THE BIG QUESTION: Can the spread of war be stopped? By David Ignatius (Washington Post Printed January 5, 2024 https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/01/04/big-question-2024-war-global-order-gaza-ukraine/
Here's my response to the Post's BIG QUESTIONS series - and this Ignatius opinion. The text of his piece is below my five questions. Summary: Wars could have been prevented if my generation had did what was needed (see 1980 bi partisan Presidential Commission on World Hunger). Now it's going to be much harder if we are not too late given the growing Axis of Tyranny vs the Allies for Democracy.
1. Why didn’t they (including Ignatius in this piece) mention the Universal Declaration of Human Rights regarding its global intention to reduce elements leading to wars, genocides, pandemics, & other preventable forms of mass deaths? And then fail to create a UN or alternative global institution that could not enforce them or buy them.
2. Why didn’t they mention the UN 17 Sustainable Development Goals - humanities best plan for addressing the root causes mentioned above without a global enforcement system. The SDGs would also be of great force in reducing the irreversible harm our current wasteful and unsatiable consumption patterns do to our planetary life support systems?
3. Why didn’t they consider that the mental map we keep for the protection of governments, their leaders, and corporate profits is fundamentally flawed. Our minds need to prioritize the protection of inalienable human rights globally & the nature we require if we/they are serious about sustaining prosperity, security, and freedom for all?
4. What keeps them (and most Americans) from grasping Abraham Lincoln’s wisdom that our Declaration of Independence is our “Apple of Gold” and our Constitution its "Frame of Sliver”? Or Jen Easterly’s statement Oct. 29, 2021 that “Everything is connected, everything is interdependent, so everything is vulnerable.... And that’s why this has to be a more than whole of government, a more than whole of nation [effort]. It really has to be a global effort....” She's CISA director. [the Cyber & Infrastructure Security Agency. Our nation’s newest federal agency established by the Trump in 2018].
5. Why can’t they grasp the simple fundamental principle of the freedom, security, and independence trilemma? We cannot have freedom, security, and independence all at the same time. We must accept the reality that our mental concept of independence is an illusion. It exists nowhere in the known universe. And when we engineer our political institutions using this delusional concept - we ignore our global interdependence. Then believe we can protect both our freedoms and our security while ignoring our irreversibly interdependent human desires for freedom and security for all others in the world?
At the dawn of 2024, we should recognize that violence is ravaging our planet and the mechanisms to prevent it are failing badly. U.N. peacekeeping resolutions are routinely vetoed by combatants or their protectors; “deterrence” doesn’t deter Russia, Hamas or the Houthis. The “rules-based order” that President Biden proclaims has become a slogan rather than a fact.
The folly of war is the belief that it solves problems.
Israelis and Palestinians have been battling for more than 50 years without
gaining lasting security. Russia’s unprovoked war in Ukraine began as a fever
dream of President Vladimir Putin. He failed to conquer Kyiv, thanks to brave
Ukrainian resistance, but the bloody war of attrition has cost Russia an
estimated 320,000 casualties and Ukraine an estimated 170,000 to 190,000.
The biggest national security question for 2024 and beyond
is how to craft new mechanisms that would actually combat the spread of war.
Drums are already beating for future conflicts that would be far more deadly
even than the current round: a battle between the United States and China over
Taiwan, for example, or a military campaign to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons.
As we think about avoiding future wars, a good guide is
President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a heroic commander in World War II and a
determined opponent of what he called the “military-industrial complex.” “I
hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its
brutality, its futility, its stupidity,” he said in 1946.
“The only way to win the next world war is to prevent it,”
Ike said in 1956 as president. He succeeded in avoiding a nuclear catastrophe,
and every subsequent commander in chief has echoed his message. The latest
version was President Biden’s reported avowal with Chinese President Xi Jinping
that “a nuclear war should never be fought and can never be won.”
Under its nuclear umbrella, the United States pays lip
service to conflict resolution. But in reality, we’ve been an enabler of
limited wars nearly as much as Russia, thanks to use of the U.N. veto power.
When Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the U.N. Security Council
immediately crafted a resolution calling for withdrawal; Moscow vetoed it. In
December 2023, as the civilian death toll in Gaza climbed toward 20,000, the
Security Council crafted a cease-fire resolution with broad support. Washington
vetoed it.
America has often invoked its values in going to war or
supporting insurgencies. That interventionist spirit is infused with idealism,
and often I’ve shared it. But it has led to an almost unbroken chain of U.S.
involvement in conflict overseas, from Vietnam to Central America to the
Balkans and, most of all, to the Middle East.
Putin is wrong about most things. But there was an element
of truth in his 2015 address to the United Nations about the effects of U.S.
intervention in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Egypt: “Rather than bringing about
reforms, an aggressive foreign interference has resulted in a brazen
destruction of national institutions and the lifestyle itself. Instead of the
triumph of democracy and progress, we got violence, poverty and social
disaster.”
Because the United States has been so willing to intervene
abroad to help its friends and values, it creates a kind of moral hazard for
smaller, weaker countries or political groups. They start wars they can’t
finish, expecting the United States will come to their aid. That was true in
the Balkans in the 1990s and in the Middle East during the Arab Spring of the
2010s, and I fear it might become true again as Israel moves toward a direct
confrontation with Iran. America isn’t good at saying no.
Deterrence has kept the peace between superpowers, but even
here, technology is chipping away at restraint and reason. As China builds its
strategic forces, it disguises nuclear and nonnuclear missiles so that it’s
hard to know which kind has been launched. Russia has developed hypersonic
cruise missiles that shorten decision times and prevent assessment of whether
the intended target is civilian or military. Artificial intelligence will
evolve radically new strategies. And space weapons will allow first movers to
blind and cripple their adversaries.
Worse, deterrence is increasingly a one-way street. The
United States acts with restraint, but its adversaries don’t. That’s what we’ve
seen with Russian nuclear saber-rattling in the Ukraine conflict: America is
checked from providing weapons that could prove escalatory, and Russia keeps on
committing war crimes.
Military strategists always
insist that the best way to prevent war is to prepare for it. But we have to
admit to ourselves, as another year of bloody conflict begins, that the current
model isn’t working. We need new rules at the United Nations to stop wars and a
new framework for crisis management with allies and adversaries. Otherwise, in
2024 and beyond, we’ll have to think about the unthinkable.
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