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To: abuelita who wrote (12982)2/14/2003 3:00:34 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Security Council heads for a split

Analysis by Marian Wilkinson

February 15 2003

The split between the US and France is now wide open over Iraq. The report by the chief UN weapons inspector has given France enough ammunition to press its case for further inspections.

Dr Blix's findings that so far no evidence of new chemical or biological weapons production have been found coupled with Iraq's handing over of documents and personnel lists, allowed for an even-handed report that gives a way forward for the inspectors.

Iraq's last minute concessions on spy flights, new legislation prohibiting weapons of mass destruction and offers of new material came just in time.

The report by the chief UN weapons inspector has undermined President Bush's strategy to pressure the Security Council into a second resolution endorsing a war with Iraq.

In his report to the council, Dr Blix also pointedly undercut US Secretary of State Colin Powell's, intelligence briefing to the council last week, questioning the value of spy satellite images allegedly showing attempts to hide chemical weapons.

France's Foreign Minister, Mr Dominique de Villepin went further, rejecting Powell's claims of a link between Baghdad and al Qaeda.

And in what was a signal that Russia's President Putin was about line up behind France, Moscow delivered a letter to the UN weapons inspectors answering point-by-point the dramatic intelligence presentation by Powell against Iraq.

Before Dr Hans Blix opened his mouth, President Bush made it clear that the weapons inspection process was over as far as he was concerned.

For weeks everyone at the Security Council has realised the US will not be deterred from attacking Iraq. The question is, what route Powell and the President will take to Baghdad and how quickly they want to get there.

Powell, with Britain's help, is now circulating a wording for a second resolution that will give UN backing for a war against Iraq in the face of resistance from Russia, France, China and Germany. Many in the Bush administration want to confront France and Russia at the Security Council and dare them to veto the resolution.

France it seems, is willing to answer that dare. In the next two weeks, if no compromise is found, the US may well be forced to break with its old allies finally to pursue its war with Iraq.

smh.com.au



To: abuelita who wrote (12982)2/14/2003 3:09:17 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
We're in the grip of a faulty metaphor

By ANTHONY B. ROBINSON
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER COLUMNIST
Friday, February 14, 2003

seattlepi.nwsource.com

I have a friend, also a preacher, who is fond of saying, "There's nothing worse than a metaphor that has done its work!" We preachers, wordsmiths, are constantly employing metaphors. As the world and our nation tremble on the edge of war, I fear we are in the grip of a faulty metaphor. Very soon after 9/11, the metaphor that was invoked to explain our situation and to map the future was "war." The president declared "War on terrorism," and announced to the nations of the world, "You are either for us or you are against us."

As metaphor, war is a heady and dangerous elixir. It simplifies a complex world, dividing it into two clear sides, declaring one side good and the other evil. Just now we are vexed because historic and recent allies, namely Germany, France and Russia, are refusing to behave as the war metaphor insists they ought; that is, either for us or against us.

Moreover, war promises release and relief from the routines of ordinary life. The often-invisible heroism of daily work decently done, of faithfulness in responsibility and relationship and slogging through the slow work of building most anything, is replaced by fiery martyrdom, aerial fireworks and Hollywood-style shootouts. Whether any of that describes the actuality of war is another matter. The point is that war eclipses all complexity, mobilizes nations and allows wholesale deployment of massive resources.

The metaphor has, it seems, done its work. On Monday the Christian Science Monitor, whether by design or not, revealed how much the citizens of North Korea and the United States now, ironically, have in common. Both live on the edge. In North Korea, the citizens of Pyongyang are under a "Siege Mentality," with "Fear of Attack Building." Meanwhile, across the world and on the other side of the front page, it was "Heightened Alert" in Buffalo, N.Y., where U.S. border guards carrying machine guns were responding to the latest terrorist alert.

But what if we've got the wrong metaphor? What if we got off on the wrong rhetorical foot after 9/11? What if we have framed the situation erroneously from the beginning and are racing downhill propelled by the weight of a way of thinking that, rather than helping, is doing a great deal to magnify our problems and distort our perceptions?

Is there another metaphor, another way to frame the world after 9/11? Instead of war, might we speak of crime and criminal activity? Instead of military action, might we think of policing and judicial process? With such a shift the temperature goes down almost immediately, a disappointment to some, but precisely the point. "So can we stop talking so much about 'war,' " asks Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, "and reconcile ourselves to the fact that the punishment of terrorist crime, and the gradual reduction of its threat cannot be translated into the satisfying language of decisive and dramatic conquest?"

To speak of war on terrorism assumes a unified and identifiable enemy who has declared war. Such a perception ups the ante tremendously and, ironically, gives the terrorist exactly what he wants, the dignity of war. To view terrorism as crime, rather than war, seems much closer to the reality of what has been experienced. There is no single, unified enemy. (Note the administration's steady yet unconvincing efforts to tie Iraq to al-Qaida.) Moreover, to describe terrorists as criminals not only has a de-escalating effect, it robs terrorists of the dignifying rhetoric or war, classifying them as merely criminals.

