LETTER FROM UNITED STATES CITIZENS TO FRIENDS IN EUROPE
The central fallacy of the pro-war celebrants is the equation
between "American values" as understood at home and the
exercise of United States economic and especially military power
abroad.
* * * *
Following the 11 September 2001 suicide attacks on the World
Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington, U.S.
President George W. Bush has declared an open-ended "war on
terrorism". This war has no apparent limits, in place, time or
the extent of destruction that may be inflicted. There is no telling
which country may be suspected of hiding "terrorists" or
declared to be part of an "axis of evil". The eradication
of "evil" could last much longer than the world can
withstand the destructive force to be employed. The Pentagon is
already launching bombs described as producing the effect of
earthquakes and is officially considering the use of nuclear
weapons, among other horrors in its constantly improving arsenal.
The material destruction envisaged is immeasurable. So is the
human damage, not only in terms of lives, but also in terms of the
moral desperation and hatred that are certain to be felt by millions
of people who can only watch helplessly as their world is devastated
by a country, the United States, which assumes that its moral
authority is as absolute and unchallengeable as its military power.
We, as United States citizens, have a special responsibility to
oppose this mad rush to war. You, as Europeans, also have a special
responsibility. Most of your countries are military allies of the
United States within NATO. The United States claims to act in
self-defense, but also to defend "the interests of its allies
and friends". Your countries will inevitably be implicated in
U.S. military adventures. Your future is also in jeopardy.
Many informed people both within and outside your governments are
aware of the dangerous folly of the war path followed by the Bush
administration. But few dare speak out honestly. They are
intimidated by the various forms of retaliation that can be taken
against "friends" and "allies" who fail to
provide unquestioning support. They are afraid of being labeled
"anti-American" -- the same label absurdly applied to
Americans themselves who speak out against war policies and whose
protests are easily drowned out in the chorus of chauvinism
dominating the U.S. media. A sane and frank European criticism of
the Bush administration's war policy can help anti-war Americans
make their voices heard.
Celebrating power may be the world's oldest profession among
poets and men of letters. As supreme world power, the United States
naturally attracts its celebrants who urge the nation's political
leaders to go ever farther in using their military might to impose
virtue on a recalcitrant world. The theme is age-old and forever the
same: the goodness of the powerful should be extended to the
powerless by the use of force.
The central fallacy of the pro-war celebrants is the equation
between "American values" as understood at home and the
exercise of United States economic and especially military power
abroad.
Self-celebration is a notorious feature of United States culture,
perhaps as a useful means of assimilation in an immigrant society.
Unfortunately, September 11 has driven this tendency to new
extremes. Its effect is to reinforce a widespread illusion among
U.S. citizens that the whole world is fixated, in admiration or in
envy, on the United States as it sees itself: prosperous,
democratic, generous, welcoming, open to all races and religions,
the epitome of universal human values and the last best hope of
mankind.
In this ideological context, the question raised after September
11, "Why do they hate us?" has only one answer:
"Because we are so good!" Or, as is commonly claimed, they
hate us because of "our values".
Most U.S. citizens are unaware that the effect of U.S. power
abroad has nothing to do with the "values" celebrated at
home, and indeed often serves to deprive people in other countries
of the opportunity to attempt to enjoy them should they care to do
so.
In Latin America, Africa and Asia, U.S. power has more often than
not been used to prop up the remnants of colonial regimes and
unpopular dictators, to impose devastating commercial and financial
conditions, to support repressive armed forces, to overthrow or
cripple by sanctions relatively independent governments, and finally
to send bombers and cruise missiles to rain down death and
destruction.
The "Right of Self-Defense"
(1) Whose right?
Since September 11, the United States feels under attack. As a
result its government claims a "right to self-defense"
enabling it to wage war on its own terms, as it chooses, against any
country it designates as an enemy, without proof of guilt or legal
procedure.
