War
on Iraq:
Not
the president's decision
By
Richard
Falk, professor emeritus of
international law and policy at Princeton University,
board chair of the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation
and
David
Krieger, President,
The Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation
TFF
Associates
September 27, 2002
It took the public expression of doubts by Brent
Scowcroft, a former national security adviser to
presidents Gerald Ford and George Bush, to initiate
finally a national debate on the merits of preemptive war
against Iraq. Before Scowcroft spoke out it was nearly
impossible to be heard above the drumbeats of war being
orchestrated from the White House. Scowcroft was careful
to couch his criticism in ultra-pragmatic terms relating
to the dangers of undertaking such a war at this time and
its likely diversion of energy from what he rightly
depicts as America's number one security priority, the
continuing challenge posed by al-Qaida. Persuasively,
also, Scowcroft downplays the regional threat posed by
Saddam Hussein, and is highly skeptical about Iraq's
purported links to Sept. 11 or to terrorism generally.
Scowcroft relies for political closure on an American
call for a renewal of inspections, this time on an
unrestricted (anytime, anywhere, no permission required)
basis. If refused by Iraq, then Scowcroft appears to
accept the logic of preemptive war.
This diminishes greatly the overall force of his
argument, and provides the Bush planners with a way to
shore up their support, especially in Washington-namely,
by insisting on unrestricted inspection arrangements with
such a wide ranging intrusion on Iraqi sovereign rights
that Baghdad would have no choice but to refuse.
Scowcroft's doubts have been echoed by other
Republican stalwarts, including House Majority Leader
Dick Armey.
Most unexpectedly, it is from Armey that we hear for
the first time objections to launching a preemptive war
against Iraq based on international law. The highly
conservative Congressional leader asserted that an attack
on Iraq would violate international law and would not be
consistent with what we have been as a nation or what we
should be as a nation.
This is such an obvious reality that it is an
extraordinary commentary on the passivity of the
Democratic Party that such a principled concern about
Bush's war talk had to wait upon the words of a leading
Republican lawmaker.
Finally, with such rumblings coming from prominent and
conservative members of his own party, President Bush
could no longer turn a blind eye to doubts and criticisms
directed at his plans for preemptive war against
Iraq.
He even acknowledged that skepticism was coming from
some very intelligent people, promised to consult, and
called these dissenting voices part of a healthy
debate.
Unilateralist
ways
But in the same breath, the president resumed his
unconstitutional and unilateralist ways by saying, "But
America needs to know, I'll be making up my mind based
upon the latest intelligence and how best to protect our
own country plus our friends and allies.''
Doesn't Bush realize that the U.S. Constitution does
not vest war-making powers in the office of the
presidency? Doesn't he realize the founders deliberately,
with the greatest care, placed a decision of such gravity
in the hands of the Congress?
And even if this condition were to be satisfied,
formidable legal obstacles to war would still remain. It
would still be constitutionally necessary for the United
States to show respect for validly ratified international
treaties, including the United Nations Charter.
It does not seem to us possible, given these
considerations, to launch a preemptive war against Iraq
without violating both the U.S. Constitution and
international law.
Although we welcome and agree with the pragmatists who
warn about the dire consequences that would likely follow
upon initiating war against Iraq, we side with the
principled opponents of war against Iraq, relying not
only on international law, including the U.N. Charter,
but also on the moral and religious guidelines contained
in the just war doctrine.
Guilty of aggressive
war
From these perspectives, under present conditions, it
is clear that if the United States goes ahead and wages
war against Iraq it will be guilty of what international
lawyers call aggressive war, which was one of the
principal charges leveled against surviving Axis leaders
at the Nuremberg and Tokyo war crimes tribunals after
World War II.
The main argument put forward by the Bush
administration for the war is that the United States
cannot stand aside while a brutal and expansionist Iraqi
regime is acquiring nuclear and other weaponry of mass
destruction.
Iraq, their argument continues, would then be in a
position to transfer such weaponry to al-Qaida and other
terrorist groups, as well as threaten Israel and the Gulf
countries, which hold a large share of the world's oil
reserves.
As Scowcroft and others have pointed out, however,
Saddam Hussein, for all his evils, has not had a record
of cooperating with terrorist groups, much less
al-Qaida.
It would be clear to Saddam Hussein that any
provocative action would lead to the annihilation of Iraq
as well as his personal destruction. Baghdad has been
deterred over the course of the last decade, and there is
every sound reason to think that deterrence and
containment will work in the years ahead.
Unlike Iraq, al-Qaida cannot be deterred by threats of
retaliatory force since it has no territorial base. The
U.S. government should give its highest priority to
guarding against al-Qaida gaining possession of weapons
of mass destruction. Unfortunately, in this regard, the
United States is failing to provide adequate support to
assuring the control of the Russian nuclear arsenal.
Going to war against Iraq would produce the one set of
conditions in which Saddam Hussein, faced with certain
death and the destruction of his country, would have the
greatest incentive to strike back with any means at his
disposal. These would include the arming of al-Qaida or
the launching of such weapons as Saddam Hussein possesses
against U.S. troops and Israel.
Several constructive alternatives to war exist that
are both consistent with international law and strongly
preferred by America's most trusted allies, and at the
same time address those security concerns about future
Iraqi behavior that seem valid.
These include the resumption of responsible weapons
inspections under U.N. auspices combined with
multilateral diplomacy and a continued reliance on
non-nuclear deterrence. By responsible weapons
inspections we mean those that an international
inspectorate deems necessary to achieve confidence that
weapons of mass destruction are not possessed or being
developed by Iraq.
This approach is very different from the Scowcroft
"anytime, anywhere'' image of an acceptable inspection
capability, which would almost certainly be rejected by
Iraq, thereby reopening the door to the initiation of war
that would still be unwarranted, imprudent and
illegal.
In contrast, the resumption of responsible inspections
could also lead to an improving diplomatic atmosphere,
especially if coupled with ending the sanctions that have
had such a cruel impact on Iraqi civilian society for
more than a decade and the ending of frequent U.S. and
British bombing missions in the no-fly zones in northern
and southern Iraq. Diplomacy and international
inspections successfully addressed comparable concerns
about North Korea's pursuit of a nuclear weapons
capability.
Principle and
prudence
It is time for the public debate on Iraq policy to
raise these issues of principle and prudence, and to
recognize that American leadership in the world will be
much more respected, and in the end effective, if it does
everything in its power to avoid war, and to strengthen
the role of international law, including its insistence
that international disputes be settled by peaceful
means.
It has never been more crucial for American citizens
and our friends abroad to raise their voices for peace
and to resist the counsels of war.
* * *
This comment was originally contributed to the
IHT/Asahi Shimbun.(IHT/Asahi: September 14, 2002)
©
TFF & the author 2002
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