Does this shift of metaphor and perception also have bearing on the situation in Iraq? If we're engaged in war, the task must be to defeat the enemy. If, however, we face a breach of international law and of nuclear non-proliferation treaties, then the task is for the community of nations to strengthen and support the rule of law. This would be expressed in a more deliberate and multi-lateral approach on Iraq. That is a slower, less intoxicating labor, but it is a framing of the issues that better fits reality.

As Christopher Jones, an international security scholar at the University of Washington's Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, recently pointed out, "The Bush administration has in effect accepted the rules of engagement set by ludicrously weaker opponents, Iraq with its $29 billion GDP and North Korea with is $16 billion GDP (by comparison, the state of Washington has a $200 billion economy)." The war metaphor has, ironically, seduced us into giving such nations far more power than they have or deserve.

It would have been understandable if in the wake of 9/11 the American people had reacted with bellicose rhetoric. By and large, that did not happen. The American people showed considerable restraint. Those who have overreacted and have taken us to the brink have, alas, been our leaders. In many ways, this seems a spectacular failure of leadership for it has distorted reality by interpreting it through the wrong metaphorical lens.

___________________________________________________

Anthony B. Robinson is senior minister at Plymouth Congregational Church: United Church of Christ in Seattle. E-mail: trobinson@plymouthchurchseattle.org



To: abuelita who wrote (12982)2/14/2003 3:34:17 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
World Protests War

by Ruth Rosen
The San Francisco Chronicle
Published on Thursday, February 13, 2003

MANY OF US will never forget when the people of the world welcomed the dawn of the new millennium. As the Earth turned, we watched televised pictures of people celebrating and cheering as the sky lit up with fireworks -- from Asia to Europe, from Africa to North America. And, for the first time in human history, we understood, in a deeply visceral way, that we really do inhabit the same planet and that we are, in fact, members of a global society.

That is what's going to happen again on Saturday. In 316 cities in 60 countries -- Cairo, Bangkok, Beirut, Jakarta, Prague, Budapest, Tokyo, Moscow, London, Cape Town, Kigali in Rwanda, Madrid, Warsaw, Kiev, Lisbon, Mexico City,

Sao Paulo, New York, Sydney, Barcelona, to name but a few -- more than a million people are expected to march and rally against an American invasion of Iraq. Even McMurdo Station in Antarctica will hold a protest against the war. Such a global outpouring against the threat of war is unprecedented.

Without the Internet, of course, such a global protest would be unimaginable. But the Internet is only the messenger. Clearly, there is strong opposition here and abroad to an American invasion of Iraq.

What's truly surprising are the concise slogans posted on the Web sites of the coalitions that have helped organize this protest. No America bashing. No defense of Saddam Hussein. No solidarity with al Qaeda terrorists. In dozens of languages, the message is simple and direct: "No war in Iraq." "Stop the war in Iraq."

People around the world now feel a right to express their opposition to war.

They clearly believe Hussein is a ruthless dictator. But they also understand that the greatest threat is terrorist attacks from elusive networks that cannot be stopped by American bombs or U.N. weapons inspections.

The Bush administration, of course, will try to discredit this global uprising against an American war with Iraq. But it won't be so easy. The coalitions assembled in these cities include business, labor and religious groups; veterans of former wars, environmentalists, human rights activists and mothers against war; and thousands of ordinary people who are asking the U.N. Security Council to pursue further weapons inspections in Iraq, not war.

The next day will be our turn to march. In deference to the celebration of the Chinese New Year, San Francisco will hold its anti-war march on Sunday, Feb. 16. Once again, as thousands did last month, people will assemble at 11 a. m. at Justin Herman Plaza at the Embarcadero. They will then march up Market Street for a 2 p.m. closing rally in Civic Center. Once again, ordinary people will give up a precious weekend day to make their voice heard -- peacefully.

Expect a tiny band of adolescent anarchists, who would rather spray graffiti and smash windows than join others in a peaceful march. We should condemn such antics. There is nothing less persuasive than using violence in the name of preventing war.

Why, you may ask, should you participate in this demonstration? Because you are a citizen of a great nation that is violating its own democratic ideals, treating the rest of the world with dismissive contempt and refusing to be restrained by international law.

Because you are a citizen of a new global society. Globalization is about more than free trade. What we are witnessing is the birth of a grassroots global democracy. To emphasize our membership in this new global society, many protesters around the world will be carrying the U.N. flag, a fitting symbol for a new era.

When people ask, as they eventually will, who stood up for human rights, let your name be among those who opposed an unjust and unnecessary war.

For information on anti-war protests in San Francisco and around the world, see www.unitedforpeace.org.

©2003 San Francisco Chronicle

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