Anything War Can Do Peace Can Do Better
Anything War Can Do Peace Can Do Better
by C. A. Matthews
An overwhelming sense of déjà vu came over me when I first saw the video clip of Afghans frantically chasing after a US military jet on a runway in Kabul. It's the fall of Saigon all over again. I immediately thought of the classic folk song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? and its plaintive chorus: When will they ever learn?
I've lived long enough to witness the "ending" of two "forever wars" that the US should have never entered into in the first place. I have witnessed the horrifying images of the aftermath of bombs being dropped on civilians and soldiers coming home in body bags too many times throughout my lifetime. I have felt helpless for decades to do anything to stop the slaughter. It's not a good feeling.
It begs the question, "What good is supposed to come from war?" Or to put in a more positive way--
Anything war can do peace can do better.
It isn't very hard to show how much better enacting peaceful solutions to the world's problems can be. Let's go back in time to 2001. Congress passes a bill that gives the president power under the Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF). Supposedly Mr. Bush was to use this military force “against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons.”
But by 2016, the Congressional Research Service reported that Presidents Bush and Obama had used this authorization to justify 37 distinct military operations in 14 different countries and at sea. What gets worse is that the vast majority of the people killed, maimed or displaced in these operations had nothing to do with 9/11. Each successive administration has repeatedly ignored the actual wording of the AUMF, which only authorizes the use of force against those involved in some way in the 9/11 attacks.
And yet…terrorism still exists in the world. The AUMF used rightly or wrongly hasn't solved the root problems of terrorism. Perhaps diplomacy and dialogue with those persons who would use violence to gain attention to their plight could have been used instead of bombing? We could have bargained from our position of strength (we do have the world's largest military and military budget, after all) to reach out in peace and settle our differences in a more civilized and humane manner?
Rep. Barbara Lee of Oakland, California, compared the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force to the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution and warned that it would inevitably be used in the same expansive and illegitimate way. The final words of her floor speech ring truer today than they did twenty years ago: “As we act, let us not become the evil we deplore.”
But the US government has defaulted to using deplorable evil every time. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright embodied this new breed of war hawks when she asked General Colin Powell in 1992, “What’s the point of having this superb military you’re always talking about if we can’t use it?”
If you got it, you got to use it, right? There's a shelf life on tanks, bombs and jets, right? Even if it costs the lives of 2,443 US service members and more than 114,000 Afghans over a span of twenty years, you gotta use up all the expensive war equipment before it goes stale. War is a hungry beast that has to be fed with fresh human blood.
The estimated $2 trillion we've spent on this death and destruction has little to show for itself. There is the $25 million building in Afghanistan that no one wanted or would ever use, a $200 million literacy program that failed to teach would-be Afghan soldiers how to read, a $335 million power plant the Afghan government couldn’t afford to run, and the $486 million spent on planes that couldn’t fly and ended up as so much scrap metal.
By spending money faster than it could be accounted for, the US achieved the opposite of what it supposedly intended to do in the first place. Instead of building a stronger Afghanistan where terrorists would become a thing of the past because their physical needs were met and their human rights affirmed, the trillions of dollars of US taxpayers' money fueled epic corruption, delegitimized the Afghan government, and increased insecurity--for everyone worldwide, if we're honest with ourselves.
War is a real bargain, all right.
Think of what all the US could have done with that $2 trillion. It could have been used in peace to help people around the world as well as our own people. It's estimated that it would take less than $20 billion to end world hunger and save millions of lives. Peace is infinitely cheaper in practice and provides many more benefits to many, many more people.
About the only thing peace doesn't do in the long run is make the billionaire owners and shareholders of the military industrial complex richer. Peace would shut down the factories that create death, destruction, and mayhem. And with the money saved by not perpetuating warfare, we could retrain these factory workers to build useful things like housing for all, carbon sequestering devices, and defenses against flooding and coastal erosion caused by the climate emergency we're currently experiencing.
I hope I don't have to belabor this point or explain myself in too many words. One trending hashtag should suffice: #EatTheRich
Or to repeat the chorus of another classic song: All we are saying is… give peace a chance!
