension of the principles of democratic capitalism.

    Under the direct influence of its great revolution, France proclaimed a crusade againstAlgerian slavery and anarchy and, in the name of instituting orderly and civilized

    conditions, was able to break up Arab communal fields of villages, including landsuntouched by the barbarous and unenlightened Ottoman rulers. As long as Moslem

    Islamic culture had prevailed, hereditary clan and family lands were inalienable, makingit impossible for the land to be sold. But after fifty years of enlightened French rule, the

    large estates had again appeared and famine made its ugly appearance in Algeria.

    Civilization or Barbarism?

    I have indicated how European capitalist civilization -- particularly its most

    enlightened forms -- systematically slaughtered native peoples and created acentralized world system that demands militarism as a key organizing principle. If this

    were simply past history, we could all breathe a sigh of relief. But these very tendenciesare today stronger than ever. According to the United Nations, in the 1990s more than

    100 million children under the age of five died of unnecessary causes: diarrhea,whooping cough, tetanus, pneumonia, and measlesdiseases easily preventablethrough cheap vaccines or simply clean water. UNICEF estimates that up to 30,000

    children under the age of five die of easily preventable diseases every day in the Third

    11 See Chomsky, op. cit.

    9

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    10/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    World. 12 Kofi Annan declared in 2001 that as many as 24,000 people starve to deathevery day. 13 Altogether one billion people are chronically malnourished while austerity

    measures imposed by the IMF have resulted in a drop in real wages in the Third Worldand declining gross national products in many countries. While 70 percent of the

    worlds wealth is in the hands of 20 percent of its population, one in ten human beingssuffers starvation and malnutrition.

    Despiteor more accurately, because ofthe spatial extension of liberal values in the

    period after World War II, there were four times as many deaths from wars in the fortyyears after World War II than in the forty years prior to World War II. While the world

    spends something like a trillion dollars a year on its militaries, one adult in three cannotread and write, one person in four is hungry, the AIDS epidemic accelerates and we aredestroying the planets ecological capacity to sustain life. The absurdity and tragedy of

    such a world is made even more absurd and tragic by the profound ignorance andinsensitivity of the wealthiest planetary citizens regarding the terrible plight of human

    beings in the periphery.

    In such a world, of course, there can be no lasting peace. As long as the wretched of the

    earth, those at the margins of the world system, are dehumanized, branded as terrorists,and kept out of decision-making, they have no alternative but to carry out insurrection

    and wage war in order to find justice. In order to remedy this irrational system, a crucialtask is to redefine what civilization means. We know what it is not for the billion or

    more wretched of the earth for whom increasing planetary centralization anddependence upon transnational corporations, militarized nation-states and the

    international axis of evil mean living hell. With the passing of time it becomes moreobvious that this same civilization squanders humanitys wealth, destroys traditionalcultures wholesale, and plunders the planets natural resources.

    The structural violence of an economic system based upon short-term profitability is a

    crisis that all peace and justice movements will have to address. Even if some of theabove irrationalities of the present system are reduced, the structural contradictions of

    the system will inevitably be displaced to other arenas. As long as vast social wealthremains dominated by the enlightened and rational principles of efficiency and

    profitability, there will be militarism, brutal degradation of human lives along with

    12 UN Says Millions of Children Die Needlessly by Elizabeth Olson, New York Times , March

    14, 2002, p. 13.13 Time to Act on Hunger, Annan says, International Herald-Tribune , June 11, 2002.

    10

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    11/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    unbridled destruction of the natural ecosystem; there will be mammoth socially wasteful projects, for example tunnels in the Alps and Pyrenees, bridges connecting Denmark

    and Sweden or Prince Edward Island and the Canadian mainland, redundant World Cupstadiumsrather than constructive use of humanitys enormous social wealth. A few

    hundred multinational corporations today control this social wealth through the mostundemocratic of means and for ends benefiting only a small minority. According to the

    logic of enlightened neoliberal economics, these corporations must either grow or die.Only a fundamental restructuring of the world system can lead us toward an

    ecologically viable life-world, one in which we decentralize and bring under self-management the vast social wealth of humanity.

