The
Wars to End All War
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/05/08-2
“Peace,
as we have seen, is not an order natural to mankind: it is
artificial, intricate and highly volatile. All kinds of preconditions
are necessary.”
— Michael Howard, The Invention of Peace
And
here comes World War I, wrapped in World War II, wrapped in the Cold
War: tremors on one of Planet Earth’s human fault lines.
We
have enough angry, manipulable people on this planet to carry out the
game plan of the political ideologues and war profiteers, who are
always on the lookout for the next war, the one that’s too volatile
and “inevitable” to stop. As David Swanson, author of War Is a
Lie, put it: “The search for a good war is beginning to look as
futile as the search for the mythical city of El Dorado. And yet that
search remains our top public project.”
And
the searchlight stops at Ukraine, full of neo-Nazis, corrupt
oligarchs, nuclear reactors, an unelected government, a wrecked
economy, a simmering civil war. God help us. Old animosities and
ideological divisions come back to life. The United States and NATO
stand off against Vladimir Putin’s Russia. Thirty-one people —
maybe more — die in a burning building in Odessa. This kind of
thing could be the pretext for a world war. Sanity is up in flames.
“The
crisis in Ukraine is serious,” Floyd Rudmin writes at Common
Dreams. “At some point soon, reality needs to become the priority.
No more name-calling. No more blaming. If there are any adults in the
room, they need to stand up. The crisis in Ukraine is going critical,
and that is a fact.”
What
if one of the adults were an elected official, specifically, the
president of the United States? In an open letter, a group
calledVeteranIntelligence Professionals for Sanity has urged Barack
Obama to look beyond John Kerry and Washington’s neocon consensus
for advice and direction on Ukraine — as, it turns out, he
ultimately did with Syria — and “schedule a meeting, one-on-one,
with President Putin as quickly as possible.”
There
are numerous acts of geopolitical rationality and goodwill — e.g.,
rescind Ukraine’s invitation to join NATO — that could avert the
crisis. That’s all that matters.
“In
2014, on the one century anniversary of World War I, European nations
are again mobilizing for war,” Rudmin writes. “As in 1914, so in
2014, war is not for repelling an attack, but for loyalty to an
alliance, even when some members of the alliance are belligerent. The
1914 war was supposed to be over by Christmas, but went on and on and
on for years, killing 9 million people. The 2014 war, if its starts
in earnest, will be over in one week, maybe less, and could kill a
100 million people depending on how many nuclear reactors break open
and how many nuclear missiles are launched.”
He
adds: “The 1914 war was called ‘the war to end all wars.’ The
2014 war will be that.”
Human
civilization is walking along the edge of collapse. Endless material
growth, driven by a profit-based economy, is wrecking our natural
habitat, but our antiquated systems of leadership answer primarily to
the destructive status quo and are unable to implement meaningful,
crucial change. That same status quo is addicted not simply to fossil
fuels but to a perverted, reptile-brain sense of “survival of the
fittest” that requires constantly identifying, engaging and
defeating an enemy. This is called war, and we prepare for it more
than for anything else, including the education of our children.
With
the development and stupefying proliferation of nuclear weapons, war
has become the fast track to annihilation — which, of course, the
world grasped during the four-plus decades of the Cold War. Lacking
the will and courage to pursue nuclear (or any other kind of)
disarmament, the leaders of the two sides of the arms race settled
for the concept of “mutually assured destruction”—MAD — to
maintain security. Beware of our nukes!
And,
voila, there were no more world wars, no more direct conflagrations
between superpowers: proxy wars only. And most of the casualties were
Third and Fourth Worlders. In the U.S., the military-industrial
complex grew fat and prosperous. But the Soviet Union, economically
less able to maintain the arms race, spent itself into oblivion and
collapsed in 1991. MAD was declared a success.
But
of course there was more going on here than a short-term competition
between East and West. When the Cold War ended, peace hardly
prevailed. In the U.S., there was no “peace dividend”: no
diversion of military spending into education, infrastructure
maintenance or the social safety net. We just looked for new enemies.
The military budget expanded.
And
the Cold War itself — this deep, unspoken commitment to mass
suicide — merely went on hold. And now it’s back, with the two
sides still in command of thousands and thousands of nuclear weapons.
Of the 15,000 nuclear weapons currently housed on Planet Earth, 95
percent are controlled by the U.S. and Russia, and 3,000 of those
warheads are on hair-trigger alert, according toIra Helfand,
co-president of International Physicians for the Prevention of
Nuclear War.
The
neo-Nazi nationalists who attacked the pro-Russian protesters in
Odessa last week, burning their tent encampment, driving them into a
building and setting that building on fire with Molotov cocktails,
reputedly called their dying enemies “Colorados” (which are black
and red potato beetles, the color of the ribbons symbolizing a
pro-Russian political commitment). So here we have it: the full
spectrum of “human nature” on display in Ukraine: from
dehumanizing insult to . . . potential nuclear war.
“Peace,
as we have seen, is not an order natural to mankind.”
Reaching
for our higher — angelic — nature is not a natural reach, but now
is the time to try
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