Obviously, such a "right of self-defense" never existed
for countries such as Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Libya, Sudan or
Yugoslavia when they were bombed by the United States. Nor will it
be recognized for countries bombed by the United States in the
future. This is simply the right of the strongest, the law of the
jungle. Exercising such a "right", denied all others,
cannot serve "universal values" but only undermines the
very concept of a world order based on universal values with legal
recourse open to all on a basis of equality.
A "right" enjoyed only by one entity -- the most
powerful -- is not a right but a privilege exercised only to the
detriment of the rights of others.
(2) How is the United States to "defend" itself?
Supposedly in self-defense, the United States launched a war
against Afghanistan . This was not an action specially designed to
respond to the unique events of September 11. On the contrary, it
was exactly what the United States was already doing, and had
already planned to do, as outlined in Pentagon documents: bomb other
countries, send military forces onto foreign soil and topple their
governments. The United States is openly planning an all-out war --
not excluding use of nuclear weapons -- against Iraq, a country it
has been bombing for a decade, with the proclaimed aim of replacing
its government with leaders selected by Washington.
(3) Precisely what is being "defended"?
What is being defended is related to what was attacked.
Traditionally, "defense" means defense of national
territory. On September 11, an attack actually took place on and
against U.S. territory. This was not a conventional attack by a
major power designed to seize territory. Rather, it was an anonymous
strike against particular targeted institutions. In the absence of
any claim of responsibility, the symbolic nature of the targets may
have been assumed to be self-explanatory. The World Trade Center
clearly symbolized U.S. global economic power, while the Pentagon
represented U.S. military power. Thus, it seems highly unlikely that
the September 11 attacks were symbolically directed against
"American values" as celebrated in the United States.
Rather, the true target seems to have been U.S. economic and
military power as it is projected abroad. According to reports, 15
of the 19 identified hijackers were Saudi Arabians hostile to the
presence of U.S. military bases on Saudi soil. September 11 suggests
that the nation projecting its power abroad is vulnerable at home,
but the real issue is U.S. intervention abroad. Indeed the Bush wars
are designed precisely to defend and strengthen U.S. power abroad.
It is U.S. global power projection that is being defended, not
domestic freedoms and way of life.
In reality, foreign wars are more likely to undermine the
domestic values cherished by civilians at home than to defend or
spread them. But governments that wage aggressive wars always drum
up domestic support by convincing ordinary people that war is
necessary to defend or to spread noble ideas. The principal
difference between the imperial wars of the past and the global
thrust of the United States today is the far greater means of
destruction available. The disproportion between the material power
of destruction and the constructive power of human wisdom has never
been more dangerously unbalanced. Intellectuals today have the
choice of joining the chorus of those who celebrate brute force by
rhetorically attaching it to "spiritual values", or taking
up the more difficult and essential task of exposing the arrogant
folly of power and working with the whole of humanity to create
means of reasonable dialogue, fair economic relations and equal
justice.
The right to self-defense must be a collective human right.
Humanity as a whole has the right to defend its own survival against
the "self-defense" of an unchecked superpower. For half a
century, the United States has repeatedly demonstrated its
indifference to the collateral death and destruction wrought by its
self-proclaimed efforts to improve the world. Only by joining in
solidarity with the victims of U.S. military power can we in the
rich countries defend whatever universal values we claim to cherish.
* * * * * * * *
LIST OF SIGNATURES (as of 10 April 2002)
Daphne Abeel, Journalist, Cambridge, MA.
Julie L. Abraham, Professor of English, New York City.
Michael Albert, ZNet, Boston.
Janet Kestenberg Amighi. Anthropologist, Hahneman University,
Philadelphia.
Electa Arenal, Hispanic & Luso-Brazilian Literatures, City
University of New York.
Anthony Arnove, Editor/Publisher, South End Press, Boston.
Stanley Aronowitz, Center for Cultural Studies, City University of
New York.
Dean Baker, economist, Center for Economic and Policy Research,
Washington, DC
Houston A. Baker, Jr., Duke University, Durham, NC.
David Barsamian, Director, Alternative Radio, Boulder, CO.
Rosalyn Baxandall, Chair, American Studies at SUNY-Old Westbury.
