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Denial is not an option 

By Enver Masud

Jordan Times, Friday, July 25, 2003

ARE WE or are we not the good guys — liberating oppressed peoples, eliminating weapons of mass destruction, maintaining law and order around the world, improving the lives of the less fortunate in developing countries? So why do so many others have such a negative opinion about us?

It's not a terribly difficult question to answer, but Americans seem to be in denial.

On Feb. 24, Glenn Kessler and Mike Allen of The Washington Post wrote: “The messages from US embassies around the globe have become urgent and disturbing: Many people in the world increasingly think President Bush is a greater threat to world peace than Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.”

On May 16, a Gallup International poll found that “majorities in all other countries think that as a result of recent military action in Afghanistan and Iraq, the world is a more dangerous place.”

A BBC poll released on June 16 stated that “nearly two-thirds of respondents to an international poll for the BBC say they have an unfavourable opinion of George W Bush.”

A few examples should help us understand these results: international law, foreign aid, Iraq and Israel.

International law: Multibillionaire George Soros has written: “The United States has become the greatest obstacle to establishing the rule of law in international affairs.”

One way or another, we have not lived up to our obligations under the: International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (1966); Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (1972); Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (1979); UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982); Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989); Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (1996); Kyoto Protocol (1997); Chemical Weapons Convention (1998); Biological Weapons Convention (2001); Non-proliferation and Test Ban Treaties (2002); International Criminal Court (July 1, 2002).

We have signalled to the world that the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties no longer binds us. Under the convention, a country that has signed a treaty cannot act to defeat the purpose of that treaty even if does not intend to ratify it. Instead, we have been bullying and bribing other states to sign bilateral agreements to circumvent the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. Yet, we do not hesitate to seek satisfaction from the UN and other international bodies when it is our interests that are at risk.

While threatening pre-emptive strike on states that we believe are seeking weapons of mass destruction, we continue to increase our stockpiles of those weapons, thereby encouraging others to attempt to do the same.

In 1996, the International Court of Justice unanimously held that Article VI of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty obligates states to “bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects.” Our recently released Nuclear Posture Review makes a mockery of our commitments and the court's ruling.

We have shown an utter disregard for international conventions on human rights by holding “illegal combatants” in a legal limbo at Guantanamo.

These prisoners have been tortured and denied rights under both American law and international law.

We rounded up hundreds of Muslims in the US, kept them in jail without being charged or allowed to communicate with family or lawyers. Of the 82,000 Muslims who voluntarily registered at the request of the Justice Department, 13,000 face deportation.

These actions have thrown the entire system of international law into chaos.

Foreign aid: Every dollar contributed to the World Bank, claims the US Treasury Department, returns two dollars to the US economy. Our foreign aid programmes have enriched the elites; they have done little for the less fortunate.

According to development expert David C. Korten, “the World Bank has served as an export-financing facility for large Northern-based corporations. The IMF has served as the debt collector for Northern-based financial institutions. GATT has served to create a corporate bill of rights protecting the rights of the world's largest corporations against the intrusions of people, communities, and democratically elected governments.”

Harvard professor Amy Chua writes: “For the last twenty years, the United States has been promoting throughout the non-Western world raw, laissez-faire capitalism — a form of markets that the West abandoned long ago .... It is striking to note that at no point in history did any Western nation ever implement laissez-faire capitalism and overnight universal suffrage at the same time — the precise formula of free market democracy currently being pressed on developing countries around the world.”

And even though California's model of electric utility restructuring has clearly failed, the US Agency for International Development is thrusting this model on developing countries.

Iraq: 750 years after the Mongols destroyed Baghdad — the cradle of civilisation — we have done the same. Iraq neither attacked us nor threatened us. We invaded Iraq claiming it was an “imminent threat”. We are occupying Iraq in order to install a “democracy” that is to our liking; we have taken over their oil fields, and the Iraqis want us out.

Senator Robert C. Byrd, in a speech on March 19, said: “We cannot convince the world of the necessity of war for one simple reason. This is not a war of necessity, but a war of choice.”

Iraq's highest ranking defector, Hussein Kamel, according to the UN transcript of his debriefing, had told the CIA, British intelligence, and UN inspectors in 1995, that Iraq had destroyed all its chemical and biological weapons. General Kamel was Saddam Hussein's son-in-law, and for 10 years he ran Iraq's nuclear, chemical, biological and missile programmes.

Both Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, and our invasion of Iraq were illegal. At our insistence, Iraq suffered 12 years of crippling sanctions, which killed a million or more Iraqis. Iraq is still paying reparations for its invasion of Kuwait. Will we pay for our invasion of Iraq? No way — we aim to profit from it.

Israel: A Pew survey released in early June reported that in 20 of the 21 countries polled, the US was considered too supportive of Israel — our double standards are obvious. The largest stockpile of weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East is in Israel — the recipient of the biggest portion of our foreign aid. Since 1973, Thomas Stauffer, a consulting economist, estimates that Israel has cost the United States about $1.6 trillion. If we truly wish to rid the Middle East of weapons of mass destruction, how can we ignore Israel's?

If we went after Iraq with such zeal for invading Kuwait, why have we not shown similar zeal in ending Israel's 35-year, illegal occupation of the West Bank and Gaza? Our Middle East roadmap, writes Columbia University Professor Edward Said, “is not about a plan for peace so much as a plan for pacification: it is about putting an end to Palestine as a problem.” We have given a green light to Israel's assassination of Palestinians.

Americans who couldn't be bothered by all of this need only look at our defence budget. Greater than that of the next 15 countries combined, it takes away funds which would otherwise go towards education, healthcare, social security, infrastructure development, etc.

The “rogue states” and “axis of evil” combined spend on defence less than half of what we spend on covert operations alone. To sustain this massive spending on “defence,” our government has to keep making new “enemies,” use them to scare us, and take away more and more of our freedoms to protect us from these “enemies.” At risk is our way of life, and democracy itself. Are we or are we not the good guys? We should recall that in a democratic society we must take responsibility for the actions of our elected leaders. Denial is not an option.

The writer received the Human Rights Foundation Gold Award for his book 'The War on Islam.' He is the founder of The Wisdom Fund, www.twf.org., which contributed this article to The Jordan Times.

 



 

 
Earth, a planet hungry for peace

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).
The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in the West Bank (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).

 

 

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