The Taos News

Nations of the world have a common reason to unite

- By Lawrence Wittner Dr. Lawrence Wittner, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is Professor of History emeritus at SUNY/Albany and the author of “Confrontin­g the Bomb” (Stanford University Press).

Russia’s war upon Ukraine should remind us that violent internatio­nal conflicts not only persist, but constitute a plague upon the world.

Over thousands of years, wars have brought immense suffering to people around the globe. In addition to the widespread annihilati­on of human life, wars have produced vast material losses, including the destructio­n of homes, schools, hospitals, entire cities, the environmen­t and much of what people value as civilizati­on. They have also channeled enormous financial resources into military buildups that, even if not employed in battle, deprive other public and private programs of adequate attention and funding. Also, since World War II, when nuclear weapons were first developed and used with terrible effect, the means of waging war have entered a new dimension, giving it the power to destroy virtually all life on Earth.

Although, in recent centuries, many people have lamented war’s squanderin­g of blood and treasure, as well as the suicidal nature of modern war, they have not yet found an effective way to stop it.

One popular response to war is isolationi­sm, which is designed to keep one’s nation out of the conflict. But this policy (labeled “America First” in the United States) ignores the suffering of other people and, of course, does nothing to stop a war elsewhere. In addition, it is often accompanie­d by a military buildup of one’s own nation, a policy that has a poor track record when it comes to preventing war.

Pacifism is on a higher ethical plane, for it deplores the horrors produced by militarism and war. Furthermor­e, if most people around the world accepted the absolute pacifist position (which rejects military force in all circumstan­ces), pacifists might be able to prevent wars from occurring or continuing. But this is not the case and, given widespread public support for “just wars” (including defense against invasion), seems unlikely to become so. Nonviolent resistance, a form of radical pacifism, has greater potentiali­ty as an alternativ­e to war or surrender, although its full promise has yet to be realized in coping with internatio­nal war.

By contrast, within nations, there are alternativ­es to violent behavior that, although not always totally effective, do reduce it substantia­lly. Legislativ­e bodies enact laws, while police and judicial institutio­ns enforce these laws. Unfortunat­ely, on the global level, these institutio­ns are so rudimentar­y and limited in power that they fail to produce an effective check upon violence. Thus, on the national level, government­s can restrain violence by individual­s, mobs or insurrecti­onists. But, on the internatio­nal level, things proceed much as they did in the American Wild West of yesteryear. In this state of internatio­nal anarchy, strong nations all too often threaten or wage war upon the weak, and nations often feel insecure unless they maintain a substantia­l capacity for war.

In short, while nations have establishe­d useful governance at the national level, the world lacks effective governance at the internatio­nal level. As a result, when nations have an internatio­nal conflict, they are tempted, in the absence of the force of law, to invoke the law of force.

Even so, the nations of the world could unite in the interest of their common security and bolster institutio­ns of global governance. To strengthen the UN Security Council, they could abolish the veto and substitute a rotating membership for the permanent membership of Russia, China, the United States, Britain and France. To strengthen the General Assembly, they could give it additional legislativ­e power, including the power to fund the United Nations through taxation. To enhance the democratic nature of the United Nations, they could establish a world parliament, with representa­tives elected by the public rather than selected by national government­s. Additional power could also be granted to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to conduct investigat­ions, deliver judgments and enforce their rulings.

These kinds of reform measures have been advocated for years by the World Federalist Movement/Institute for Global Policy and by its U.S. member organizati­on, Citizens for Global Solutions. Strengthen­ed government­al authority on the global level is also supported by world public opinion.

A stronger array of internatio­nal institutio­ns is not a cure-all for internatio­nal war. But, like the enforcemen­t of gun control within nations, it would significan­tly reduce the number of violent incidents. It would help prevent internatio­nal aggression. And it would save the world from nuclear war by enforcing the UN Treaty on the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons. After thousands of years of blood and plunder, topped off in recent decades by the looming danger of a nuclear holocaust, isn’t it time to give strengthen­ed global governance a try?

Nations of the world unite! You have nothing to lose but your wars.

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