|
In Bob Woodward's book, "Bush at War," readers learn
that the only response considered by the Bush
Administration after September 11, 2001 was military --
the use of force and bombs. The United States focused on
the name “terrorists” meaning “people creating extreme
fear” and operated out of our fear, responding with
fight reflexes. Respected international mediator John
Paul Lederach has said that bombing Afghanistan to
vanquish the al Quaeda Network was like hitting a mature
dandelion with a baseball bat -- it only ensured another
generation of al Quaeda. A better choice would have
been to treat as criminals the men who piloted the
planes into the Trade Towers in New York and into the
Pentagon. It would have been a more rational response.
When Timothy McVeigh destroyed the Federal Building in
Oklahoma City, the F.B.I. didn't go to his hometown and
bomb it. Probably no one thought they would, because
most people understand the legal system in the United
States sufficiently to know that the bomber would be
found and tried in court. International law needs to
function in a similar way so that it encompasses
criminal acts like those committed on September 11th.
People need to expand the understanding that they
already have about how compliance to law makes everyone
safer to include relationships with people in and from
other countries. We need to promote the perspective that
we all live together on the planet. Citizens from all
nations need to support, develop, and adhere to
international law. In a March 2003 Christian Science
Monitor Opinion Editorial, Desmond Tutu writes that the
most compelling international need today is the uniform
application of international law. In 1998, one hundred
and twenty countries signed on to the International
Criminal Court. The United States has refused to sign
and has undermined the court by signing twenty treaties
with other countries who have agreed not to take United
States citizens to court there. The United States, a
leader in the world today, has a recent pattern of
refusing to sign, and backing out of having signed
important international treaties that would increase the
safety of everyone on the planet. For example,
- The 1972 Antiballistic Missile Treaty. In
December 2001, the United States officially withdrew
from the Treaty, gutting the landmark agreement.
This was the first time in the nuclear era that the
U.S. renounced a major arms control accord.
- Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention.
Ratified in 1972 by 144 nations including the United
States. In July 2001 the U.S. walked out of a London
conference to discuss a 1994 protocol designed to
strengthen the Convention by providing for on-site
inspections.
- Treaty banning Land Mines. Signed in Ottawa in
December 1997 by 122 nations. The United States
refused to sign, along with Russia, China, India,
Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Egypt, and Turkey.
- Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. Signed by 164
nations, ratified by 89 including France, Great
Britain, and Russia; signed by President Clinton in
1996, but rejected by the Senate in 1999.
- Kyoto Protocol of 1997, for controlling global
warming, declared 'dead' by President Bush in March,
2001.
- U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Signed but not ratified by the U.S. in 1989. The
only other country not to ratify is Somalia, which
has no functioning government.
|