    Instead of relying on liberal governments to constrain US militarism, people can useextraparliamentary tactics to isolate the U.S. -- just as earlier international groups and

    movements turned the apartheid regime in South Africa into an international pariah.Wherever in the world Bush or senior US officials travel, protests should be as militant

    and massive as possible. Grassroots rebellions in Argentina, Mexico and Nigeria reflectthe high level of consciousness people in many countries have developed and are readyto act upon. 14 In this context, far-reaching protests can help unleash a global peace

    offensive that will compel governments to stop war by raising their costs and disruptingdomestic tranquility.

    In the U.S., where regime change is most desperately needed to prevent use of weapons

    of mass destruction and fight militarism, an extraparliamentary opposition wasgalvanized by the Seattle anti-WTO protests. Although reactionary forces now

    command overwhelming majority allegiance, vital countertrends have appeared, as seenin the 200,000 or more people who marched in Washington at the end of October alongwith the great popularity enjoyed by such critics as Michael Moore and Noam

    Chomsky. Gradually breaking with the ideological and organizational power of reactionwill necessarily proceed from small steps to giant leaps.

    Since 1968 the international character of popular movements has been recognized as a

    primary factor in their emergence and impact. Two more examples of the spread of movements across borders, involving a process of mutual amplification and synergy,can be found in the disarmament movement of the early 1980s in the US and Europe

    14

    See Amory Starr and Jason Adams, Anti-globalization: The Global Fight for LocalAutonomy, New Political Science 25:1 (March 2003).

    11

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    12/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    and in the wave of democracy movements in Asia in the mid and late-1980s. 15

    From a handful of nuclear disarmament protesters in the 1970s, an enormous peace movement changed world history in the 1980s, helping end the Cold War and

    alter the global balance of power. Movements grew from years of grassroots initiativesin a variety of arenas, 16 spreading rapidly and bringing hundreds of thousands of people

    into the streets of New York, Paris, London, Rome, Brussels and Bonn. The situation in Northeast Asia today is very similar to that of Europe in the early 1980s, when the US

    and USSR stationed intermediate range Pershing and SS-20 nuclear missiles in theregion. Such new missile deployment meant that the US and USSR could have fought a

    limited nuclear war in Europe without either country being directly engaged inmilitary hostilities. The emergence of the Green Party in Germany and the presence of huge protest movements helped Gorbachev convince Russian generals that Western

    Europe would not attack them, allowing the USSR to change peacefully, release its EastEuropean buffer states, and take the initiative to end the arms race.

    The Slaughter of InnocentsState Terrorism and Genocide in Our Time

    We have recently left perhaps the bloodiest and most terrifying century of human

    history. The tragedies are too numerous to mention in full, but a short list will suffice:the Armenian genocide, the Soviet gulag, the European Holocaust, the NankingMassacre, the fire bombings of Tokyo and Dresden, the atomic bombings of Hiroshima

    and Nagasaki, the repressions of Maoist China, the nightmare of the Khmer Rouge, theslaughter of the Kurds, the dirty wars waged by Latin American governments upon

    their own people. Killing fields dot the landscape of human history. But in the 20thcentury, we developed the techniques to realize our most murderous tendencies.

    The end of the Cold War in Europe in 1989 led to much speculation that great historical passions were finally put to rest and the world would settle down to a bureaucratic state

    15 These are examples of what I call the eros effect. See www.eroseffect.com.16

    For a full analysis, see my book The Subversion of Politics: European Social Movements and the Decolonization of Everyday Life , published in 1997.

    12

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    13/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    of ever increasing political entropy the EU-ification of the world. But the 1990s were just as brutal as the previous nine decades. The mass slaughter in Rwanda, the targeting

    of civilians in the former Yugoslavia, ethnic cleansing in Sudan, the ruthless suppressionof uprisings in Iraq, and countless bloody disputes throughout Africa, the Middle East,

    and Asia all suggested that those initial expectations were nave.

    The 20th-century atrocities that Ive mentioned, both before and after 1989, share twothings in common. They involved the large-scale death of civilians non-combatants

    who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time or were killed for not havingthe right ethnicity or religion or ideas. And the perpetrators of these crimes were states,

    for only states possess the means to plan, carry out, or inspire such large-scale killing.If the 18th and 19th centuries witnessed all the bloody sacrifices associated with the riseof states consider the French Revolution, the forging of Germany out of blood and

    iron, the making of the Meiji state in Japan the 20th century provided a cautionarytale of the consequences of mature state power.

