There is Only Us: The Dennis Kucinich
Vision for Enduring World Peace
March 11, 2004
By Tad Daley
As the Bush Administration was busy bullying the UN
Security Council into supporting its Iraq war resolution
in the fall of 2002, the satirical newspaper The
Onion ran a spoof headline: "Bush Seeks U.N. Support
For 'U.S. Does Whatever It Wants' Plan." "I call upon
you now," said the president in his lampoon speech
before the world body, "to join us in our vision of
America as the only country whose wishes matter."
In the past three
years, the rest of the world community has seen unveiled a doctrine of
preventive first strikes against "forces of evil" that have not attacked us.
An obsession with overwhelming U.S. military superiority maintained over
everyone into perpetuity. An insistence that everyone else adhere to rules
of international order that we have no intention of following ourselves.
Condemnations of the nascent nuclear arsenals of others while saying not one
word about our own. Contempt for international organizations and any
multilateral constraints whatsoever on the employment of American power.
Rhetoric declaring that other nations must humbly follow our lead or become
“irrelevant.” An arrogant and barely concealed ambition to build a 21st
Century American empire.
All of this has
estranged and frightened and provoked enduring enmity in both the councils
of other governments and the hearts of other citizens around the world.
Millions of ordinary people around the world feel a sense of inferiority and
wounded pride in the shadow of American power. Nations and peoples have long
memories, especially of the humiliations they suffer during difficult times.
And many, as a direct consequence, are now plotting to do us incalculable
harm.
George Bush's
foreign policies have made us new foreign enemies. George Bush's defense
policies have weakened our defenses. George Bush's responses to 9/11 have
made future 9/11's far more likely to occur.
So much for
Republicans being "strong on defense."
Boys on the Fence
While many talk of a
cycle of violence, Dennis Kucinich chooses to talk of a cycle of fear.
America’s overwhelming power and overweening behavior on the world stage
generates fears in others ... which provokes behavior by others that, in
turn, generates fears of our own.
No one can doubt
that hard-core terror types exist who intend to launch attacks on American
soil no matter what. Dennis Kucinich has made clear that he would not
hesitate to use American military power to defend Americans against such
imminent threats.
But the most glaring
result of George Bush’s foreign policies seems to be the phenomenon of
self-fulfilling prophecies. When we treat others like enemies, then enemies
they will surely become. There are undoubtedly today millions of teenage
Muslim boys who are essentially on the fence. They have perhaps spent most
of their childhood in Islamic madrasas. Their families have lived in
desperate poverty for as long as anyone can remember. They are unemployed,
idle and hold little hope for obtaining gainful employment. And they are
debating within themselves whether take a stab at making it as a citizen of
the world – or to enlist instead with the enemies of peace.
So far, George Bush's incentive program
for these boys has been a singular, one-dimensional message: If you seek to
do us harm, we will pound you. As Morton Halperin recently observed,
the Bush Administration apparently believes “that the best way to deter
suicide bombers is to threaten them with the death penalty.”
What could be more delusional than the
neo-conservative notion that our planet contains a finite number of
terrorists that we can entice into Iraq and hunt down, and, by doing so, win
the war on terror? During the Vietnam War, it was often said that every time
we killed a Viet Cong guerrilla, we created two more. George Bush is all
stick and no carrot. And if history has anything to teach us, it is that all
stick and no carrot never works. All it does is to provoke new individuals
to become new perpetrators and generate an endless Newtonian cycle of action
and reaction.
How to Wind
Friends and Influence Peoples – and Nations
Dennis Kucinich
would accommodate rather than alienate, make friends instead of enemies and
employ carrots far more than sticks. A Kucinich Administration would dry up
the swamps of hopelessness, exploitation and humiliation that cause
vulnerable individuals to be seduced down the false road of terrorism.
Dennis Kucinich would offer those teenage boys – and all the poor and
dispossessed members of the human community – some rewards for a better
choice, some hope and opportunity, some promise of full participation in a
prosperous and peaceful global civilization. In Dennis Kucinich's America,
our great country would abide by Lincoln’s great precept: "The only lasting
way to eliminate an enemy is to make him your friend."
