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From The Progressive magazine (www.progressive.org)
The Progressive | December 2001 Issue
A Just Cause, Not a Just War
by Howard Zinn
I believe two moral judgments can be made about
the present "war": The September 11 attack constitutes a crime against
humanity and cannot be justified, and the bombing of Afghanistan
is also a crime, which cannot be justified.
And yet, voices across the political spectrum,
including many on the left, have described this as a "just war."
One longtime advocate of peace, Richard Falk, wrote in The Nation
that this is "the first truly just war since World War II." Robert
Kuttner, another consistent supporter of social justice, declared
in The American Prospect that only people on the extreme left could
believe this is not a just war.
I have puzzled over this. How can a war be truly
just when it involves the daily killing of civilians, when it causes
hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children to leave their
homes to escape the bombs, when it may not find those who planned
the September 11 attacks, and when it will multiply the ranks of
people who are angry enough at this country to become terrorists
themselves?
This war amounts to a gross violation of human
rights, and it will produce the exact opposite of what is wanted:
It will not end terrorism; it will proliferate terrorism.
I believe that the progressive supporters of the
war have confused a "just cause" with a "just war."
There are unjust causes, such as the attempt of
the United States to establish its power in Vietnam, or to dominate
Panama or Grenada, or to subvert the government of Nicaragua. And
a cause may be just--getting North Korea to withdraw from South
Korea, getting Saddam Hussein to withdraw from Kuwait, or ending
terrorism--but it does not follow that going to war on behalf of
that cause, with the inevitable mayhem that follows, is just.
The stories of the effects of our bombing are
beginning to come through, in bits and pieces. Just eighteen days
into the bombing, The New York Times reported: "American forces
have mistakenly hit a residential area in Kabul." Twice, U.S. planes
bombed Red Cross warehouses, and a Red Cross spokesman said: "Now
we've got 55,000 people without that food or blankets, with nothing
at all."
An Afghan elementary school-teacher told a Washington
Post reporter at the Pakistan border: "When the bombs fell near
my house and my babies started crying, I had no choice but to run
away."
A New York Times report: "The Pentagon acknowledged
that a Navy F/A-18 dropped a 1,000-pound bomb on Sunday near what
officials called a center for the elderly. . . . The United Nations
said the building was a military hospital. . . . Several hours later,
a Navy F-14 dropped two 500-pound bombs on a residential area northwest
of Kabul." A U.N. official told a New York Times reporter that an
American bombing raid on the city of Herat had used cluster bombs,
which spread deadly "bomblets" over an area of twenty football fields.
This, the Times reporter wrote,"was the latest of a growing number
of accounts of American bombs going astray and causing civilian
casualties."
An A.P. reporter was brought to Karam, a small
mountain village hit by American bombs, and saw houses reduced to
rubble. "In the hospital in Jalalabad, twenty-five miles to the
east, doctors treated what they said were twenty-three victims of
bombing at Karam, one a child barely two months old, swathed in
bloody bandages," according to the account. "Another child, neighbors
said, was in the hospital because the bombing raid had killed her
entire family. At least eighteen fresh graves were scattered around
the village."
The city of Kandahar, attacked for seventeen straight
days, was reported to be a ghost town, with more than half of its
500,000 people fleeing the bombs. The city's electrical grid had
been knocked out. The city was deprived of water, since the electrical
pumps could not operate. A sixty-year-old farmer told the A.P. reporter,
"We left in fear of our lives. Every day and every night, we hear
the roaring and roaring of planes, we see the smoke, the fire. .
. . I curse them both--the Taliban and America."
A New York Times report from Pakistan two weeks
into the bombing campaign told of wounded civilians coming across
the border. "Every half-hour or so throughout the day, someone was
brought across on a stretcher. . . . Most were bomb victims, missing
limbs or punctured by shrapnel. . . . A young boy, his head and
one leg wrapped in bloodied bandages, clung to his father's back
as the old man trudged back to Afghanistan."
That was only a few weeks into the bombing, and
the result had already been to frighten hundreds of thousands of
Afghans into abandoning their homes and taking to the dangerous,
mine-strewn roads. The "war against terrorism" has become a war
against innocent men, women, and children, who are in no way responsible
for the terrorist attack on New York.
And yet there are those who say this is a "just
war."
Terrorism and war have something in common. They
both involve the killing of innocent people to achieve what the
killers believe is a good end. I can see an immediate objection
to this equation: They (the terrorists) deliberately kill innocent
people; we (the war makers) aim at "military targets," and civilians
are killed by accident, as "collateral damage."
Is it really an accident when civilians die under
our bombs? Even if you grant that the intention is not to kill civilians,
if they nevertheless become victims, again and again and again,
can that be called an accident? If the deaths of civilians are inevitable
in bombing, it may not be deliberate, but it is not an accident,
and the bombers cannot be considered innocent. They are committing
murder as surely as are the terrorists.