Medea Benjamin, Founding Director, Global Exchange, San Francisco.
Dick Bennett, Professor Emeritus, University of Arkansas.
Larry Bensky, KPFA/Pacifica Radio.
Norman Birnbaum, Professor Emeritus, Georgetown University Law
Center
Joel Bleifuss, Editor, In These Times, Chicago
Chana Bloch, Professor of English, Mills College.
William Blum, author, Washington, DC.
Magda Bogin, Writer, Columbia University.
Patrick Bond, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
Charles P. Boyer, Professor of Mathematics, University of New Mexico
Francis A. Boyle, Professor of International Law, University of
Illinois.
Gray Brechin, Department of Geography, University of California,
Berkeley.
Renate Bridenthal, Professor Emerita of History, The City University
of New York.
Linda Bullard, environmentalist, USA/ Europe.
Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley.
Bob Buzzanco, Professor of History, University of Houston.
Helen Caldicott, pediatrician, author, founder of Physicians for
Social Responsibility.
John Cammett, historian, New York.
Stephanie M.H. Camp, Assistant Professor of History, University of
Washington.
Ward Churchill, Author, Boulder, CO.
John P. Clark, Professor of Philosophy, Loyola University, New
Orleans.
Dan Coughlin, Radio Executive Director, Washington, DC.
Sandi Cooper, historian, New York. Lawrence Davidson, Professor of
Middle East history, West Chester University, PA
David Devine, Professor of English, Paris, France.
Douglas Dowd, economist, Bologna, San Francisco.
Madhu Dubey, Professor, English and Africana Studies, Brown
University
Richard B. Du Boff, Bryn Mawr College, PA.
Peter Erlinder, Past President, National Lawyers Guild, Law
Professor, St. Paul, MN.
Francis Feeley, Professor of American Studies, Université Stendhal,
Grenoble.
Richard Flynn, of Literature and Philosophy, Georgia Southern
University.
Michael S. Foley, Assistant Professor of History, City University of
New York.
John Bellamy Foster, Eugene, OR.
H. Bruce Franklin, Professor of English and American Studies,
Rutgers University
Jane Franklin, Author and historian, Montclair, NJ.
Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Annenberg School for Communication, University
of Pennsylvania.
Jamshed Ghandhi, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania.
Larry Gross, Annenberg School for Communication, University of
Pennsylvania.
Beau Grosscup, Professor of International Relations, CSU Chico, CA.
Zalmay Gulzad, Professor of Asian-American Studies, Loyola
University, Chicago.
Thomas J. Gumbleton, Auxiliary Bishop, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of
Detroit.
Marilyn Hacker, Professor of English, The City College of New York
Robin Hahnel, Professor of Economics, American University,
Washington, DC.
Edward S. Herman, economist and media analyst, Philadelphia.
Marc W. Herold, University of New Hampshire.
John L. Hess, Journalist and correspondent, New York City.
David U. Himmelstein, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard
Medical School.
.G . Huff, University of Glasgow.
Adrian Prentice Hull, California State University, Monterey Bay
Marsha Hurst, Director, Health Advocacy Program, Sarah Lawrence
College, NY.
David Isles, Associate Prof. of Mathematics, Tufts University,
Medford, MA.
Robert Jensen, School of Journalism, University of Texas.
Diana Johnstone, journalist, Paris, France.
John Jonik, Political Cartoonist/Activist, Philadelphia.
Louis Kampf, Professor Emeritus of Literature, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
Mary Kaye, Professor of Fine Arts, Art Institute of Boston, Lesley
University.
Douglas Kellner, University of California, Los Angeles.
Michael King, Senior News Editor, The Austin Chronicle, TX.
Gabriel Kolko, author, Amsterdam.
Joyce Kolko, author, Amsterdam.
Claudia Koonz, history professor, Duke University, NC.
Joel Kovel, Bard College.
Marilyn Krysl, writer, University of Colorado.
Mark Lance, Philosophy, Justice and Peace, Georgetown University.