Next year, our great
country will spend more on our bloated military machine than all the other
countries in the world put together. This is a situation probably
unprecedented in all of world history. In Chalmers Johnson’s new book,
The Sorrows of Empire, he offers a portrait of what he calls a
“globe-girdling Baseworld” – 725 sprawling U.S. military outposts in 140 of
the 189 countries in the United Nations. Oh ... and 234 U.S. military golf
courses too. The christening last year of the U.S.S. Ronald Reagan
took us from 12 to 13 “aircraft carrier battle groups.” No other country has
even one.
Yet we will spend
one-tenth of one percent of our Gross National Income on development aid --
the lowest of any developed country. That gives us a lot to be proud of,
doesn’t it? We’re number one in both our ability to blow things up and in
our stinginess. In the great global conversation about how to address
destitution and despair in the 21st Century, Paul Kennedy
recently observed that the United States is “away on crusade.”
Is this a formula
for winning the hearts and minds of the next global generation? Can't we be
something more in the international arena than a hammer looking for nails?
In its singular focus on the war on terror, the Bush Administration has
squandered opportunities to cooperatively address our most intractable
common challenges. As Mikhail Gorbachev recently asked, why not “pre-empt
global warming?” A Kucinich Administration would work with the world
community to address environmental degradation, persistent hunger, ignorance
and illiteracy, safe water, the AIDS pandemic, the degrading status of women
in so many places, failed states, cultural obliteration, exploitative
transnational corporations, and perhaps most important of all, the grinding
poverty of 2 billion souls – fully a third of the planet. We need a
president who will work to bridge the chasm between rich and poor – around
the block and around the world.
World Peace
Through World Law
During the original Persian Gulf crisis
in 1990, George H. W. Bush labored to obtain Security Council approval for
American actions every step of the way. He recognized that formal
international legal authorization was vital to gain legitimacy and
credibility, to enforce the will of all nations rather than to impose the
wishes of one and to avoid an anti-American backlash that could haunt us for
decades to come.
George Bush the son has obviously chosen
a very different approach. By showing such open disdain for the U.N. Charter
and international law during the past three years, the primary outlaw on the
world stage in the eyes of many today is no longer Saddam Hussein, but us.
The rest of the world did not miss America’s hypocrisy when we defied the UN
to demonstrate that Saddam Hussein couldn’t get away with defying the UN.
“The U.S. tells the world: My sovereignty is inviolable. Yours isn’t,” says
the Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes. “Or, there is one rule for the USA and
another for the rest.”
Dennis Kucinich knows that the U.N. is
far from perfect. Dominated by the five victors of a war that ended in the
first half of the last century – each one of which, through its "veto," can
prevent the entire rest of the world from acting – it is profoundly
anachronistic, undemocratic and far from representative of the peoples of
the world. But it’s the closest thing we have at the moment to a universal
forum, a body representing the whole of the human community. At this point
in history, the United Nations is the best vehicle we have to assemble the
collective conscience of the human community.
Dennis Kucinich believes that the rule of
law must apply both to the conduct of our nation in the international arena
and the conduct of our government in its treatment of captured adversaries.
It is perhaps not too much to claim that the Nuremberg tribunal after World
War II was the high point of 20th Century American civilization.
And it is perhaps not too much to claim that the high point of the Nuremberg
tribunal was not the convictions, but the acquittals. If anyone ever
deserved to be summarily lined up against a brick wall and shot – as both
Churchill and Stalin advocated – it was the high officials of the loathsome
Nazi regime. What did we do instead? We provided them with public trials,
fine legal counsel, the full due process of law … and let some of them walk
free. Could anything have more profoundly demonstrated not just our military
victory over Nazi Germany, but our moral superiority?