The absurdity of claiming innocence in such cases
becomes apparent when the death tolls from "collateral damage" reach
figures far greater than the lists of the dead from even the most
awful act of terrorism. Thus, the "collateral damage" in the Gulf
War caused more people to die--hundreds of thousands, if you include
the victims of our sanctions policy--than the very deliberate terrorist
attack of September 11. The total of those who have died in Israel
from Palestinian terrorist bombs is somewhere under 1,000. The number
of dead from "collateral damage" in the bombing of Beirut during
Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 1982 was roughly 6,000.
We must not match the death lists--it is an ugly
exercise--as if one atrocity is worse than another. No killing of
innocents, whether deliberate or "accidental," can be justified.
My argument is that when children die at the hands of terrorists,
or--whether intended or not--as a result of bombs dropped from airplanes,
terrorism and war become equally unpardonable.
Let's talk about "military targets." The phrase
is so loose that President Truman, after the nuclear bomb obliterated
the population of Hiroshima, could say: "The world will note that
the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, a military base.
That was because we wished in this first attack to avoid, insofar
as possible, the killing of civilians."
What we are hearing now from our political leaders
is, "We are targeting military objectives. We are trying to avoid
killing civilians. But that will happen, and we regret it." Shall
the American people take moral comfort from the thought that we
are bombing only "military targets"?
The reality is that the term "military" covers
all sorts of targets that include civilian populations. When our
bombers deliberately destroy, as they did in the war against Iraq,
the electrical infrastructure, thus making water purification and
sewage treatment plants inoperable and leading to epidemic waterborne
diseases, the deaths of children and other civilians cannot be called
accidental.
Recall that in the midst of the Gulf War, the
U.S. military bombed an air raid shelter, killing 400 to 500 men,
women, and children who were huddled to escape bombs. The claim
was that it was a military target, housing a communications center,
but reporters going through the ruins immediately afterward said
there was no sign of anything like that.
I suggest that the history of bombing--and no
one has bombed more than this nation--is a history of endless atrocities,
all calmly explained by deceptive and deadly language like "accident,"
"military targets," and "collateral damage."
Indeed, in both World War II and in Vietnam, the
historical record shows that there was a deliberate decision to
target civilians in order to destroy the morale of the enemy--hence
the firebombing of Dresden, Hamburg, Tokyo, the B-52s over Hanoi,
the jet bombers over peaceful villages in the Vietnam countryside.
When some argue that we can engage in "limited military action"
without "an excessive use of force," they are ignoring the history
of bombing. The momentum of war rides roughshod over limits.
The moral equation in Afghanistan is clear. Civilian
casualties are certain. The outcome is uncertain. No one knows what
this bombing will accomplish--whether it will lead to the capture
of Osama Bin Laden (perhaps), or the end of the Taliban (possibly),
or a democratic Afghanistan (very unlikely), or an end to terrorism
(almost certainly not).
And meanwhile, we are terrorizing the population
(not the terrorists, they are not easily terrorized). Hundreds of
thousands are packing their belongings and their children onto carts
and leaving their homes to make dangerous journeys to places they
think might be more safe.
Not one human life should be expended in this
reckless violence called a "war against terrorism."
We might examine the idea of pacifism in the light
of what is going on right now. I have never used the word "pacifist"
to describe myself, because it suggests something absolute, and
I am suspicious of absolutes. I want to leave openings for unpredictable
possibilities. There might be situations (and even such strong pacifists
as Gandhi and Martin Luther King believed this) when a small, focused
act of violence against a monstrous, immediate evil would be justified.
In war, however, the proportion of means to ends
is very, very different. War, by its nature, is unfocused, indiscriminate,
and especially in our time when the technology is so murderous,
inevitably involves the deaths of large numbers of people and the
suffering of even more. Even in the "small wars" (Iran vs. Iraq,
the Nigerian war, the Afghan war), a million people die. Even in
a "tiny" war like the one we waged in Panama, a thousand or more
die.
Scott Simon of NPR wrote a commentary in The Wall
Street Journal on October 11 entitled, "Even Pacifists Must Support
This War." He tried to use the pacifist acceptance of self-defense,
which approves a focused resistance to an immediate attacker, to
justify this war, which he claims is "self-defense." But the term
"self-defense" does not apply when you drop bombs all over a country
and kill lots of people other than your attacker. And it doesn't
apply when there is no likelihood that it will achieve its desired
end.
Pacifism, which I define as a rejection of war,
rests on a very powerful logic. In war, the means--indiscriminate
killing--are immediate and certain; the ends, however desirable,
are distant and uncertain.
Pacifism does not mean "appeasement." That word
is often hurled at those who condemn the present war on Afghanistan,
and it is accompanied by references to Churchill, Chamberlain, Munich.
World War II analogies are conveniently summoned forth when there
is a need to justify a war, however irrelevant to a particular situation.
At the suggestion that we withdraw from Vietnam, or not make war
on Iraq, the word "appeasement" was bandied about. The glow of the
"good war" has repeatedly been used to obscure the nature of all
the bad wars we have fought since 1945.