    In the 21st century, some argue that the threat from states has largely retreated, and it isnon-state actors terrorists who most threaten individuals and the world order. The

    Bush administration has used this argument to justify recent attacks. It was theTalibans sheltering of Al Qaeda that served as the explicit rationale for U.S.

    intervention in 2001. And the administration, to rally public support for invasion,attempted to link Saddam Hussein to its larger war on terrorism by suggesting links

    that did not exist to Al Qaeda. Both Iran and North Korea, the two other members of the axis of evil, are demonized not so much for what they can do directly to the

    United States (though the United States frequently worries about the reach of NorthKorean missiles), but for their alleged capacity to service terrorist organizations withmaterial support or even weapons of mass destruction.

    For all this talk of the terrorism of non-state actors, however, states have not suddenly

    become benign in the 21st century. States, both large and small, continue to wage war both externally and internally. Indeed, in terms of sheer numbers, states continue to be

    responsible for the overwhelming number of civilian deaths around the world in themillions over the last decade compared to the thousands killed by terrorists.Approximately 5,000 people died in terrorist attacks from 2001 to the end of 2003 a

    record number because of 9/11 but that compares to an estimated 9,000 civilian deaths

    in the Iraq occupation alone. This is not to excuse or justify or minimize terrorism.

    13

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    14/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    From the point of view of the victim, an atrocity is an atrocity, regardless of the perpetrator or the scale of the act.

    As the largest and most powerful state in the world, the United States plays a

    particularly troubling role, as much for its acts of war as for its stubborn adherence tounilateralism. This unilateralism predates the Bush administration. Linked to a

    tradition of American exceptionalism, this go it alone ethos is hard-wired into thevery practice of U.S. foreign policy.

    This presentation will look at the role of the state in perpetuating violence against

    citizens, both in the form of state terrorism and genocide. Ill also briefly look atwhat has been done to curb the excesses of the state, largely through popular movements and legal action at both the national and international level. And Ill look

    at how the United States, despite many excellent organizations and committed politicians, has a disproportionately negative impact on creating international standards

    to prevent human rights abuses.

    But the central questions Ill be posing today will be the following. Is it nave to expect

    that states can be transformed, or are they, like colonial systems, constitutionallydisposed to large-scale, unjust actions? Is it equally nave to expect that we have any

    sane or effective alternatives to the modern state? And what can we expect from themost powerful state in the world, regardless of who is in the White House?

    A Short History of the State and Terrorism

    Life before the State was not a great deal of fun, if we are to believe the English

    philosopher Thomas Hobbes. It was a war of all against all, and the average personsexperience was solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. The State might be an

    awesome and fearful force a Leviathan in Hobbess biblically inspired words butit was generally preferable to the alternative of chaos.

    To prevent challenges to its authority that might return society to this war of all againstall, the modern state has sought a monopoly on violence. It reserved for itself the right

    of both foreign military activities and the maintenance of internal order. And the state,

    with occasional consultation with religious authorities and even less frequent resort to

    14

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    15/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    treaties, determined whether any particular use of force was just or not. The history of the formation of states can be viewed romantically (Garibaldi and the creation of

    modern Italy) or with a more jaundiced eye (the slaughter of indigenous peoples, theruthless suppression of minorities). But today, however you would like to believe a

    given state was constructed, the 180-odd existing states in the world are legal facts backed up by force of arms. The poorest states, like North Korea, have armies. Neutral

    states like Switzerland have armies. And even Japan, which was governed by theworlds only peace constitution, is lobbying hard to have a normal military. (Costa

    Rica, the only country without a standing army, is the exception that proves the rule).

    The history of the modern state is also a history of bureaucratic control. This controlhas been maintained through institutions such as the military, schools, and the civilservice. To the extent that state and nation do not coincide and this is the case

    throughout the world with only a few exceptions the state has also used its institutionsto create national sentiment as a legitimizing force to turn peasants into Frenchmen

    in Eugen Webers characterization of the breaking down of minority (Breton, Provencal)affections to build support for central French power in Paris.

