Statements>
William Franke
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Italian
I hope that the strategy here is to accomplish what is
necessary with the THREAT of war. So it has to SEEM imminent. However,
I am pessimistic. I could not believe it the day bombs started dropping
on Kabul--that was the date when we became the losers, not 9/11. And it
doesn't look like our attitude has changed fundamentally since then. That
sort of conversion comes about only from deep, harrowing, prolonged suffering.
Most of us have evidently not yet been touched nearly enough for that.
We still act as if American lives count more than others--or are even
the only ones that count. I can see the other side too. I do not think
Bush is evil or stupid. It hurts me to see the crude, cynical views of
our government coming from the left.
I admire the courage to stand up and say that the world
will not tolerate tyranny. If only it were the world as a concerted whole
saying that and not simply the greatest power trying to bully some of
the others. I know that the world behaves like children and sometimes
someone is called on to be the adult. I just fear that we are still in
a tragic phase of history that we naively delude ourselves was left behind
in the old world.
It looks to me like we are repeating the same old mistakes of attempting
colonial domination (now called economic freedom and globalization), motivated
by the same delusions of superiority, and will naturally provoke violent
reactions and our own downfall. America can be powerful only where its
presence is genuinely desired. Otherwise we will simply provoke others
to muster their power against us. Our strength can only be in the consent
of the governed (and the craving of the consumer), not in the unscrupulous
force of the genuine tyrant, which we are not and do not have the will
to be.
I hear people saying that this situation is hopeless
and without any good alternative. But I see a possibility of a good outcome
to it all. We are the ones who could bring it off. There are no good choices
only if we stay frozen in our bellicose attitudes. All we have to do is
to honor the united nations and the democratic will of the peoples of
the world. We should welcome the resistance to our plans and turn over
the authority to decide about using force and war to the UN.
What a relief it would be to have the world take responsibility for problems
like Saddam Hussein. And the UN as a world authority could be effective
and even use arms without having it be perceived as conquest by a superpower.
If our army is needed then let the UN call for it and we will come in
as heroes again, as in the world wars that are being recalled. But the
policy we are following is causing us to be cast rather as the villain.
Anything we try to do abroad on our own will and initiative now is bound
to be resisted and fail. Even if we succeed militarily we become only
less credible to the rest of the world as a force for peace. There are
situations all over, like the Korean nuclear threat, that need to be dealt
with immediately and probably with force. But if we make it OUR force
then we ourselves become the number one threat.
I agree that peace is not a matter of doing nothing. Quite the contrary.
It is a matter of constructing positive relations with our neighbors all
around the world. What a brilliant gesture it would be if George W. Bush
would now remit his authority to wage war to the UN. Everything would
change immediately. That would be even more wilely and effective than
Saddam Husseins challenging Bush to an open debate. And it would
not let Saddam Hussein off the hook. Then all our threats would be seen
to have served a necessary purpose in the interests of the whole world.
Bush and Blair have been right all along to confront the threat Hussein
poses. They have forced the world not to ignore it.
If we back off from our unilateralism now, the world would have the responsibility
of disarming Hussein as all have agreed must be done. In one fell swoop
it would deprive him of all his political capital, his one ground for
legitimacy and popularity, which he knows how to exploitstanding
up against and defying the USA. We would simply have to admit that this
is not a matter of our "prevailing" but of our accepting the
general will which is being clearly articulated on this issue.
Rather than declaiming that we will prevail, which other peoples are never
going to accept without fighting us, we must accept and submit like everyone
else to the common will of the world community. It would be possible,
so possible, in precisely this instance because there is a consensus,
even a universal consensus, that Saddam Hussein must be disarmed. This
would be the precedent for dealing with North Korea and all sorts of other
problems with a coercive authority that can be effective rather than counterproductive.
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