[PAA-Discuss] From Dennis Kucinich: Laying a New Ground Work for International Peace

Juli3 at aol.com Juli3 at aol.com
Sat Sep 25 12:10:33 EDT 2010


    Having trouble viewing this email? _Click here _ 
(http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=9uu6zlcab&v=001sR9KXnYiTHgJYlnbAb0T2wsl3n76bZun
oHDNEysX2ngMvw24Gud4R0B-SNRtQ8_PDLpr4I7Fb3kkTUioPIIfjy1dic6VEBFyKujOVHqB895B
ceHyWeca4-mGreP4YIKGFRtvu30k8bfmhMMBl1hB65iXle9JpVURFDGKIFNaBTe-7QtRyZbM0c3W
XoWBgTYB7fN4cKtidwx5MTfXviq27Jj8lbjY8VuZRsQKhtZnsuCoGLBAFl-rwCqZcLs-_kIRXEGo
q5Amt4jyXXuhb42fnk6HxrKPbKQHUdtVrKeSzpL7Z6q5GtCPTwvoYaz3gwvK) 
 
 
     
 
 
>From  Dennis Kucinich: Laying a New Ground Work
for International Peace 
Today is the International Day of Peace. Please read this  important 
interview with Dennis Kucinich on how we can create a more  peaceful world.   
____________________________________
 Exclusive: Interview With Rep. Dennis Kucinich  


Monday 20 September 2010 by: Maya  Schenwar
Executive Director, t r u t h o u t | Interview
(used by permission)  

 Rep.  Dennis Kucinich. (Photo: abstract plain; Edited: Jared Rodriguez /  
t r u t h o u t)Almost nine years  into longest war in US history, at a time 
when the US spends more on its  military budget than the rest of the world 
combined and endless war  seems a frighteningly realistic possibility, I 
spoke with Rep. Dennis  Kucinich (D-Ohio), a long-time advocate for peace. 
Kucinich reminds us  that there is another way: that through unity, persistence 
and a deeply  necessary change in mindset, we can move toward a world in 
which mutual  respect and global connections shape foreign policy, and the  
self-fulfilling prophecy of war loses its tragic momentum. He challenges  us to 
imagine a world in which "peace is inevitable."  

Maya Schenwar: Since the end of formal combat operations  in Iraq, you've 
been speaking out against the continuing presence of US  troops and 
increasing presence of American mercenaries there. How do you  respond to those who 
say the continued presence is necessary for  security reasons? 

Dennis Kucinich: America's invasion  of Iraq has made us less secure. 
Before the entire world we invaded a  country that did not attack us - that had 
no intention or capability of  attacking us - and that, famously, did not 
have weapons of mass  destruction. The subsequent occupation has fueled an 
insurgency, and as  long as we have troops there, the insurgency will remain 
quite alive.  

The very idea that somehow the war is in a new phase needs to be  
challenged. Insurgents don't differentiate between combat troops and  noncombat 
troops; any of our troops who are out there are subject to  attack. And the 
insurgencies will continue to build, with the continued  American presence, 
resulting in the death of more innocent civilians.  

Every mythology about our presence in Iraq is being stripped  away. The 
idea that we can afford it? We can't. That Iraq will pay for  it? It shouldn't 
and couldn't. That somehow we'd be welcomed there? By  whom? That there's 
some kind of security to be gained in the region? We  have destabilized the 
region. That it would help us gain support from  moderates in the Muslim 
world? We are undermined throughout the Muslim  world. Every single assertion of 
this war, and every reason for this  war, has been knocked down. And yet it 
keeps going. 

MS: Then,  is a complete, immediate withdrawal in order - right now?  

DK: That's what we have to do. We should have done it  a long time ago. Is 
it likely that there will be conflict when we leave?  Yes. We set in motion 
forces that are irrevocable. You cannot simply  launch a war against a 
country where there were already factions -  Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds who were 
at odds with each other - and think  that you can leave there without 
difficulties. That's going to happen no  matter what. 

But the fact that the conflict that we helped to  create is still quite 
alive does not justify staying there. War becomes  a self-fulfilling prophecy 
of continued war, unless you break the  headlong momentum by getting out. 

MS: Do you view Afghanistan  similarly? Should we be looking at a quick, 
complete withdrawal?  

DK: Well, Afghanistan is a separate war; it needs to  be separated. I 
believe we were right to strike at al Qaeda immediately  after 9/11. And I think 
most Americans believed that was the right thing  to do. But - it was wrong 
to invade and occupy the country. It showed an  acute lack of understanding 
of history, and a lack of understanding of  the people of Afghanistan. 