    The state, in other words, is the great homogenizer. Violence has been used to maintain borders (or expand them), but it has also been used to enforce loyalty domestically. No

    state tolerates rebellions, revolts, and revolutions. Governments may come and go,depending on the democratic nature of the country, but states with very rare exceptions

    East Germany, Gorbachevs Soviet Union do not disappear gently into history.Those who are not loyal to the state in the form of individual traitors or collective

    rebellions are subject to criminal penalties in the first case (including death) and war in the second case (the crushing of uprisings such as the one in Kwangju or thesuppression of the National League for Democracy in Burma).

    Much has been written of the economic origins and justifications of the state. But when

    it comes to state violence and genocide, economic rationales have rarely played acritical role. Certainly the mass slaughters associated with colonialism the millions

    who died, for instance, in Congo at the hands of the Belgians in the 19th and early 20thcenturies were motivated by greed. But desire for wealth cannot explain the rampagesof the Tutsis in Rwanda, the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, or the Nazis in Europe. These

    campaigns required some conception or ideology of enforced homogeneity based on

    race, political beliefs, or a combination of the two. Genocide can be understood as an

    15

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    16/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    extreme corruption of the homogeneity that all states require and which goes by variousnames patriotism, nationalism, political loyalty.

    It has been common to contrast states and terrorists. States are a legitimate part of the

    world order, and their violence is legal and expected and governed (to a certain extent) by international law. Terrorists form an illegitimate force whose violence is unexpected

    and illegal. This facile contrast, repeated by most state leaders, does not hold up toclose scrutiny.

    Lets look first at several definitions of terrorism. The American Heritage Dictionary

    defines it as the use of terror, violence, and intimidation to achieve an end. The FBI puts an emphasis on the illegal nature of terrorist acts and throws in attacks against property: "the unlawful use of force against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a

    government, the civilian population or any segment thereof, in the furtherance of political or social objectives." The United Nations has so far been unable to achieve

    consensus on a definition, but there has been a good deal of support for definingterrorist acts simply as the peacetime equivalents of war crimes.

    Even with the FBI definition, it should be clear that terrorism can be a technique used by both state and non-state actors. The Nazi state was a terrorist state, as was the Soviet

    state under Stalin and the Japanese state of the 1930s they all used violence againstcivilians to further political goals. But democracies, too, have used terror and violence

    against citizens to achieve ends. During the 20th century, for instance, large-scale terror attacks against civilians became a legitimate strategy of war. The Allied fire bombings

    of Dresden and Tokyo were specifically designed to kill civilians in large numbers andreduce popular support for the respective governments. U.S. use of nuclear weapons inHiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II and the bombing of dams in North Korea

    in the Korean War were a logical continuation of this trend. The continued developmentof weapons of mass destruction during the Cold War must be considered in this context

    of state-sponsored terrorism; nuclear deterrence, a cornerstone of the current worldorder, is a technique by which states balance each others institutionalized terrorism.

    During peace-time, too, democratic states practiced terrorism through both overt andcovert operations (for example, U.S. material and logistical support for death squads inLatin America or Israels assassinations of its enemies).

    But terrorism, conventionally, has been used to describe the activities of non-state

    16

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    17/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    movements. The precursors to modern terrorists espoused violence to combat tyranny.In the modern era, however, terrorist movements initially arose to either create states

    (Israel, Macedonia), recreate states (Korea, Poland), or transform states (Russia,Germany). To achieve these goals, movements that are outnumbered seek advantage by

    breaking the rules of combat. In many cases, terrorism has only been a method of equalizing power relations so that outsiders can win a seat at the table. Many

    organizations that have been labeled terrorist the precursor to Israels Likud, SinnFein in Northern Ireland, the African National Congress have since become political

    actors in the mainstream.

    The term terrorism is thus ambiguous. Both state and non-state actors use violenceagainst civilians to achieve political goals. The term can be stretched to encompassvirtually any group, from the freedom fighters in Afghanistan to the Contra rebels in

    Nicaragua, from the Red Army Brigade in Japan to the Real IRA in Ireland, and even(according to the Chinese government), the Falun Gong. And former terrorists like

    Nelson Mandela have become world-renowned statesmen.