Ann J. Lane, University of Virginia.
Karen Latuchie, book editor, New Jersey.
Peggy Law. Executive Director, International Media Project, Oakland,
CA.
Amy Schrager Lang, Associate Professor of American Studies,
Cambridge, MA.
Helena Lewis, Historian, Harvard University Humanities Center.
Dave Lindorff, Journalist, Maple Glen, Pennsylvania.
Eric Lott, Professor of English, University of Virginia.
Angus Love, Esq., Narberth, PA.
David MacMichael, Director, Association of National Security Alumni,
Washington, DC.
Harry Magdoff, co-editor, Monthly Review, New York City.
Sanjoy Mahajan, physicist, University of Cambridge, England.
Michael Marcus, Dept. of Mathematics, City College, NY.
Robert McChesney, University of Illinois.
Jo Ann McNamara, Historian Emerita, Hunter College, NY.
Arthur Mitzman, Emeritus Professor of Modern History, University of
Amsterdam.
Margaret E. Montoya, Professor, School of Law, University of New
Mexico
Robert Naiman, Center for Economic and Policy Research, Washington,
DC.
Marilyn Nelson, Poet/Professor, University of Connecticut.
Suzanne Oboler, University of Illinois, Chicago.
Bertell Ollman, Department of Politics, New York University.
Alicia Ostriker, Professor of English, Rutgers University, NJ.
Christian Parenti, author, New College of California.
Michael Parenti, author, Berkeley, CA..
Mark Pavlick, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
Michael Perelman, Professor of Economics, Chico State University,
CA.
Jeff Perlstein, Executive Director, Media Alliance, San Francisco.
David Peterson, writer and researcher, Chicago.
James Petras, State University of New York, Binghamton.
Joan Pinkham, Translator, Amherst, MA.
Lawrence Pinkham, Professor Emeritus of Journalism, University of
Massachusetts.
Cathie Platt, Licensed Professional Counselor, Charlottesville, VA.
Gordon Poole, Istituto Universitario Orientale, Naples, Italy.
Douglas Porpora, Professor of Sociology, Drexel University,
Philadelphia.
Larry Portis, American Studies, Université
Paul Valéry, Montpellier, France.
Ellen Ray, Institute for Media Analysis, New York City.
Elton Rayack, Professor of Economics Emeritus, University of Rhode
Island.
Lillian S. Robinson, Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Concordia
University, Montreal.
Rick Rozoff, medical social worker, Chicago.
Albert Ruben, writer.
Sten Rudstrom, Theater Artist, Berlin
William H. Schaap, Institute for Media Analysis, New York City.
Ellen Schrecker, Yeshiva University, New York City.
Gretchen Seifert, artist and photographer, Chicago
Anne Shaver, Professor Emerita of English, Denison University, OH.
Gerald E. Shenk, Social & Behavioral Sciences Center, California
State University, Seaside.
Mary Shepard, media critic, St Paul, Minnesota.
Francis Shor, professor, Wayne State University, MI.
Robert M. Smith, Brandywine Peace Community, Swarthmore, PA.
Alan Sokal,
Professor of Physics, New York University.
Norman Solomon, author and syndicated columnist, San Francisco.
William S. Solomon, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ.
Sarah Standefer, nurse, Minneapolis, MN.
Abraham Sussman, Clinical Psychologist, Cambridge, MA.
Malcolm Sylvers, University of Venice, Italy.
Paul M. Sweezy, co-editor, Monthly Review, New York City.
Holly Thau, Psychotherapist, Oregon.
Reetika Vazirani, Writer, New Jersey.
Gore Vidal,
writer, Los Angeles Joe Volk, Friends Committee on National
Legislation, Washington, DC.
Lynne Walker, Historian, London.
Karin Wilkins, University of Texas at Austin.
Howard Winant, Temple University, Philadelphia.
Steffie Woolhandler, MD, MPH, Associate Professor of Medicine,
Harvard Medical School.
George Wright, Department of Political Science, California State
University, Chico.
Howard Zinn,
writer, Boston, MA.
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