Wally Shawn in The Princess Bride gets it right! https://youtu.be/7LUUk6wVNrY
“Give war a chance” https://t.co/noZlZ6YzHm
— Faiz (@fshakir) August 20, 2021
Related Articles:
Will the Voices of Those Who Were Always Right on Afghanistan Still Be Ignored? https://truthout.org/articles/will-the-voices-of-those-who-were-always-right-on-afghanistan-still-be-ignored/
What the US Didn't Learn In Afghanistan According to the Government's Own Inspector Generals https://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/71097-what-the-us-didnt-learn-in-afghanistan-according-to-the-governments-own-inspector-generals
The System is Rigged for Endless War https://caitlinjohnstone.com/2021/08/20/the-system-is-rigged-for-endless-war-notes-from-the-edge-of-the-narrative-matrix/#
Right-Leaning Columnist Calls Forever War a Myth https://truthout.org/articles/right-leaning-columnist-calls-forever-war-a-myth/
Corporate Media Are Erasing US's Long Term Culpability for Afghanistan War https://truthout.org/articles/corporate-media-are-erasing-uss-long-term-culpability-for-afghanistan-war/
Before 2001 Invasion, Bush Administration Declared Taliban an Ally in the War on Drugs https://truthout.org/articles/before-2001-invasion-bush-admin-declared-taliban-an-ally-in-the-war-on-drugs/
Listen to "Bush-Era War Criminals Are Louder Than Ever Because They've Lost The Argument" https://soundcloud.com/going_rogue/bush-era-war-criminals-are-louder-than-ever-because-theyve-lost-the-argument
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From Roots Action:
As the humanitarian crisis escalates in Afghanistan, we urge the Biden administration to end the bombing of Afghans and grant asylum to Afghan refugees.
While we support President Biden’s decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan, we must warn against engaging in an air war that would continue 20 years of warfare on that country.
The U.S. invasion and occupation of Afghanistan displaced over 3.2 million Afghans internally while at least 2.1 million Afghans have fled the country to Pakistan and Iran. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees warns that the Afghanistan war has taken a heavy toll on displaced women and children. The United States, a signatory to the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees, is obligated to honor and protect those Afghans fleeing in fear of political and religious persecution.
Click here to send an email to your Representative, two Senators, and President Biden.
"At this moment," Senator Bernie Sanders has said, "we must do everything we can to evacuate our allies and open doors to refugees.”
Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who cast the sole vote in 2001 against the open-ended Authorization for Use of Military Force that led to the Afghanistan occupation and other wars, recently said: “What’s happening in Afghanistan currently is a humanitarian crisis. Let’s be clear: there has never been, and will never be, a U.S. military solution in Afghanistan. Our top priority must be providing humanitarian aid and resettlement to Afghan refugees, women, and children. We should expedite Special Immigrant Visas and support all in Afghanistan -- U.S. citizens, women, journalists, civil servants and activists, and allies of U.S. troops -- who need safe passage. This includes working with surrounding countries to encourage the welcoming of Afghan refugees across their borders.”
We echo Congresswoman Lee’s call for safe passage and asylum for Afghan refugees.
Click here to tell Congress and the White House.
"At this moment," Senator Bernie Sanders has said, "we must do everything we can to evacuate our allies and open doors to refugees.”
Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who cast the sole vote in 2001 against the open-ended Authorization for Use of Military Force that led to the Afghanistan occupation and other wars, recently said: “What’s happening in Afghanistan currently is a humanitarian crisis. Let’s be clear: there has never been, and will never be, a U.S. military solution in Afghanistan. Our top priority must be providing humanitarian aid and resettlement to Afghan refugees, women, and children. We should expedite Special Immigrant Visas and support all in Afghanistan -- U.S. citizens, women, journalists, civil servants and activists, and allies of U.S. troops -- who need safe passage. This includes working with surrounding countries to encourage the welcoming of Afghan refugees across their borders.”
We echo Congresswoman Lee’s call for safe passage and asylum for Afghan refugees.
Click here to tell Congress and the White House.
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Afghans desperately need help; Demand more countries take in refugees!