    With the end of the Cold War, however, the categories have shifted once again. A new

    construct for understanding international relations has emerged: market democraciesversus everyone else (rogue states, stubbornly communist countries, terrorist

    organizations). Anti-terrorism has thus become the anti-communism of our generation.State-sponsored violence, which was once directed against communists in Guatemala

    or Indonesia or South Korea, is now directed against those engaged in jihad. Whatwas once a strictly political distinction, for communists were understood largely in

    terms of their goal of seizing state power, now comes with a set of cultural assumptionsas well. Al Qaeda does not believe in our God. It rejects our social liberalism.And it believes not so much in seizing state power as eliminating modern states

    altogether in favor of recreating an ancient caliphate with mullahs in charge. The political needs of the war on terrorism do not quite square with the cultural overtones

    of the current crusade against radical Islam. To imagine that Al Qaeda has anything incommon with the IRA or the Basque ETA or with North Korea and Cuba or with non-

    communist rogue states such as Sudan and Syria stretches terrorism beyond even its previous malleability. Just as anti-communism saw conspiracies between disparatemovements inveterate enemies such as China and Vietnam or feuding powers like the

    Soviet Union and Yugoslavia or distant acquaintances like Chilean socialists and Cuban

    communists anti-terrorism has created an equally disconnected axis of evil.

    17

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    18/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    Before I turn to the war on terrorism and current U.S. policy, though, let me discuss

    the non-violent path to reining in the excesses of the state popular movements for democracy and human rights.

    Democracy and Human Rights

    The most profound transformation to temper the excesses of the state has beendemocracy. Majority rule, with minority protections and transparent political

    institutions, offers the promise of reaping the benefits of the state (stability, economicgrowth) while avoiding the drawbacks (oppression). Democratic movements serve avital watchdog function on the exercise of state power, whether overseas or domestic.

    Democratic institutions, through checks and balances, prevent any one individual or group from using state power unjustly. At least, this is the theory.

    Without going into the real world failings of democracy, suffice it to say that democracydoes not automatically spell the end of oppression. There is the problem of the tyranny

    of the majority German support for the Nazi party, Japanese-American internmentcamps in the United States which sanctions oppression through popular support.

    Second, there is the problem of the national security exception, which exemptsquestions of national security from democratic scrutiny. The budget and activities of

    U.S. intelligence agencies, for instance, are not open to public control. Pentagonstrategy is not subject to Congressional control much less citizen oversight. The state

    argues that the security of the country requires a measure of secrecy, and with thissecrecy comes a wealth of opportunities for abuse.

    Democracy is a necessary condition for putting controls on state violence. But it is notsufficient. Popular movements can organize domestically to improve democratic

    controls over the army and intelligence agencies. But lets look at another strategy applying pressure from the outside. This is where the human rights movement enters

    the picture.

    The human rights movement grew out of the experience of World War II and the

    Holocaust. Developing countries, anticipating the break-up of colonialism, demanded

    the creation of standards for economic and social justice. An incipient NGO movement,

    18

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    19/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    numbering approximately 40 organizations, pushed for universal human rights for individuals over and above the self-determination of peoples. As described by Mary

    Ann Glendon in A World Made New, Eleanor Roosevelt guided the Human RightsCommission toward reconciling these two approaches by asserting a set of basic human

    values that transcended diverse cultural contexts. The UN Declaration of Human Rightsoffered a potential check on states that engaged in cross-border violence or that turned

    against their own citizens.

    At the same time, the Commission was careful not to upset the principle building blocksof the nation-state system, namely the notions of sovereignty and territorial integrity

    established in the 17th century in the Treaty of Westphalia. As such, no state could usethe Universal Declaration of Human Rights to justify intervention in another statesaffairs. Sovereignty has always been the last refuge of the state. If internal policies

    cannot be justified on a moral or legal basis, the state in the end asserts that the policiesare not open to external challenge for all states have the right to do what they please

    within their own borders.

    Parallel to the work of the Human Rights Commission, however, were Raphael Lemkes

    efforts to secure a genocide convention. Here the goal was to establish a kind of exception to the standard of sovereignty if and only if a state attempted mass murder

    against an ethnic group within its borders. This was a radical move. Even at the Nuremburg trials, Nazi defendants were charged with crimes against humanity only in

    the cases of German invasion of other countries; what German citizens did in Germanyto other German citizens did not count. The convention, which passed in 1948,

    deliberately excluded political groups from its definition of the potentially victimized.

