Bring on the peacekeepers? By planning a global peacekeeping army, the Bush administration stays on course for a UN-dominated world.To judge from the media's reaction, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's June 26th speech calling for a U.S.-led world peacekeeping army represented an abrupt change of policy for Washington. Addressing a group of defense contractors, Rumsfeld declared: "I am interested in the idea of our leading, or contributing to in some way, a cadre of people in the world who would like to participate in peacekeeping or peacemaking Peacemaking See also Antimilitarism. Agrippa, Menenius Coriolanus’s witty friend; reasons with rioting mob. [Br. Lit.: Coriolanus] Antenor percipiently urges peace with Greeks. [Gk. Lit. .... I think it would be a good thing if your country was to provide some leadership for training of other countries' citizens who would like to participate in peacekeeping ... so that we have a ready cadre of people who are trained and equipped and organized and have communications [so] that they can work with each other." According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. an account of Rumsfeld's speech in the June 27th Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name). , the world peacekeeping army envisioned by the defense secretary "would operate outside the auspices of the United Nations and NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion. and would include thousands of U.S. Army troops trained for, and permanently assigned to, peacekeeping work." An account of Rumsfeld's speech in the Sydney Morning Herald predicts that the proposal "would likely be opposed by the U.S. Army, which has resisted efforts to draw its troops into peacekeeping, especially now that it is stretched thin with operations in Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo and Afghanistan." But it's important to recognize that the Army--like the rest of our military--is stretched thin precisely because it has been transformed into a world peacekeeping force peacekeeping force n → fuerza de pacificación peacekeeping force n → forces fpl qui assurent le maintien de la paix . Girding gird 1 v. gird·ed or girt , gird·ing, girds v.tr. 1. a. To encircle with a belt or band. b. To fasten or secure (clothing, for example) with a belt or band. the Globe At present, some 370,000 soldiers--roughly 70 percent of the Army--are garrisoned in 120 nations around the globe. More than 150,000 of that number have been deployed in open-ended occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. Roughly 20,000 U.S. troops are serving under UN/NATO command in the Balkans, and 37,000 more serve as part of a UN-commanded force in South Korea. Most of the headlines generated by Rumsfeld's proposal pointedly describe it as an alternative to UN-led peacekeeping missions. According to the Australian newspaper The Age, Tom Schieffer John Thomas "Tom" Schieffer (born October 4, 1947) is the current United States Ambassador to Japan, and served as U.S. Ambassador to Australia from 2001 to 2005. Schieffer is a friend and former business partner of President George W. Bush. , U.S. ambassador to Australia, maintains that "a United States-led international military force [is] needed because the United Nations [is] too focused on process to effectively counter the post-September 11 terrorist threat.... The ambassador insisted that the U.S. was not against the UN, but said it was outdated and too focused on process rather than outcomes to meet contemporary security challenges." Curiously, however, Rumsfeld himself told reporters on June 27th that the arrangement he suggested "wouldn't be U.S. peacekeeping...." This suggests that the U.S.-created world peacekeeping army--comprised of both American and nonAmerican troops--would be commanded by a multilateral organization of some sort. And right now the only serious candidates for that position are the UN and its NATO subsidiary. In addition to the envisioned world peacekeeping army, the Bush administration has proposed a "Proliferation Security Initiative The Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI) is an international effort led by the United States to interdict transfer of banned weapons and weapons technology. The PSI is primarily focused on combating proliferation of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons and materials. " (PSI) that would include a multinational military force devoted to rolling back proliferation of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons. "It envisions partnerships of states working in concert, employing their national capabilities to develop a broad range of legal, diplomatic, economic, military and other tools to interdict interdict (ĭn`tərdĭkt), ecclesiastical censure notably used in the Roman Catholic Church, especially in the Middle Ages. When a parish, state, or nation is placed under the interdict no public church ceremony may take place, only certain threatening shipments of [weapons of mass destruction Weapons that are capable of a high order of destruction and/or of being used in such a manner as to destroy large numbers of people. Weapons of mass destruction can be high explosives or nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, but exclude the means of transporting or ] ... and missile-related equipment and technologies," explained U.S. Under Secretary of State for Arms Control arms control Limitation of the development, testing, production, deployment, proliferation, or use of weapons through international agreements. Arms control did not arise in international diplomacy until the first Hague Convention (1899). and International Security John Bolton in congressional testimony on June 4th. PSI's military role, Bolton observed, could include pre-emptive pre·emp·tive or pre-emp·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of preemption. 