I don't knock the issues being discussed. Plainly they are issues which concern US citizens.
But there is one issue which is simple. Uncluttered by questions of who did what when or who said what to whom and why.
The simple issue is this. Do we wish to live in a world where when one nation state is unhappy about what another nation state is doing it goes to war?
That is the arrangement which has been in place since nation states evolved.
Now when the US and the UK decided to invade Iraq it may well be that the risks were no greater than when such decisions were taken in the past. Even if Iraq had possessed WMD it does not seem very likely that armagdon would have ensued once they were used.
But that is a case where one of the antagonists is quite a small and disunited nation state.
If this is to continue to be the way disputes between nation states are resolved it is worth asking whether we want to carry on with it when both sides are made up of sizeable, united and powerful nation states.
It is no coincidence that in the history of wars between nation states the numbers involved and the destruction wrought increases as time has rolled on. It is because of the greater cohesiveness that modern societies can achieve and, ironically in view of the genesis of the US/UK Iraq conflict, because weapons have steadily become more long range and more destructive.
Already we are in a situation where existing arsenals are known to be sufficient to destroy all life on the planet. Indeed to do so several times over. And our ingenuity as regards creating WMD is not exhausted. Far from it. Expenditure on weaponry and upon personnel to use it in the US alone is many billions of dollars each and every year. Weapons just get bigger and better from day to day.
Can it seriously be doubted that the next major war will be a threat to each and every one of us?
So let us imagine that the answer to the question whether we wish to continue to resolve disputes between nations by war is that we do not. Well what is the alternative, if any?
Clearly something new is needed. War has been the method up to now.
But resolving disputes without recource to violence is a commonplace in other fields. Indeed it has been the norm in all developed countries for a long time. Resorting to duels held stubbornly on among the most touchy of us but by and large putting a dispute before an independant and fair minded arbiter and then abiding by his or her decision has been the way civilised people have behaved.
Can that method be used for disputes between nation states?
Not right now seems to be the answer. Because there is no tradition of doing so, no established arbiter and no particular reason to expect the states to respect the arbiter's decisions.
But nation states have nevertheless found ways to reach agreements and to resolve conflicts in some things. Which is why we have a whole bunch of treaties signed up to by nations states and some international courts - the one which arbitrates on international tarriffs and trade for example.
If the option of resolving conflicts between nation states by an arbitral process is to become a real option what we really need, as an intermediate step, is an institution which can facillitate the further development of arbitral processes. And it needs to command the respect of most, if not all, and be actively promoted by all leading players, that is by all the most powerful nation states.
Some sort of start down these lines has been made. In the creation of the UN and its continuance for long enough for people to get used to its existence and to start to come to terms with the role which it is developing.
Some are coming to terms with that role faster than others.
If, like me, you would answer the question, do we wish nation states to continue to resolve conflict by war, in the negative you will hope that more nation states support the UN and fewer ignore or undermine it.
But there is one issue which is simple. Uncluttered by questions of who did what when or who said what to whom and why.
The simple issue is this. Do we wish to live in a world where when one nation state is unhappy about what another nation state is doing it goes to war?
That is the arrangement which has been in place since nation states evolved.
Now when the US and the UK decided to invade Iraq it may well be that the risks were no greater than when such decisions were taken in the past. Even if Iraq had possessed WMD it does not seem very likely that armagdon would have ensued once they were used.
But that is a case where one of the antagonists is quite a small and disunited nation state.
If this is to continue to be the way disputes between nation states are resolved it is worth asking whether we want to carry on with it when both sides are made up of sizeable, united and powerful nation states.
It is no coincidence that in the history of wars between nation states the numbers involved and the destruction wrought increases as time has rolled on. It is because of the greater cohesiveness that modern societies can achieve and, ironically in view of the genesis of the US/UK Iraq conflict, because weapons have steadily become more long range and more destructive.
Already we are in a situation where existing arsenals are known to be sufficient to destroy all life on the planet. Indeed to do so several times over. And our ingenuity as regards creating WMD is not exhausted. Far from it. Expenditure on weaponry and upon personnel to use it in the US alone is many billions of dollars each and every year. Weapons just get bigger and better from day to day.
Can it seriously be doubted that the next major war will be a threat to each and every one of us?
So let us imagine that the answer to the question whether we wish to continue to resolve disputes between nations by war is that we do not. Well what is the alternative, if any?
Clearly something new is needed. War has been the method up to now.
But resolving disputes without recource to violence is a commonplace in other fields. Indeed it has been the norm in all developed countries for a long time. Resorting to duels held stubbornly on among the most touchy of us but by and large putting a dispute before an independant and fair minded arbiter and then abiding by his or her decision has been the way civilised people have behaved.
Can that method be used for disputes between nation states?
Not right now seems to be the answer. Because there is no tradition of doing so, no established arbiter and no particular reason to expect the states to respect the arbiter's decisions.
But nation states have nevertheless found ways to reach agreements and to resolve conflicts in some things. Which is why we have a whole bunch of treaties signed up to by nations states and some international courts - the one which arbitrates on international tarriffs and trade for example.
If the option of resolving conflicts between nation states by an arbitral process is to become a real option what we really need, as an intermediate step, is an institution which can facillitate the further development of arbitral processes. And it needs to command the respect of most, if not all, and be actively promoted by all leading players, that is by all the most powerful nation states.
Some sort of start down these lines has been made. In the creation of the UN and its continuance for long enough for people to get used to its existence and to start to come to terms with the role which it is developing.
Some are coming to terms with that role faster than others.
If, like me, you would answer the question, do we wish nation states to continue to resolve conflict by war, in the negative you will hope that more nation states support the UN and fewer ignore or undermine it.
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