When there is as much terror afoot as there has been
since September 11th, it is hard to see how love might prevail.
This is how it is with us human beings when we are afraid: We contract.
Our breathing becomes shallow and constricted.Concerns for our immediate
survival push everything else out of the picture.In the throes of
terror, our thinking is narrowed and short-term. The world is divided
into two kinds of people, those who are threats and those who can
help us defend against the threat. Everyone else is seen as irrelevant,
and might as well not exist. All our attention is focused on protecting
ourselves from the immediate danger. Our thoughts become dominated
by “fight or flight,” triggering the reptilian part of our brain
to take over. If we can’t successfully flee, then we must fight.
It’s kill or be killed. Nothing else matters.
That’s the mindset of terror. That’s what fear does to us.It’s
a stateof consciousness that’s been widespread in our nation since
the horrifying and tragic attacks of September 11th.
In Time magazine’s special issue about the terrorist attacks,
the concluding essay was titled, “The Case for Rage and Retribution.”The
author of this piece, frequent Time contributor Lance Morrow,
called for “hatred,” and “a policy of focused brutality.”He was
far from alone in speaking of the virtues of rage and retaliation.On
Fox News Channel, Bill O’Reilly said “the U.S. should bomb
the Afghan infrastructure to rubble — the airport, the power plants,
their water facilities and the roads.”As far as the civilian population
of Afghanistan, O’Reilly said, “If they don’t rise up against this
criminal government, they starve, period.”Calling for the U.S. to
massively attack not only Afghanistan, but also Iraq and Libya,
he added, “Let them eat sand.” Meanwhile, the former executive editor
of the New York Times, A. M. Rosenthal, said we should issue
ultimatums to six nations, including Iran, Syria and the Sudan,
and then, if they don’t comply to our satisfaction within 72 hours,
follow up with massive bombing. New York Post columnist Steve
Dunleavy was also something besides coolheaded, saying “As for cities
or countries that host these worms, bomb them into basketball courts.”The
editor of National Review, writing in the Washington Post,
concurred, adding, “If we flatten part of Damascus or Tehran or
whatever it takes, that is part of the solution.”
With the sounds of such war drums reverberating through the American
psyche, polls show that 80% support not only the use of ground troops
in Afghanistan, but also military action against other countries
in the Middle East.
I am no stranger to the desire for revenge. Like President George
W. Bush, and most likely like you, I have felt it surge through
me in recent weeks.Contemplating what took place on September 11th,
are there any among us who have not, at least momentarily, felt
their blood boil with outrage, and with the demand that these mass
murderers and all those behind them pay with an eye for an eye?
But at such times, when our hearts are filled with outrage and
our eyes look everywhere for revenge, it is extraordinarily important
that we remember the awesome truth behind Gandhi’s prophetic statement:“An
eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind.”
This is the very truth that the Osama bin Ladens of the world would
want us to forget.They would like us to be so lost in hysteria that
we can’t think straight.They would like us to be so terrified, so
anxious, so belligerent, that we lose perspective and make rash
and destructive decisions.If we stay within the bubble of our fear,
then the bin Ladens of the world will have won.
Sometimes we need to take a very long, very slow, and very deep
breath, to restore our mental balance and ability to function with
clarity. There is a difference between enraged action and wise,
effective response.
Of course we should find the people and organizations responsible
for the attacks of September 11th, and the subsequent anthrax mailings,
and any other attempts that might yet be made to terrorize our nation.We
should find them, destroy their networks, and bring them to justice.By
no means should we tolerate or excuse their actions, much less allow
them to continue.These are people not the slightest bit interested
in giving peace a chance.The possibility that they might acquire
and use nuclear weapons is unfortunately all too real.If we fail
to track them down and uproot them, we may find ourselves in even
worse shoes than the European who wrote, after World War II, “We
who live beneath a sky still streaked with the smoke of crematoria
have paid a high price to find out that evil is really evil.”
But as we work to uproot the terrorists and their networks, we
must be careful to do so without escalating the cycle of violence,
and without causing the deaths of even more innocent people, for
this would only deepen the anger and rage already extant in our
world. Burning down the haystack is not the best way to find the
needle, especially when, in the effort, you might set the barn,
and the whole world, on fire. We must bring those responsible to
justice without jeopardizing our ability to create a world where
terrorism won’t take root, a world where criminal psychopaths find
no followers, a world where hatred has no lure.