    The genocide convention has had more hortatory than actual effect. As Samantha

    Power makes clear in her 2002 book A Problem from Hell, all states have acknowledgedthe importance of the genocide convention but very rarely have invoked it. States are

    large, unwieldy creations. They do not act with moral conviction (though an occasionalleader will do so, for better or worse). Only the most slender efforts were made to

    prevent ethnic cleansing in Bosnia. Even less was done to stop the killings in Rwanda.Very little is being done today, as we speak, to prevent the Sudanese government and its

    proxy Arab militias from killing non-Arab Africans in Darfur. Human rights

    organizations can bring attention to genocide, but they cannot by themselves stop the

    killing. Nor can the international community, such that it is, stop genocide. Only states

    19

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    20/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    have the means to prevent (or authorize the UN to prevent) genocide.

    Although they havent been able to stop genocide, the human rights movement has hadmeasurable impact on the activities of states. Human rights movements played critical

    roles in democratizing Eastern Europe, transforming governments throughout LatinAmerica, and making a profound difference for millions of people throughout Asia. As

    critically, human rights movements have affected how putatively democraticgovernments behave, for such movements have challenged pragmatic alliances that the

    United States or European countries have maintained with dictatorial regimes.Although democratic institutions are more widespread and human rights organizations

    have greater power today than every before, states continue to oppress. A large gapremains between the state as guarantor of rights and the state as the violator of rights.When the UN Declaration of Human Rights and the Genocide Convention were written

    in the 1940s, there were great hopes that a newly emerging set of internationalinstitutions would make states behave. This did not happen. In the 1990s, hopes were

    renewed that the UN would step into the void of power created by the end of the ColdWar. Let me turn now to one of the chief reasons why an international system has beenslow to replace the old, creaking nation-state system.

    American Exceptionalism

    Although U.S. civil society and elements of the U.S. government have taken strongstands on human rights issues, there are four major problems in the overall U.S.

    approach, all of which have made it very difficult to construct an international set of standards that can serve as a backbone for a peaceful, rights-respecting global system.

    Reluctance to combat genocideRefusal to compromise on sovereignty

    Inconsistent application of human rights standards globallyExtralegality in counterterrorism operations

    .Although U.S. citizens were instrumental in pushing for the genocide treaty, the UnitedStates did not ratify the treaty until 1988. Even while they quibbled over the terms of

    the treaty, U.S. politicians solemnly promised that the European Holocaust would

    never again happen. Actions did not live up to these words. The United States

    20

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    21/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    condemned the Khmer Rouge during its reign of terror, but then backed the deposedmovement after the Vietnam invasion of 1979 in order to achieve a balance of power

    in the region. In a similar effort to balance the power of Iran, the United States sidedwith Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s. The U.S. agricultural lobby also

    blocked consideration of economic sanctions against Iraq when news of the slaughter of Kurds began to leak out (Iraq was the 9th largest importer of U.S. food). The Clinton

    administration decried the acts of the Serbian government and Bosnian Serbs in Bosnia, but tended to blame all sides. While Croatia was certainly guilty of atrocities (Bosnia

    committed considerably fewer), this tendency to assess blame evenly prevented the U.S.government from backing more resolute action more UN peacekeepers, NATO

    bombings of Serb military targets to prevent, for instance, the slaughter of 7,000Bosnians at the supposedly safe haven of Srebrenica.

    And when very credible reports began to emerge from Rwanda of Tutsi atrocitiesagainst the Hutu minority, the Clinton administration refused to invoke genocide for

    fear of being required, by international law, to support intervention into the crisis.Approximately 800,000 Hutus were killed, approximately 80 percent of the Hutu

    population in Rwanda. In the middle of the genocide, the U.S. government actually

    prevented the UN from deploying 5500 troops when the Security Council finallyapproved a measure to expand its forces. Only 800 men were deployed. Why didnt the

    United States act? In part, it was reluctant to oppose France, which was aligned withthe Tutsis and blocked intervention at the UN level. The United States also did not want

    to be caught in a long conflict that could cost American lives, especially so soon after the Mogadishu disaster and the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Somalia. Nor was there

    a Tutsi community in the United States putting pressure on the U.S. president or theU.S. Congress. This was a clear case of the necessity of a humanitarian intervention.It has been estimated that a force of 5,000 well-armed soldiers deployed immediately

    could have prevented the bulk of the atrocities. But the United States, like other countries, did not feel compelled, either politically or morally, to intervene.