2. Having or granted by the right of preemption. 3. a. warfare against governments accused of WMD WMD white muscle disease. proliferation. And the NATO alliance provides the most suitable mechanism for carrying out the Proliferation Security Initiative. President Bush announced the PSI in a May 31st speech in Krakow, Poland. "This is a time for all of us to unite in defense of liberty and to step up to the shared duties of free nations," proclaimed the president, who identified the UN's NATO affiliate as one of the ways in which those duties would be shared. "NATO must show resolve and foresight to act beyond Europe, and it has begun to do so," continued the president. "NATO has agreed to lead security forces in Afghanistan and to support our Polish allies in Iraq. A strong NATO alliance, with a broad vision of its role, will serve our security and the cause of peace." A UN Asset Most Americans aware of NATO believe that it was created as a defensive alliance against the Soviet threat. But from its beginnings, NATO was intended to serve as a political and military arm of the United Nations. In a March 1949 address in Washington, D.C., Secretary of State Dean Acheson explained: "[NATO] is designed to fit precisely into the framework of the United Nations and to assure practical measures for maintaining peace and security in harmony with the Charter.... The United States government and the governments with which we are associated in this treaty are convinced that it is an essential measure for strengthening the United Nations...." In his speech in Krakow, President Bush alluded to the fact that the recent U.S. invasion of Iraq was intended to strengthen the UN by putting teeth into the world body's disarmament decrees: "The dictator in Iraq pursued weapons of mass murder, cultivated ties to terror and defied the demands of the United Nations--so his regime has been ended." According to an analysis offered by the Council on Foreign Relations The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an influential and independent, nonpartisan foreign policy membership organization founded in 1921 and based at 58 East 68th Street (corner Park Avenue) in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C. , the proposed Proliferation Security Initiative will fortify for·ti·fy v. for·ti·fied, for·ti·fy·ing, for·ti·fies v.tr. To make strong, as: a. To strengthen and secure (a position) with fortifications. b. To reinforce by adding material. the UN's ability to carry out global disarmament. The PSI would begin with "like-minded" countries cooperating to enforce disarmament measures. At some point, predicts the CFR CFR See: Cost and Freight , the Bush administration will seek "to pass a Security Council resolution endorsing the U.S. initiative," thereby globalizing the policy--and setting the stage for future military confrontations with governments disinclined dis·in·clined adj. Unwilling or reluctant: They were usually disinclined to socialize. disinclined Adjective unwilling or reluctant to obey the UN's disarmament edicts. Following the Plan The system that the Bush administration is putting in place stems from the vision outlined in a classified 1962 report entitled A World Effectively Controlled by the United Nations, prepared for the State Department by MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Lincoln P. Bloomfield. (Professor Bloomfield's son, Lincoln P. Bloomfield Jr., presently serves in the State Department as an arms control specialist.) That report envisioned a global disarmament regime administered by the United Nations (or a successor organization) that "would explicitly forbid national possession of weapons of mass destruction, of the means of delivery, and of the trained personnel required to mount an attack." The world body would impose its will through an "international force, balanced appropriately between ground, sea, air, and space elements." It would also possess a small stock of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons. The global army would "monitor and enforce disarmament, settle disputes, and keep the peace. All other powers [would be] reserved to the nations," which would be "disarmed to police levels," and "a significant 'UN presence'" would exist in all countries to monitor and enforce the disarmament program." * The tone of recent headlines notwithstanding, there is nothing at all novel about the Bush administration's peacekeeping proposals. The administration, like its predecessors since 1945, remains committed to building a UN-dominated world. * To view this document online go to www.getusout .org/resources/bloomfield_7.htm. |
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