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Five Reasons Why America Should Not Be at 
War  
 
9 October 2001
 
ALONG with hundreds of other Houstonians, I have been passing 
out fliers,
holding signs, attending rallies and speaking out against American 
intervention in the Middle East and South Asia. Now that the 
attacks have
begun, I will be joining millions of Americans in a nationwide call for
the Bush administration to recognize the peril of war in those 
regions and to
refrain from a wider commitment. While this is not a majority 
opinion --
yet -- it is one that needs to be heard and discussed at the outset 
of
this conflict.
 
A war against Afghanistan or other neighboring states poses great 
risks
and  may not achieve the ends that the United States has 
proclaimed, namely 
ending terrorist attacks against American, Israeli, European or 
other 
targets. It may alienate allies, create new enemies and prompt a 
larger 
cycle of violence. While all of us demand that those responsible for 
the
attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., be brought to justice 
and we all
want to effectively end terrorism, we believe, as Secretary of State 
Colin
Powell has argued, that the United States could accomplish these 
goals 
through working with other nations according to international laws 
and 
conventions.
 
More specifically, there are five reasons to be deeply concerned 
about 
American military intervention in this new conflict. 
 
·       First, this intervention will inevitably lead to untold numbers of
civilian deaths. This "war" is directed principally against a network 
of
terrorists, perhaps numbering between 10,000 and 20,000 and 
operating in
over 30 different countries. American and other troops will not be 
attacking military targets per se but will be trying to dislodge
terrorists from hundreds of locations, many in areas that are heavily 
populated. With
Cruise and Tomahawk missiles being used, there is no way that 
only 
terrorists will be surgically targeted. Much has been made lately 
about
the values and behavior of civilized societies, but it must be clear 
that 
civilized nations do not indiscriminately kill innocents and then call 
it
"collateral damage." How would we react, for instance, if the police 
tried
to apprehend a drug trafficker by bombing the neighborhood in 
which he 
lived and caused the deaths of scores of innocent people in that 
area? 
 
·       Next, this intervention will almost certainly destabilize the 
Middle East and South Asia, leading to a wider conflict and 
causing many
allied governments to come under siege from forces in their own 
lands. 
Already, radical Islamic elements have shown their opposition to an 
American role in this conflict in Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Leaders in 
Iran
and Uzbekistan have opposed or tried to temper U.S. intervention. 
In 
Pakistan, the government publicly announced that supporting the 
United 
States was the "lesser of evils" and has already had to quash 
street riots
in Islamabad. With the United States already suspect in the region 
because
of the continuing embargo against Iraq and support of Israel, this 
war
will only lead to more distrust and recrimination, and will likely 
provoke 
internal movements against any government perceived to be loyal 
to the 
United States. 
 
·       Third, we must recognize that this war will be fought 
disproportionately by working-class whites, African-Americans, 
Mexican-Americans and other minorities. As Martin Luther King Jr. 
pointed
out during the Vietnam era, the United States was taking young 
men from 
underprivileged areas "and sending them 8,000 miles away to 
guarantee 
liberties in Southeast Asia which they had not found in southwest 
Georgia
and East Harlem." In the same way, we have a racial and class 
divide in 
America today that will be exacerbated in wartime. The loyalty of 
poor 
whites, blacks and Chicanos cannot be questioned, but their 
patriotism 
cannot be exploited to make them more likely to fight and take 
casualties
in any future war. 
 
·       Then, we must be aware that a wide war will cause serious 
economic
problems at home. Even before Sept. 11, the government's budget 
surplus
had disappeared, and since then spending has increased greatly. 
With $40 
billion already committed to new defense and anti-terrorism 
measures and
larger amounts sure to come, $15 billion appropriated to bail out 
the 
airline industry, and the government's stated goal of using taxpayer 
money
to cover losses suffered by the insurance industry, government 
deficits
are sure to return and grow. Such conditions -- a stagnant, cold 
economy 
overheating with new spending and possibly a capital gains tax cut -
- will
create an economic storm, which surely will affect all of us. 
 
·       Finally, this war, as such conflicts historically do, will lead to
an attack on civil liberties and "suspect" groups at home. One 
need not 
expect another Red Scare or the internment of minority groups to 
be deeply
concerned about new proposals to give the government more 
authority to 
restrict immigration, tap phones, read e-mails or conduct 
surveillance. 
Under the umbrella of "anti-terrorism" all of us, young or old, male 
or 
female, black or white, conservative, moderate or liberal, will be at 
risk
to lose some of our liberty, have our freedom constricted, and have 
our 
actions examined and questioned more closely.
 
All of us were affected by the unspeakably horrible acts of Sept. 
11, and
no one wants to see terrorist attacks like that occur again.
Unfortunately, a heavy military response by the United States and 
its allies may provoke
more aggression and more terrorism. International law and global 
discussions offer less peril and may lead to the creation of a 
different
international system. We weep and remain shocked by the attacks 
in New
York and Washington, and our hearts go out to all those affected, 
but our grief
is not a cry for war.
 
Robert Buzzanco,  
Associate Professor of History, University of Houston. 
Published in the Houston Chronicle. 
 
  
Index page on Response to attacks in 
US  
 
 
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