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Promote Culture Of Peace - Make Wars Detestable’
BY ROBERTO SAVIO*
While the war in Iraq triggered massive demonstrations
across the globe, the ratcheting up of the number of troops
in Afghanistan has generated no more than brief debates in
parliaments. Obviously the intervention in Afghanistan if
far more "legitimate" than the invasion of Iraq based as it
was on false assumptions about the existence of weapons of
mass destruction.
Nonetheless, it is still significant that the Afghan war,
with its high human costs, is accepted as inevitable and
that even the world peace movement seems resigned to it.
Man tends to resort to conflict as something natural and
spontaneous. Only a society of law and order can control
this tendency with any effectiveness. Over the centuries,
the values and principles adopted by societies have grown
more refined.
For example, there is growing acceptance of the use of
humanitarian intervention in conflicts that affect high
numbers of civilians. In other words, it is now thought that
wars are not supposed to exceed a certain level of
barbarity.
It is worth asking whether or not the destruction of Dresden
or Hiroshima could happen again without arousing universal
moral condemnation, which the annihilation of civilian as
opposed to military targets did not arouse in that epoch.
Conflicts are characterised by the level of civilisation of
the period in which they take place. The more primitive a
society, the more frequent its conflicts and the more
killing of defenceless civilians, women, and children.
Imagine a creature from another planet landing on earth and
asking where he was. He is told that on earth societies are
divided into nations. The visitor asks: “How do these
nations relate to one another?” He is told that there is an
institution called the United Nations that represents all
countries and is charged with preventing wars between them.
Wars? The extraterrestrial asks: “What are they? How do they
work?”
They are conflicts fought with weapons, the traveller is
informed, although the five permanent members of the United
Nations Security Council have veto power and also happen to
be responsible for 82 percent of world arms sales, with the
United States the leader by far. At this point the
extraterrestrial gets back into his ship and leaves in
search of a planet with more logical inhabitants and better
suited for peace tourism.
It may be because of this lack of logic that major
historical events usually awaken people's hope for a better
future. The end of the Cold War aroused the expectation of a
significant reduction in military spending and thus of a
giant "peace dividend" that could be invested in the
development of the two-thirds of humanity in the South of
the planet. But this dividend never materialised, and today
the U.S. is spending as much on weapons as the next twenty
arms-buying countries.
Obviously wars change. We are now in the grips of the theory
of a "clash of civilisations", as the conflict with Al
Qaeda, the Taliban, and other radical Islamic movements is
called. The theory posits that a struggle is underway
between Judeo-Christian and Muslim civilisations.
This "clash of civilisations" theory was introduced by
author Samuel Huntington in an article in 1993, and much has
been said and written about it since. However, there has
been no true examination by the international community of
the causes of this alleged clash, nor have any
recommendations been generated to resolve it, except for a
commission formed ten years ago by Spain and Turkey that
brought together eminent figures from all areas and
backgrounds to examine the topic. The primary conclusion
reached was that there is no clash between civilisations,
but rather specific conflicts within them.
It is in this context that we should examine the original
objective of Al Qaeda to take control of the Arab world, and
its subsequent fight against the infidels who supported
corrupt governments of the area.
Similarly, the commotion caused when an Italian minister
wore a shirt with a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed,
setting off protests that resulted in the deaths of 22
people in Libya, should be understood as a conflict within
Christian civilisation.
In effect, the minister was trying to curry favour with the
Catholic fundamentalists within Italy to benefit his own
party, the League, which seeks the secession of the north of
the country from the underdeveloped South.
It has already been ten years since the UN General Assembly
approved the commission's report and its recommendations for
a Plan of Action for a Culture of Peace, which is one of the
most modern and ethical documents ever generated by the
international community. Very little has come out of it
since.
Nonetheless, this effort raised the level of the
civilisation we live in and makes war all the more
detestable. Each wave of peace that breaks against the wall
of violence brings its collapse a little closer.
(Copyright IPS)
*
Roberto Savio is founder and president emeritus of
Inter Press Service news agency (IPS), as well as DEVNET and
others. He wrote this article in collaboration with the
Foundation Culture of Peace and IPS, in the framework of the
10th anniversary of the Declaration and Plan of Action for a
Culture of Peace 1999-2009.
This op-ed also
appeared in the DAILY STAR of Lebanon on Oct. 24, 2009. |