This is no small task, but it is the task before us.Our leaders
are wise in working to form a multinational coalition to fight terrorism.But
this should not be merely a coalition of countries who allow the
U.S. military the use of their airspace, or the use of their airports,
or provide other military support.No coalition to defeat terrorism
can be ultimately successful unless it is also a coalition of countries
joining together to build a peaceful, just and prosperous world.Our
coalition to defeat terrorism will do only half of its job if it
merely seeks to defeat those who are responsible for the attacks
of September 11th.It must also work to build a world of international
cooperation, a world where no part of the greater human family is
left out or marginalized.
Approximately 6,000 people perished in the September 11th attacks.Our
nation reels from that despicable brutality.But those who died from
the attacks on that tragic day were not alone.On September 11th,
35,000 children worldwide died of hunger.A similar number of children
died on September 12th,and again on the 13th, and on every single
day since then.Meanwhile, we in the U.S. feed 80% of our grain harvest
to livestock so that a people whose cholesterol levels are too high
can have cheap meat.
To advance human security and control terrorism, we must not only
find the brutality of the September 11th attacks to be totally intolerable.We
must also find intolerable that one billion people worldwide struggle
to survive on $1 a day, that more than one billion people lack access
to safe drinking water, and that 3 billion people have inadequate
access to sanitation.
The presence of such dire poverty is an insult to human dignity
and would be deplorable enough.But today, with worldwide telecommunications
making the rising inequality between a rich, powerful and imposing
West and the rest of the world visible to all, its continued existence
can only spur those who have no prospect of a better life to previously
unheard of levels of despair and rage.In a time when a handful of
desperate and suicidal people can devastate the most militarily
powerful nation in the history of humankind, any coalition dedicated
to defeating terrorism must also be a coalition dedicated to the
goal of bringing justice and prosperity to the poor and dispossessed.
If we are serious about stopping terrorism, then our goal must be
to reduce the level of pollution, fear, and poverty in the world.
If this is truly our goal, and if we devote our actions and resources
to its accomplishment, the support for the bin Ladens of the world
will inexorably evaporate.People who would have otherwise sided
with the terrorists will be clamoring to tell us who and where they
are, and to help us find and defeat them.
This goal is too costly, many say.But this is not true.The cost
of our initial military response will easily top $100 billion (on
top of our already enormous annual defense budget of $342 billion).What
could we accomplish if we spent even a small fraction of that much
on programs to alleviate human suffering?
In 1998, the United Nations Development Program estimated that
it would cost an additional $9 billion (above current expenditures)
to provide clean water and sanitation for everyone on earth. It
would cost an additional $12 billion, they said, to cover reproductive
health services for all women worldwide.Another $13 billion would
be enough not only to give every person on Earth enough food to
eat but also basic health care.An additional $6 billion could provide
basic education for all.
These are large numbers, but combined they add up to $40 billion
— only one fifth as much as the $200 billion the U.S. government
agreed in October 2001 to pay Lockheed to build new F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter (JSF) jets.
Our government leaders have not hesitated to build an international
coalition and to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to defeat
those who launched the attacks of September 11th.What if we were
equally as dedicated to building an international coalition to eradicate
hunger, to provide clean water, to defeat infectious disease, to
provide adequate jobs, to combat illiteracy, and to end homelessness?What
if we understood that, today, there is no such thing as national
security as long as the basic human needs of large portions of humanity
are not met?In today’s world made transparent by television and
other telecommunications, any country that attains prosperity unshared
by its fellow nations can only breed resentment and hatred.
Most immediately, we must address what is rapidly becoming an overwhelming
humanitarian problem in Afghanistan.This nation has endured decades
of conflict. As a result, there are millions of people there who,
even before our bombing campaign began, were dependent on food aid.Now,
they face the prospect of imminent starvation.According to United
Nations experts, this is the most severe humanitarian emergency
ever.