Let's examine that analogy. Czechoslovakia was
handed to the voracious Hitler to "appease" him. Germany was an
aggressive nation expanding its power, and to help it in its expansion
was not wise.
But today we do not face an expansionist power
that demands to be appeased. We ourselves are the expansionist power--troops
in Saudi Arabia, bombings of Iraq, military bases all over the world,
naval vessels on every sea--and that, along with Israel's expansion
into the West Bank and Gaza Strip, has aroused anger.
It was wrong to give up Czechoslovakia to appease
Hitler. It is not wrong to withdraw our military from the Middle
East, or for Israel to withdraw from the occupied territories, because
there is no right to be there. That is not appeasement. That is
justice.
Opposing the bombing of Afghanistan does not constitute
"giving in to terrorism" or "appeasement." It asks that other means
be found than war to solve the problems that confront us. King and
Gandhi both believed in action--nonviolent direct action, which
is more powerful and certainly more morally defensible than war.
To reject war is not to "turn the other cheek,"
as pacifism has been caricatured. It is, in the present instance,
to act in ways that do not imitate the terrorists.
The United States could have treated the September
11 attack as a horrific criminal act that calls for apprehending
the culprits, using every device of intelligence and investigation
possible. It could have gone to the United Nations to enlist the
aid of other countries in the pursuit and apprehension of the terrorists.
There was also the avenue of negotiations. (And
let's not hear: "What? Negotiate with those monsters?" The United
States negotiated with--indeed, brought into power and kept in power--some
of the most monstrous governments in the world.) Before Bush ordered
in the bombers, the Taliban offered to put bin Laden on trial. This
was ignored. After ten days of air attacks, when the Taliban called
for a halt to the bombing and said they would be willing to talk
about handing bin Laden to a third country for trial, the headline
the next day in The New York Times read: "President Rejects Offer
by Taliban for Negotiations," and Bush was quoted as saying: "When
I said no negotiations, I meant no negotiations."
That is the behavior of someone hellbent on war.
There were similar rejections of negotiating possibilities at the
start of the Korean War, the war in Vietnam, the Gulf War, and the
bombing of Yugoslavia. The result was an immense loss of life and
incalculable human suffering.
International police work and negotiations were--still
are--alternatives to war. But let's not deceive ourselves; even
if we succeeded in apprehending bin Laden or, as is unlikely, destroying
the entire Al Qaeda network, that would not end the threat of terrorism,
which has potential recruits far beyond Al Qaeda.
To get at the roots of terrorism is complicated.
Dropping bombs is simple. It is an old response to what everyone
acknowledges is a very new situation. At the core of unspeakable
and unjustifiable acts of terrorism are justified grievances felt
by millions of people who would not themselves engage in terrorism
but from whose ranks terrorists spring.
Those grievances are of two kinds: the existence
of profound misery-- hunger, illness--in much of the world, contrasted
to the wealth and luxury of the West, especially the United States;
and the presence of American military power everywhere in the world,
propping up oppressive regimes and repeatedly intervening with force
to maintain U.S. hegemony.
This suggests actions that not only deal with
the long-term problem of terrorism but are in themselves just.
Instead of using two planes a day to drop food
on Afghanistan and 100 planes to drop bombs (which have been making
it difficult for the trucks of the international agencies to bring
in food), use 102 planes to bring food.
Take the money allocated for our huge military
machine and use it to combat starvation and disease around the world.
One-third of our military budget would annually provide clean water
and sanitation facilities for the billion people in the world who
have none.
Withdraw troops from Saudi Arabia, because their
presence near the holy shrines of Mecca and Medina angers not just
bin Laden (we need not care about angering him) but huge numbers
of Arabs who are not terrorists.
Stop the cruel sanctions on Iraq, which are killing
more than a thousand children every week without doing anything
to weaken Saddam Hussein's tyrannical hold over the country.
Insist that Israel withdraw from the occupied
territories, something that many Israelis also think is right, and
which will make Israel more secure than it is now.
In short, let us pull back from being a military
superpower, and become a humanitarian superpower. Let us be a more
modest nation. We will then be more secure. The modest nations of
the world don't face the threat of terrorism.
Such a fundamental change in foreign policy is
hardly to be expected. It would threaten too many interests: the
power of political leaders, the ambitions of the military, the corporations
that profit from the nation's enormous military commitments.
Change will come, as at other times in our history,
only when American citizens-- becoming better informed, having second
thoughts after the first instinctive support for official policy--demand
it. That change in citizen opinion, especially if it coincides with
a pragmatic decision by the government that its violence isn't working,
could bring about a retreat from the military solution.
It might also be a first step in the rethinking
of our nation's role in the world. Such a rethinking contains the
promise, for Americans, of genuine security, and for people elsewhere,
the beginning of hope.
-Howard Zinn is a columnist for The Progressive.
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