    While it is easy to make judgments about genocide after the fact, the choices at the time

    are not always so clear. Take the example of Kosovo. In March 1999, the Clintonadministration finally used genocide as a rationale for instructing NATO for the firsttime in its 50-year history to wage an actual war. NATO conducted bombing raids over

    Serbia during which not a single NATO soldier died. Indeed, planes bombed from

    much higher altitudes than would otherwise be effective simply to avoid anti-aircraft

    21

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    22/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    fire. This led to several costly mistakes, such as killing a busload of Albanian refugees overall, approximately 500 civilians died during the bombing, according to Human

    Rights Watch. Did the bombing work? 2500 Kosovars were killed in the year before bombing. Within 11 weeks of the bombing, Serb forces killed roughly 10,000 (the exact

    figures are still under dispute). But how many might have died if the bombing hadnttaken place? Would fewer innocent civilians have died if American fighter pilots had

    flown at lower but riskier altitudes? These are not easy questions to answer.

    The second problem of U.S. policy is the governments refusal to tolerate any formalinfringement of its sovereignty. This has led the U.S. government to reject numerous

    international treaties (UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, UN Covenant onEconomic, Social, and Cultural Rights, the treaty on landmines, the Kyoto protocol onglobal warming, the International Criminal Court) and to sign others only with

    reservations, understandings, and declarations that render U.S. participation largelynominal. Large powers have shown no qualms about infringing the sovereignty of other

    countries invading them, establishing no-fly zones, and insisting that they conformto international rules of conduct. But only large countries, the United States most

    prominently, are powerful enough to remain within the Westphalian system, retaining

    the right of exclusive control over what happens within their borders.

    The refusal of the United States to play well with others means that the internationalnorms governing genocide, human rights, fair working conditions and so on remain

    weak. The United States argues that U.S. laws are more robust than any internationallaws, but this insistence in fact is self-fulfilling. U.S. unilateralism flows from an

    exceptionalist tradition that argues that the United States is an exception to the rulesthat govern all other nations. The United States has a special role in history (which isGod-given, according to fundamentalists), has not suffered from foreign wars on its soil,

    does not have the baggage of feudalism, and has the moral authority to spreadAmerican-style democracy (and culture and economics) worldwide. If other countries

    dont understand this role, then the United States must go it alone.

    The third problem is inconsistency in application of human rights standards. No U.S.government even the Carter administration has been immune from economic and

    political considerations when formulating human rights policy. U.S. economic interests

    in Uganda, for instance, contributed to the Carter administrations reluctance to impose

    sanctions against the brutal Idi Amin. The Reagan administration adhered to Jeanne

    22

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    23/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    Kirkpatricks distinction between authoritarian and totalitarian governments when itignored the human rights abuses of the former (Chile) and focused on the abuses of the

    latter (Soviet Union). Subsequent U.S. governments have followed a similar pattern of selective application. For our allies in the war on terrorism Pakistan, Indonesia,

    Uzbekistan human rights has taken a backseat to military aid and trade. When theUnited States needed Chinas support last year for the war on Iraq, the administration

    conveniently neglected to introduce a resolution on the human rights situation in thecountry at the UN Human Rights Commission (this year, to deny the Democrats an easy

    campaign issue, the administration dusted off its resolution because of Chinesebacksliding). Julie Mertus, in her valuable book Bait and Switch: Human Rights and

    U.S. Foreign Policy, argues persuasively that the United States has systematicallyrefused to apply to itself the human rights standards to which it insists other countriesadhere. In no presidency to date can we say that human rights norms have been

    pervasively or consistently embedded in thought and action, she writes.In its recent war on terrorism, the Bush administration has highlighted a fourth

    problem in U.S. policy extralegality. While other administrations have skirted the lawin the past, the current administration has used counterterrorism to justify a sweepingrejection of international standards on such matters as preventive war, political

    assassination, secret military tribunals, torture, and illegal detentions. In order to limitmy remarks, let me focus on political assassination.