In his State of the
Union address, President Bush said “America will never seek a permission
slip to defend the security of our people.” Forget for a moment whether the
unilateral, preventive, illegal and very unwise invasion of Iraq had
anything to do with the security of the American people. Consider simply
that if we flagrantly disregard the rule of law on the world stage, we
eliminate any incentive for anyone else to abide by it. We strike at the
very foundations of the legitimacy of the international system. We set the
pot simmering with a recipe for international anarchy. Last year Jonathan
Schell wrote: "there are moments in history when ... what is at stake is not
just who will win and who will lose, but the rules by which everyone will
have to play from then on." If we disregard the law of nations, we are left
with the law of the jungle, where the only constraint on violence is the
power and ruthlessness of those who would employ it. Rest assured, in that
world, we will not be the only ones to employ it.
A Department of
Peace
In 1793, Dr.
Benjamin Rush, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence,
published “A Plan of a Peace-Office for the United States.” “As the
War-Office of the United States was established in the time of peace,” wrote
Dr. Rush, “it is equally reasonable that a Peace-Office should be
established in the time of war.”
Dennis Kucinich
aspires to revive Rush’s grand idea and to establish a Department of Peace
to stand alongside the Department of Defense. If our country must spend
hundreds of billions every year preparing for war, how about just 1% of that
amount for a department whose raison d'etre is preventing war?
The Department of
Peace would seek to make non-violence an organizing principle of society. It
would present a wider range of alternatives within the councils of our
government. It would seek to articulate
new structures of global governance, a paradigm of people resolving
differences without resorting to primitive violence and a clear and
sparkling vision of permanent peace as a higher evolution of Homo sapiens
as a social animal.
On September 11,
2001, George Bush told the nation that “the first war of the 21st
Century” had now been joined. It was as if it was self-evident, for him,
that our new century would be soaked in at least as much blood as the last –
when more than 100 million souls died face down in the mud. Dennis Kucinich
takes no such fatalistic view of the destiny of the human race. The
Department of Peace proposal, most fundamentally, is about the proposition
that it is within the power of the human imagination to envision abolishing
war itself.
Toward a Politics
of Human Unity
Science writer
Michael Shermer recently said: “In-group morality is a universal human trait
... from the earliest bands and tribes to modern nations and empires. The
long-term solution is to view all people as members of our in-group: the
species Homo sapiens.”
Dennis Kucinich
knows that politics is not only about tangible policy ideas, but also
intangible spiritual ideals. And the Americans supporting Dennis Kucinich
for president believe that the advancing tide of human unity may be no less
than the Great Story of the 21st Century. We know that each of us is bound
to a common destiny, that higher than our loyalty to our nation is our
loyalty to humankind, that we are all in the same boat on Spaceship Earth.
We claim that our national patriotism must be transcended in this new
century by our planetary patriotism. We insist that our government’s pursuit
of national interests must be accompanied by a consideration of
transnational interests. We know that the only way to end incessant cycles
of hatred and violence is to stop talking about “them and us,” and to
recognize that there is only us.
These are hardly new
ideas. We stand in the tradition of what the great developmental
psychologist Erik Erikson called an emerging "all-human solidarity." We see
the first glimmerings of what the Princeton political scientist Robert C.
Tucker called an "ethic of specieshood." We are the vanguard of what
Voltaire called the "party of humanity."
The picture taken by
Voyager 1 from beyond the orbit of Pluto shows our planet as a tiny speck –
almost completely lost in the glare of the Sun. In his exquisite paean
Pale Blue Dot, Carl Sagan wrote of this photograph: "Think of the rivers
of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors, so that, in glory and
triumph, they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot."
We believe that Dennis Kucinich’s global
policy agenda reflects the truth of Earth from space. We compare the soft
blues and greens of our fragile planet to the stark blackness of the cosmos
and recognize the infinite preciousness of our lonely home, suspended among
the blazing stars. We have a nagging intuition that the Whole Earth is
perhaps something greater than the sum of its parts. We pledge allegiance to
the flag of the United States of America. But we also pledge our allegiance
to humanity.
Tad Daley has
served since September 2003 as National Issues Director and Senior Policy
Advisor to the Presidential campaign of U.S. Representative Dennis Kucinich.
Congressman Kucinich, Democrat of Ohio, is Chair of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus and served as prime organizer of the Democratic
opposition to the Iraq war resolution in the fall of 2002. |