At this point, Afghanistan has a  kleptocracy. There's no remote 
possibility that it could sustain  anything like a democratic system right now. And we 
have assured that by  using US tax dollars to help prop up a bunch of 
crooks. When you think  of the grotesque scene of Hamid Karzai being given the 
singular honor of  a presence on the floor of United States Senate, and then 
you learn that  some of the very people who are involved in corruption in 
Afghanistan  were working with him on the CIA payroll, you know that what we've 
seen  is a turn, not towards a realpolitik approach, but toward depravity  
masquerading as diplomacy. 

We have lost our way through our  misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan, 
and we have to come home. Not  only do we have to come home from Iraq and 
Afghanistan, but we also have  to take a different look at America's presence in 
the rest of the world.  Unless we start to focus on a global position for 
the United States that  is not hegemonic, but is cooperative with 
international institutions,  we're looking at nothing but one nightmare after another. 

MS:  So, what do you think that new role in the world would look like for 
the  United States? What would our position be if we made that shift?  

DK: We would start supporting structures of  international law. With friend 
and foe alike, we'd support compliance  with the Nuclear Nonproliferation 
Treaty. With friend and foe alike,  we'd support compliance with the 
Biological Weapons Convention and the  Chemical Weapons Convention. And we'd submit 
to the fullness of those  treaties. We'd support the small arms treaty, the 
landmine treaty. We'd  support the United Nations. We would participate 
fully in an  international criminal court. 

Only when you have recognized  global standards of justice can there truly 
be respect among nations. We  cannot have one set of laws for the United 
States and another set of  laws for the rest of the world. For example, our 
policy on claiming the  right to pursue assassination anywhere we please: that 
is against  everything America should stand for. And we haven't worked to 
craft a  climate change agreement that is truly mindful of the environmental  
challenges we see - an agreement that would phase out coal and nuclear.  The 
US is missing a historic opportunity to chart a new path in the  world. 

Let it be said, we have a right to defend ourselves. But  we do not have a 
right to take international law in our own hands. We do  not have a right to 
be police, prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner  all in one fell swoop. 

MS: What can the American people - and  Truthout's readers - do right now 
if they want to effect change on the  issues we're discussing?

DK: Support the candidates  that support the change you want. We have an 
election coming up, and  those candidates who really are dedicated to America 
taking a new role  in the world and taking care of things here at home 
deserve support.  

And we need to ask candidates where they stand on these issues.  If they 
voted to continue the war, will they go back to Congress and  continue to 
support the war? People need to know that. Will they  continue to vote for these 
appropriation funds? Will they continue to  vote for resolutions that keep 
us at war? Will they continue to support  the fiction that the "global war 
on terror" has trumped Article I,  Section 8 of the Constitution, with 
respect to Congress's role of  declaring war in any country where the US has a 
military presence?  

We all have to start thinking of national defense in a broader  way. 
National defense should also mean a full-employment economy.  National defense 
should mean jobs for all, health care for all,  education for all, retirement 
security for all. We spend more on the  military than every other nation in 
the world put together.  

There's another thing we need to do in this discussion: we need  to look at 
how we think of the world. If we see the world only as Us  versus Them, as 
divided into warring camps, then our worldview produces  an outcome which 
creates war. If we see the world only in terms of these  dichotomies, that's a 
precursor of war. If we see a world where war is  inevitable, that 
inevitability becomes a reality - we make it so.  

But war is not inevitable. Peace is inevitable, if we are  willing to 
explore the inherent truth of human unity - if we are willing  to contemplate the 
undeniable fact that we're all one, that we are  interdependent and 
interconnected. This compelling truth of human unity  needs to be called upon at a 
time of division. It needs to be insisted  upon. It needs to resound with 
the historical precedent of America's  first motto, "e pluribus unum": out of 
many, we are one. 

And so,  I'm dedicated to continuing to work for an international policy 
where we  work with the world community, where we use structures of 
international  law and adhere to and participate in them, where we begin to understand 
 that our role in the world cannot be as policeman of the world, and  where 
we work with the nations of the world to achieve security for all  people. 

MS: What would funding for nonviolence look  like?

DK: We need to support a cabinet-level  department of peace, which would 
serve to make nonviolence an organizing  principle of our society. The 
department would address issues of  violence in our own society as well as head off 
war, through having  somebody in the cabinet who could advise the president 
on nonviolent  conflict resolution. 

Funding would be pegged to 1 percent of the  Department of Defense's 
budget. One percent! And that would be about $7  billion a year. 

Why wouldn't we want to explore peaceful means  of conflict resolution? 
We've explored war and war doesn't work. This is  a different world. It's not 
World War II anymore. There's a whole  different technological structure to 
society. We can pick up a cell  phone and call anyone, anywhere in the world; 
we can get on a plane and  go anywhere in the world in half a day; we can 
send a text message  anywhere in the world in seconds; we're already 
experiencing the world  as one! Why aren't our social structures keeping pace? Why 
don't we  demand that we come into rhythm with what is really an impulse 
toward  unity? 

