Statements
Michael Bess
Associate Professor of History
Michael
Bess delivered the following letter to Senator Frists Nashville
office on January 31 2003:
As a university
professor of 20th-century history, specializing in the history of war
and peacemaking, I have come to the conclusion that the United Nations
offers humankind a vitally important instrument for handling international
problems and crises, including the threats posed by tyrants like Saddam
Hussein. I would therefore wish to request that you use your considerable
influence in Congress to advocate a foreign policy that continually strengthens
the United Nations in its role as a guarantor of international collective
security.
Any unilateral action by the United States that disregards or circumvents
the authority of the United Nations will whatever its immediate
consequences grievously weaken our national security in the long
haul, because it weakens the principal institution to which we can turn
for collective security in the century to come. The days of effective
unilateral action are numbered: technology, globalization, and ecological
challenges will increasingly render the use of coercion by individual
nations (whether military, economic, or otherwise) ineffective and counterproductive.
Our only hope for the coming century lies with the principles and institutions
of collective security. We cannot afford to weaken those institutions
now, in the aftermath of the Cold War, when they are finally getting a
chance to establish themselves as legitimate and viable tools of international
policy.
Therefore, I fervently request that you urge Congress, and the Bush Administration,
to continue to work for a resolution of our foreign policy challenges
through the good offices of the United Nations, and not to pursue unilateral
action. Such action, though it may appear to serve our immediate and pressing
security interests, would in fact severely undermine our nation's security
for the coming century.
Thank you for your consideration, Senator.
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