The U.S. government has made much of C-17 cargo planes dropping
20,000 food packets a day to Afghan civilians.But according to world
hunger relief organizations active in Afghanistan such as Oxfam,
the program has been a dismal failure.The president of one of the
world’s most prestigious aid organizations, Doctors Without Borders,
speaking from Islamabad, deplored the program as so much “PR.”The
airdrops, he said, are a huge waste of money.The packages, containing
enough to feed an adult for a day, land all over the place, with
no guarantee that they will be retrieved. Many land in the midst
of landmines.And the amount being dropped is insignificant is a
country where seven or eight million people are in danger of starvation.
The money ($25 million according to U.S. government sources) would
be far better spent provisioning the regular aid convoys already
in action.
There is a terrible irony here.The United States has long been
a major supplier of food aid to Afghanistan.But now it is U.S. bombing
that is destroying roads and making it impossible for substantial
food aid to be delivered.If we were to make a dramatic effort, now,
to get meaningful amounts of emergency relief to these people, it
would make a great difference to their survival.If we don’t, it
will only cement in the minds of the world’s masses the image of
the U.S. as indifferent to the needs of the poor.
While the vast majority of Americans care deeply about the welfare
of their fellow human beings, the foreign policies of the U.S. government
have for some time now been seen by much of the rest of the world
as arrogant and selfish.And it is a sad fact that we have far too
often given them cause for such a view.It is hard to be proud of
our country for standing nearly alone among nations in refusing
to sign the treaty banning land mines; for being one of only four
nations (the others are Libya, Syria and Iraq) who refuse to comply
with a global treaty to eliminate chemical weapons; and for almost
single-handedly blocking U.N. efforts to reduce the use of children
as soldiers, even when two million children have been killed in
armed conflicts in the past decade.
Our nation has also done many wonderful and generous things. We
have at times behaved with honor among nations, and been a beacon
of freedom. But the world has seen our other side, too.It’s not
easy to feel grateful to the United States for being one of only
two nations (the other is Somalia) to refuse to ratify the U.N.
Convention on the Rights of the Child, and one of only three nations
(the others are Libya and Iraq) to oppose the U.N. being able to
investigate and prosecute genocide, crimes against humanity, and
war crimes such as rape and sexual slavery.
There is an enormous disconnect taking place between the will of
the American people and the foreign policy of our government. The
American people are for the most part honest, decent, and compassionate.
But few U.S. citizens are aware of how much U.S. foreign policies
have betrayed our caring and our humanity.How many Americans know
that we are far and away the world’s leading arms merchant?Or that,
in the last fifteen years, the U.S. share of the worlds arms trade
has increased from 16% to more than 70%? How many Americans know
that even before September 11th we were spending 18 times more money
on the military than the combined spending of all of the nations
identified by the U.S. government as potential enemies (Cuba, Iran,
Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and Syria)?
President Bush began his term by withdrawing from almost
every multilateral agreement and international treaty that came
up, except those that in the short term served to enhance American
profits and power.From the outset, his administration angered and
alienated the world community by disengaging from treaties attempting
to deal with global warming, nuclear disarmament, population control,
trafficking in small arms, and chemical and biological weapons,
to name just a few.
This is not a matter of partisanship.Both
Republican and Democrat administrations have come all too often
to define American self-interest almost without regard for the concerns
of other nations. It’s sad but true that to assure American access
to oil and other natural resources around the world, and to provide
a constant pool of cheap labor, the U.S. government has frequently
supported undemocratic and repressive regimes that have been hated
by their own populations. We have massively supported governments
that have engaged in widespread terrorism against their own people.Instead
of supporting human rights and self determination, we’ve sold hundreds
of billions of dollars of weapons to a string of tyrannical governments
as long as doing so provided us with cheap oil and access to their
markets.
But now, suddenly, we are realizing that
we desperately need the help of the world.There are signs of hope.
As a London newspaper recently commented, “Colin Powell, in a stunning
and rare display of humility for an American official, now acknowledges
that in order to fight terrorism effectively the U.S. is going to
have to be more sensitive to the concerns of other cultures.”
