What Are the Real Security Issues'?
Friends Committee on National
Legislation - Washington newsletter, October 2004
Many Friends and others are discouraged
by the direction of the presidential campaign. The two main presidential
candidates have spent the last two months attacking each other's
military record from the Vietnam era. Yet, neither President Bush
nor Sen. John Kerry has articulated his plan on how he would end
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Security for the U.S. is portrayed as
fighting an endless "war on terrorism." Yet, the ongoing
violence in the Middle East, Iraq, and Afghanistan and the continuing
threat of attacks here in the U.S. all point to failures in the
current U.S. national security strategy. More lives will be lost
and billions more dollars wasted unless there is a serious change
in the U.S. approach-from war fighting to building national and
global security through a policy that addresses the root causes
of violent extremism.
From Guantanamo to Abu Ghraib to Afghanistan,
the U.S. has undertaken mass detentions for intelligence gathering
purposes, imprisoning people without charges and without allowing
visitations by family or legal counsel. Such policies violate
the Geneva Conventions and fundamental American values and fuel
resentment against the U.S. throughout the Muslim world. But there
is little discussion in the campaign about the status and treatment
of detainees.
Friends and like-minded persons have an
opportunity to inject real issues and real answers into the final
weeks of the election campaign. The majority of the public says
it is giving "quite a lot" of thought to the election
and believes the election result "really matters." The
public's interest in the presidential campaign is significantly
higher than in the last two elections, according to the Pew Research
Center.
We need to work together to help get the
electorate and the candidates to focus on the real issues. People
across the country are seeking an alternative to the unilateral,
militaristic U.S. foreign policy of recent years.
An alternative policy offering real security
would require ending the support of oppressive rulers in the Middle
East and elsewhere, pursuing a more balanced approach to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, changing our oil-dependent energy policy, and replacing
the drive for overwhelming global military dominance with policies
for the peaceful prevention of atrocities and deadly conflict.
Real national security calls for U.S.
policies based on strengthening international cooperation and
the rule of law, promoting disarmament, addressing the root causes
of extremist violence and other deadly conflict.
The "global war on terrorism"
is a lost cause. You cannot shoot or bomb terrorism out of existence.
Terrorism thrives on war; war fighting is its goal. The effective
answer to terrorism is prevention, and prevention relies primarily
on civil not military power. To prevent and reduce terrorism,
the world must address the profound grievances that give rise
to violent extremist groups.
The next president of the United States
must offer leadership in addressing these issues if the people
of the U.S. are to enjoy real security in the future. The next
president must face up to the truth: War is not the answer.
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