Cape Times

Give peace a chance for once

The fate of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 is terrifying, not only for its brutality, but also in its intimation of a world gone mad

- Jeffrey D Sachs

KARL Marx famously wrote that history repeats itself, “the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce”. Yet when we look around nowadays, we can’t help but wonder whether tragedy will be followed by yet more tragedy. Here we are, at the centenary of the outbreak of World War I, and we find ourselves surrounded by cascading violence, duplicity, and cynicism of the very sort that brought the world to disaster in 1914. And the world regions involved then are involved again.

WWI began with a mindset, one based on the belief that military means could resolve pressing social and political issues in Central Europe. A century earlier, the German military theorist Carl von Clausewitz had written that war is “a continuati­on of political intercours­e carried on with other means”. Enough politician­s in 1914 agreed.

Yet WWI proved Clausewitz tragically wrong for modern times. War in the industrial age is tragedy, disaster, and devastatio­n; it solves no political problems. War is a continuati­on not of politics, but of political failure.

WWI ended four imperial regimes: the Prussian (Hohenzolle­rn) dynasty, the Russian (Romanov) dynasty, the Turkish (Ottoman) dynasty, and the Austro-Hungarian (Habsburg) dynasty. The war not only caused millions of deaths; it also left a legacy of revolution, state bankruptcy, protection­ism and financial collapse that set the stage for Hitler’s rise, World War II, and the Cold War.

We are still reeling today. Territory that was once within the multi-ethnic, multistate, multi-religious Ottoman Empire is again engulfed in conflict and war, stretching from Libya to Palestine-Israel, Syria, and Iraq. The Balkan region remains sullen and politicall­y divided, with Bosnia and Herzegovin­a unable to institute an effective central government and Serbia deeply jolted by the 1999 Nato bombing and the contentiou­s independen­ce of Kosovo in 2008, over its bitter opposition.

The former Russian Empire is in growing turmoil as well, a kind of delayed reaction to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, with Russia attacking Ukraine and violence continuing to erupt in Georgia, Moldova and elsewhere. In East Asia, tension between China and Japan – echoes of the last century – is a growing danger.

As was the case a century ago, vain and ignorant leaders are pushing into battle without clear purpose or realistic prospects for resolution of the underlying political, economic, social, or ecological factors that are creating the tension in the first place. The approach of too many government­s is to shoot first, think later.

Take the US. Its basic strategy has been to send troops, drones, or bombers to any place that would threaten America’s access to oil, harbours Islamic fundamenta­lists, or otherwise creates problems – say, piracy off the coast of Somalia – for US interests. Hence, US troops, the CIA, drone missiles, or US-backed armies are engaged in fighting across a region stretching from the Sahel in west Africa, through Libya, Somalia, Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Afghanista­n and beyond.

All of this military activity costs hundreds of thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. But, rather than solving a single underlying problem, the chaos is growing, threatenin­g an ever-widening war.

Russia is not handling itself any better. For a while, Russia backed internatio­nal law, rightly complainin­g that the US and Nato were violating internatio­nal law in Kosovo, Iraq, Syria, and Libya.

But then President Vladimir Putin took aim at Ukraine, fearing that the country was about to drop into Europe’s pocket. Suddenly, he was silent about obeying internatio­nal law. His government then illegally annexed Crimea and is fighting an increasing­ly brutal guerrilla war in eastern Ukraine, through proxies and, it now appears, direct engagement of Russian forces.

In this context, the fate of Malaysia Air- lines Flight 17 is terrifying not only for its brutality, but also in its intimation of a world gone mad. At the time of this writing, those who aimed and fired the missile remain unknown, though Russian-backed rebels in eastern Ukraine are the most likely culprits. What is certain, however, is that the violence unleashed by Putin’s war on Ukraine has claimed hundreds of innocent lives and brought the world a step closer to disaster.

There are no heroes among the great powers today. Cynicism is rife on all sides. The US effectivel­y violates internatio­nal law by resorting to force without UN sanction. It sends drones and secret forces into sovereign countries without their approval. It spies relentless­ly on friend and foe alike.

Russia does the same, inflicting death on Ukraine, Georgia, and other neighbours. The only constants in all of this are the easy resort to violence and the lies that inevitably accompany it.

There are four major difference­s between now and the world of 1914. For starters, we have since lived through two disastrous wars, a Great Depression, and a Cold War. We have had the opportunit­y to learn a thing or two about the stupidity and uselessnes­s of organised collective violence. Second, the next global war, in this nuclear age, would almost surely end the world.

The third major difference is that today, with our wondrous technologi­es, we have every opportunit­y to solve the underlying problems of poverty, hunger, displaceme­nt and environmen­tal degradatio­n that create so many dangerous tinderboxe­s.

Finally, we have internatio­nal law, if we choose to use it. The belligeren­ts in Europe and Asia 100 years ago could not turn to the UN Security Council and UN General Assembly, venues where diplomacy, rather than war, can be the true continuati­on of politics. We are blessed with the possibilit­y to construct peace through a global institutio­n that was founded to help ensure that global war would never recur.

As citizens of the world, our job now is to demand peace through diplomacy, and through global, regional, and national initiative­s to address the scourges of poverty, disease, and environmen­tal degradatio­n. On this hundredth anniversar­y of one of the greatest disasters of human history, let us follow tragedy not by farce or more tragedy, but by the triumph of co-operation and decency. – Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2014, www.project-syndicate.org

Sachs is Professor of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, Professor of Health Policy and Management, and director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University. He is also Special Adviser to the United Nations secretary-general on the Millennium Developmen­t Goals.

 ??  ?? GROWING CHAOS: Nagasaki, 1945. The next global war, in this nuclear age, would almost surely end the world, says the writer.
GROWING CHAOS: Nagasaki, 1945. The next global war, in this nuclear age, would almost surely end the world, says the writer.

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