After a 20 years long failed war in Afghanistan, the U.S. has finally pulled their military out of the country. Within a matter of days of that happening, the Taliban has taken over large portions of the country, including the capital city of Kabul. The Taliban takeover has sent the country and it's residents into a devastating crisis. Many people will not fare well under Taliban rule, including those who helped the U.S. or the Afghan government. Plus, entire demographics like women and LGBTQ people will face severe restrictions of their human rights and even threats to their lives under this new rule.
That's why it's so critical that each and every Afghan refugee who wants to leave the country is able to safely find asylum elsewhere. Sign the petition to demand the United States, Australia, Canada and the UK take in as many refugees as possible!
Girls are dropping out of school, essential workers are in hiding, basic infraastructure may soon fail and the Taliban is threatening to kill the family members of anyone who helped the U.S. and NATO forces if they don't turn their families in. Some Afghans are taking to the streets to protest the Taliban takeover. And many, many Afghans are trying desperately to flee the country to save their lives and the lives of their families. But even getting to the airport, let alone onto a plane, is proving dangerous. They are desperate and they need our help. Sign the petition to demand the United States, Australia, Canada and the UK take in more refugees immediately!
Thank you,
Kelsey
The Care2 Petitions Team
P.S. Afghans are in crisis and desperately trying to leave the country before the Taliban is fully in control of everything. Sign to help them get asylum elsewhere!
Tell Congress to block the sale of $750 Million dollars worth of weapons to Taiwan!
As we all witnessed in Afghanistan this week, war is never the answer. After 42 years of U.S. involvement in Afghanistan at the cost of $2+ Trillion and 50,000+ Afghan civilian lives, with little to show in terms of real progress for the country, we must recognize that war should never be used as a tool to address regional tensions or human rights concerns.
President Biden’s State Department has approved the administration’s first major arms sale to Taiwan. The $750 Million dollar deal would equip Taiwan’s military with 40 self-propelled howitzer systems, 5 M2 armored vehicles with .50-caliber mounted machine guns, nearly 1,700 GPS-guided munition kits, and other assorted weapons systems and U.S. Government support services.
Congress now has less than 30 days left to block this massive arms deal that would send more dangerous and polluting weapons into the Asia-Pacific region, inflaming tensions and increasing the potential for armed conflict and even nuclear war with China. Our swift actions at CODEPINK, with your support, have recently convinced many members of Congress to oppose increased militarism in the administration’s proposed infrastructure bill — now we have another window of opportunity to oppose intensified militarism and catastrophic forever wars!
Given China’s overwhelming military superiority over Taiwan, more weapons will do nothing to enhance Taiwan’s self-defense; instead they will further deepen Taiwan's military reliance on the U.S., making U.S. involvement in a future China-Taiwan clash increasingly likely — especially if the anti-China EAGLE Act (H.R. 3524) adds hypersonic weapons to Taiwan’s arsenal.
M109A6 howitzer
Sending more weapons to Taiwan will surely upset Chinese leaders, further sabotaging opportunities for much-needed cooperation on climate change, pandemic relief, nuclear nonproliferation, and other issues of common concern.
Furthermore, this arms sale undermines China’s sovereignty and violates the Three Joint U.S.-China Communiqués of 1972, 1979, and 1982 that form the bedrock of U.S.-China-Taiwan relations. These communiqués established Washington’s “One China” policy that recognizes that Taiwan is a part of China, guaranteed non-interference in China’s internal affairs, and committed the U.S. to reducing the sale of sophisticated arms to Taiwan. These policies have kept peace in the region for 40 years; selling advanced arms to Taiwan at this point will only make war – possibly nuclear war – ever more likely.
While this may be the first arms sale to Taiwan from the Biden administration, it won’t be the last unless we let Congress know that the people of the U.S. are against the death, military pollution, destruction, and displacement caused by being the world’s leading arms dealer.
Onward toward peace,
Madison, Jodie, RJ, and the CODEPINK China Is Not Our Enemy campaign
P.S. Read about our petition delivery to PBS asking them to stop censoring the truth about China here!