Peace, which is achieved only through painstaking effort,  doesn't have to 
cost a lot of money. We know what war costs. 

And  it's not simply a matter of politicians doing it. Each one of us has 
to  reflect on the way we look at the world and think about whether there's  
anything we do that contributes to violence, if there's anything we do  that 
contributes to polarity. We really have to look at how the way we  think is 
producing the particular kind of world we have. We could have  the world 
any way we want it. We need to carefully analyze our own  worldview to see if 
it's compatible with our survival. 

_Entire article is available at  truth-out.org_ 
(http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=9uu6zlcab&et=1103704714650&s=66277&e=001BJw6Elu1C9Rg45sM0H0x7sJdjpqGhRtM-
SOiOWZy28T02ginJHNdKb1TRz0MA8dAwX1ZKSGknwDKEmfeyMbS3pHW9i4mlEzPjla3B2XQSjvk4
2s0ciDA_HOWJKV-HaPgJ6pVIrBbCiIADRXHGUWxyNDOh5qjecqAVRO2ozj1vK9TgZbeLIMwVg==)
 

Thank you, 
The Re-Elect Congressman  Kucinich Committee  
____________________________________
       
 
(http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://kucinich.us/InternationalDayofPeace) 
 
(http://twitter.com/home/?status=http://kucinich.us/InternationalDayofPeace) 
 
(http://www.myspace.com/Modules/PostTo/Pages/?c=http://kucinich.us/InternationalDayofPeace) 
 
(http://digg.com/submit?url=kucinich.us/InternationalDayofPeace&title=Laying+a+New+Ground+Work+for+International+Peace&bodytext=Today+is+the+Internatio
nal+Day+of+Peace.+Please+read+this+important+interview+with+Dennis+Kucinich+
on+how+we+can+create+a+more+peaceful+world.) 
 (http://kucinich.us/PKJUL2010)    _Facebook_ 
(http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://kucinich.us/InternationalDayofPeace)  _Twitter_ 
(http://twitter.com/home/?status=http://kucinich.us/InternationalDayofPeace)  _MySpace_ 
(http://www.myspace.com/Modules/PostTo/Pages/?c=http://kucinich.us/Internation
alDayofPeace)  _Digg_ 
(http://digg.com/submit?url=kucinich.us/KucinichHouseVotes&title=Dennis+Kucinich+Announces+Two+Important+House+Votes&bodytext=Cong
ressman+Dennis+Kucinich+announces+that+he+and+Congressman+Ron+Paul+are+joini
ng+in+a+cause+focused+at+compelling+the+removal+of+U.S.+military+forces+from
+Pakistan.+Later+this+week,+Congressman+Kucinich+will+also+support+ending+th
e+War+in+Afghanistan+by+cutting+off+funding+for+the+war)  
 
 
PO  Box 110475 | Cleveland | OH | 44111 |  216-252-9000




_Forward email_ 
(http://ui.constantcontact.com/sa/fwtf.jsp?llr=9uu6zlcab&m=1102055395994&ea=juli3@aol.com&a=1103704714650) 

 
(http://visitor.r20.constantcontact.com/d.jsp?llr=9uu6zlcab&p=un&v=001Cz2gV83Vs3rDbw9NCfnB7ZKi50wZsUdK6V2HxjIOIf7NrcsrbC505dtFwa8gfPH2QgOMUU1o0pnYrrRYC
NJRAw==)  
This email was sent to juli3 at aol.com by _reply at kucinich.us_ 
(mailto:reply at kucinich.us) .
_Update Profile/Email Address_ 
(http://visitor.r20.constantcontact.com/d.jsp?llr=9uu6zlcab&p=oo&v=001Cz2gV83Vs3rDbw9NCfnB7ZKi50wZsUdK6V2HxjIOIf7NrcsrbC5
05dtFwa8gfPH2QgOMUU1o0pnYrrRYCNJRAw==)  | Instant removal  with 
_SafeUnsubscribe_ 
(http://visitor.r20.constantcontact.com/d.jsp?llr=9uu6zlcab&p=un&v=001Cz2gV83Vs3rDbw9NCfnB7ZKi50wZsUdK6V2HxjIOIf7NrcsrbC5
05dtFwa8gfPH2QgOMUU1o0pnYrrRYCNJRAw==) ™ | _Privacy Policy_ 
(http://ui.constantcontact.com/roving/CCPrivacyPolicy.jsp) .

Re-Elect  Congressman Kucinich Committee | PO Box 110475 | Cleveland | OH | 
 44111 
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://paa-tx.org/pipermail/discuss_paa-tx.org/attachments/20100925/665679e2/attachment.htm>


More information about the Discuss mailing list