grassrootspeace.org

November 5, 2007: This website is an archive of the former website, traprockpeace.org, which was created 10 years ago by Charles Jenks. It became one of the most populace sites in the US, and an important resource on the antiwar movement, student activism, 'depleted' uranium and other topics. Jenks authored virtually all of its web pages and multimedia content (photographs, audio, video, and pdf files. As the author and registered owner of that site, his purpose here is to preserve an important slice of the history of the grassroots peace movement in the US over the past decade. He is maintaining this historical archive as a service to the greater peace movement, and to the many friends of Traprock Peace Center. Blogs have been consolidated and the calendar has been archived for security reasons; all other links remain the same, and virtually all blog content remains intact.

THIS SITE NO LONGER REFLECTS THE CURRENT AND ONGOING WORK OF TRAPROCK PEACE CENTER, which has reorganized its board and moved to Greenfield, Mass. To contact Traprock Peace Center, call 413-773-7427 or visit its site. Charles Jenks is posting new material to PeaceJournal.org, a multimedia blog and resource center.

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Iraq: the Logic of Withdrawal

The following article is reprinted from the Baltimore Sun as a "fair use" for educational purposes. Copies of this article may be available from the source on-line or via mail. This website has no authority to grant permission to reprint this article. At times we copy an article, with attribution, rather than link directly to the source as media links are often unstable, e.g. the article moves from the source's linked page to an archive, thereby creating a bad link on this site.

Iraq war looks costly to us out in the real world
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By Molly Ivins
Originally published August 26, 2002
AUSTIN, Texas -- Here we are playing hawks and doves again -- with particularly peppy exchanges from our more excitable brethren on the right concerning "appeasement" and lack of patriotism on the part of anyone who isn't ready to nuke Baghdad now.
Bubba and Joe Bob have a question: "Why don't we git Oh-sama Bin first?"
I bring this up because it seems to me what the right wing is fond of describing as "the media elites" are so absorbed in their own Tong warfare, they forget that the American people have a great deal of uncommon good sense. Does life in Washington, D.C., actually resemble an endless round of Crossfire, or does it just seem that way from the boonies?
At last count, we were already involved in military actions in seven countries, counting Colombia, which is either a different set of terrorists or a civil war. Seems like that's a lot on our plate now. Under the new Bush doctrine of "unilaterally determined pre-emptive self-defense," we get to go around attacking anyone we want without provocation. Not so much as a "Remember the Maine!" or a Tonkin Gulf resolution.
Hard to find a soul in this country who doesn't think getting rid of Saddam Hussein is a good idea, but there are lots of people wondering why it's up to us to do it, and also asking, "What happens then?" Given our experience with George W. as governor, that's a particularly relevant question.
Texas now faces a $7 billion deficit. Mr. Bush inherited a surplus, pushed through two big tax cuts and left virtually nothing in the Rainy Day Fund, so now we're not just broke, but in the hole.
And witness the case of the charter schools in Texas. The man does have a habit of coming up with not-very-bright ideas and then leaving someone else to clean up the mess.
Speaking of cleaning up messes, how smart is it to get involved in a war with no allies? Canada announced Tuesday it won't support a war. That means, among other things, we have to pay for all of it ourselves, unlike the Persian Gulf war.
Our fiscal house is not in good order. Mr. Bush and Congress both blew the surplus in record time and will leave us with more than $742 billion added to the national debt by the end of the decade. That's without a war.
Joseph Nye argues in his new book, The Paradox of American Power: Why the World's Only Superpower Can't Go It Alone, that anti-Americanism thrives on the perception that we don't give a darn how the rest of the world feels about anything. That's the famous "arrogance" for which we get criticized.
On that count, a war with Iraq could play right into terrorist hands. It's apparent that our ally Saudi Arabia has a far stronger connection to Sept. 11 than our enemy Saddam Hussein, so attacking Mr. Hussein makes us look like hypocrites willing to sell out our foreign policy for oil. That we'd also have to kill a whole of lot of innocent Iraqis (next guy who uses the words "precision bombs" has to eat them) should count for more than it probably does with all those hard-nosed Bush foreign policy advisers who have never seen war.
The ideological struggle over foreign policy -- unilateralism vs. internationalism -- is in danger of becoming one of those futile "ism" fights, where people get so engaged in putting down their opponents, they lose sight of reality. It's smarter to stick with what works. Life is not Crossfire -- there are more than two sides. So is there a better way? Mr. Nye thinks there is.
Since terrorism flourishes in the "failed states," why not support efforts to get these places on their feet? There was a poll of foreign affairs experts and scholars at the end of the 20th century, and it found widespread agreement that the single most effective American foreign policy of the century was the Marshall Plan. Seems to me the lesson of Sept. 11 is that we cannot afford to ignore what the rest of the world thinks. Molly Ivins is a syndicated columnist. Columnist Ellen Goodman is on vacation.


Copyright © 2002, The Baltimore Sun