    After the Watergate crisis, a Congressional hearing into covert activities uncovered a

    wealth of information on U.S. complicity in political assassinations world wide. Herewas concrete proof that the United States was engaged in the oldest form of terrorism

    plotting to kill leaders such as Patrice Lumumba, Fidel Castro, and Salvador Allendeand killing as many as 20,000 opponents of the South Vietnamese government in thePhoenix Program during the Vietnam War. As outraged legislators prepared a bill to

    prevent the United States from engaging in such activities, President Ford stole their thunder by issuing an executive order to the same effect. But there was a big difference

    between the legislation and the executive order. The president could make exceptions tothe executive order. In 1989, the Bush Sr. administration asked for legal clarification of

    this order. As journalist Mark Danner describes the clarification in Killing Pablo, adecision by the president to employ clandestine, low visibility or overt military forcewould not constitute assassination if the U.S. military forces were employed against the

    combatant forces of another nation, a guerrilla force, or a terrorist or other organization

    whose actions pose a threat to the security of the United States. This interpretation

    23

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    24/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    permitted the United States to go after drug trafficker Pablo Escobar, Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, and Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic.

    The Bush Jr. administration has relied heavily on this particular interpretation to

    expedite its war on terrorism. In November 2002, CIA agents used an unmannedPredator drone to kill a suspected high-ranking Al Qaeda lieutenant along with five

    others. The attack took place outside a war zone. The five other victims not connectedto Al Qaeda were considered collateral damage. No judicial proceeding determined

    the guilt or innocence of the targeted victim. The United States simply acted above thelaw.

    The United States is not alone in its inconsistent application of human rights standards,the use of extrajudicial killings, the refusal to compromise sovereignty, and the refusal

    to intervene to stop genocide. But as the largest and most powerful country in theworld, the United States is in a special position to establish precedents, lead by moral

    example, and help create international institutions that can enforce collective decisions.

    Conclusion: Beyond the State?

    The state is at the same time the greatest protector of human rights and the greatestoppressor. Jews, East Timorese, Bosnians have all struggled to build states as a check

    against genocide and large-scale human rights violations. But as we can see from theexample of Israel, even the experience of genocide does not prevent a people from using

    the state apparatus as a tool of oppression.

    In the world that we live in as opposed to the world that we want to live in states are

    a given. But go back only a hundred years and you will find an era in which colonialempires were a given. Colonial empires co-existed with the nation-state system. As

    colonial empires broke apart, new states emerged, which strengthened the inter-statesystem and, ultimately, made the United Nations possible.

    We are nearing the end of this process. Yes, there remain some peoples who arestruggling to create states Kurds, Basques, Kosovars, Tibetans, Xinjiang Muslims,

    Chechens. But new regional and international institutions may soon be able to offer

    stateless peoples the kinds of protections and guarantees that once only a state could

    24

  • 8/14/2019 The System is the Problem

    25/25

    International Peace Camp 2004

    provide. The European Union offers Basques and Bretons and Flemish and Lombardsand Corsicans and Roma a level of representation other than national. International

    covenants on human rights and genocide, if backed by a standing army of peacekeepers,will be more than mere pieces of paper. Multilateral humanitarian interventions, rather

    than unilateral decisions or hastily assembled coalitions of the willing, will enforcethe collective decisions of an international community.

    Between todays world and the world of tomorrow stands what may well be the last

    empire in history, the United States. As in Hobbes, the United States claims that it mustact as a Leviathan in order to prevent the world from slipping into chaos, a war of all

    against all. The U.S. Leviathan, with its refusal to abide by international standards, isholding the world back from building a new global system in the same way that theBritish empire prevented the emergence of nation-states in the developing world. In the

    world that Hobbes described, people supported the Leviathan to escape the chaotic stateof nature. But today, the world over, people are increasingly uncomfortable with U.S.

    misuse of power. And poll after poll reveal that American citizens, too, do not want to bear the costs and responsibilities of empire.

    In South Korea, you have thrown off dictatorship, built democratic institutions, andcreated one of the strongest civil societies in the world. Recently you held one of the

    most exciting elections of the last decade. Now it is our turn to do the same in theUnited States: so that we can together build an international system that makes genocide

    and terrorism of all varieties a thing of the past .