Might the United States remember in all of
this that our national purpose is greater than the construction
of a McWorld, and that we have a deep and paramount interdependence
with the wellbeing of all of the world’s peoples?As the president
of the State of the World Forum, Jim Garrison, puts it:“If out of
the present crisis the United Statesemerges more connected with
the rest of the world, more willing to live cooperatively within
coalitions than outside them, then light will have truly come from
out of the darkness and redemption out of the recesses of hatred
and war.In one of the deepest paradoxes of contemporary history,
the present crisis might compel America to… (realize) no country
is an island unique unto itself…and the only solution to hate is
to stop the underlying causes that produce it, working within the
community of nations to achieve goals that benefit the poor as well
as the rich, the south as well as the north, the developing nations
as well as those more advanced.Achieving this, America will fulfill
the deepest yearning of one of its founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin,
who wrote that he believed the real destiny of America would not
be about power; it would be about light.”
Will the day come when the United States
fulfills our true national purpose and achieves lasting national
security?
We’ll know we’ve begun when we break our
addiction to oil, and develop an economy based instead on hydrogen,
wind power, solar power, and other non-polluting, safe and renewable
sources of energy.
We’ll know we’ve begun to create true national
security when we define the greatness of our civilization not by
our military capabilities, not by our ability to inflict massive
damage and punishment, but by our ability to bring out the best
in ourselves and others, and by the quality of life we leave our
children.
We’ll know we’ve begun when we stop thinking
there is such a thing as “smart” bombs or “sophisticated” weapons.“Sophisticated”
means having the ability to use our intelligence, empathy and imagination
to solve serious and complex problems.“Smart” means realizing that
when these bombs kill civilians they leave them just as dead, their
families just as heartbroken and enraged, the spiritual fabric of
the world just as shredded, and the human heart just as violated.
We’ll know we’ve begun to defeat terrorism
when we see the connection between the $5 trillion the U.S. has
spent on nuclear weapons since World War II and the homeless children
shivering in the cold, the battered women who have no shelters,
and the families broken by grinding poverty; when we see the connection
between the $1 billion a day we’ve spent every day for decades on
the military and the hungry people who have no hope, the children
dying from preventable diseases, and the families who sell their
daughters into sexual slavery because they see no other way to survive.We’ll
know we’ve begun to create a world where terrorism can’t find a
foothold when we commit ourselves and our resources to the building
of a peaceful world with as much dedication as we’ve committed ourselves
to war.
We’ll know we’re on the right track when
we begin producing and eating food that is healthy for our bodies
and healthy for the Earth, and when we no longer find acceptable
the existence of human hunger anywhere on the planet.
We’ll know we’re upholding the human spirit
when the power we seek is the ability to nurture and befriend, rather
than to conquer and subjugate; and when the success we pursue is
one in which all beings share because it is founded on reverence
for life.
We’ll know we’ve begun to create a safer
and kinder world when we design our public policies and personal
lifestyles not just for individual advantage, but for the greater
good of the whole Earth community. Then we will ask God to please
hear the prayers of the people in prison, of the homeless, of the
refugees walking on roads because a war has forced them from their
homes.We will ask God to hear the prayers of those who hunger and
are not fed, and those who are despised by their fellow humans because
they are somehow different.We will ask God to feel the exhaustion
of those living too close to the edge of their physical and spiritual
resources.Then our religious and spiritual lives will make us more
human, more humble, and more able to live with respect for all beings.
In times of fear, most people step back and
wait to see what others are going to do and what’s going to happen.Some
people, though, see the situation as an opportunity to step forward
and take a stand.The more of us who in our hearts and lives take
a stand for the creation of a thriving, just and sustainable way
of life for all, the less likely it is that the bin Ladens of the
world will accomplish their purposes, and the greater the chance
that it will be love and not fear that will prevail. Then those
who perished in the September 11th attacks will not have died in
vain, but will live on in the flourishing of human hope and well-being.
The bitter historical events that came to
fruition on September 11th did not come from nowhere, but developed
over decades and even centuries.Likewise the peace and understanding
that we seek, and which alone will make us truly safe, need to be
nurtured and cultivated over generations of time.
It is to the planting, nurturing and harvesting
of fruits worthy of all that is good and beautiful in us that we
must now, as never before, dedicate our lives.Because now, as never
before, the world needs our wisdom, our cooperation, and our understanding
that all humanity is connected.
(John Robbins is the author of many best-sellers,
including Diet For A New America, and his recently released The
Food Revolution. He is the founder of EarthSave International, and
can be contacted through the website foodrevolution.org)