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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: darsie@eecs.ucdavis.edu (Richard Darsie)
- Subject: SANE: Conventional Weapons
- Message-ID: <1992Aug26.190312.26674@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: University of California, Davis
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- Date: Wed, 26 Aug 1992 19:03:12 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 59
-
- "Conventional" Wisdom on Conventional Weapons
- by Caleb Rossiter and Anne Detrick
-
- The Gulf War brought several things into sharp focus. One of the most
- important was the dangers of conventional weapons: hundreds of
- thousands of Iraqi dead and the devastation of Kuwait and Iraq could not
- be ignored. As a result, the dangers of conventional weapons now seem
- higher on the list of people's immediate concerns than nuclear weapons.
- This is not to say that people are cavalier about Hussein's attempts
- to produce the bomb. But the grim cadavers of Iraqi soldiers, gunned
- down from above as they retreated across the desert, swept into the
- consciousness of our country and brought home this reality: Conventional
- weapons kill as easily as any other.
- Conventional weapons lack the drama of nuclear obliteration, and
- talk about the differences between F-15D's and F-15E's seems pallid
- and unexciting next to discourse about The Bomb. Yet here's the point:
- Conventional arms have been flowing into developing countries at a
- dizzying pace since the end of World War II, and the result is 40 million
- dead in some 125 wars and conflicts since 1945.
- The developing world needs all the money it can get -- for internal
- investment and, more simply, for bread and butter. The U.S. acknowledges
- this by giving developing countries $10 billion annually in foreign
- aid. This figure is, unfortunately, more than offset by the billions
- going out to pay for weapons *purchased from* the U.S.
- Even if the U.S. (and other developing countries) actually just
- *gave away* arms to the developing world, thank-you's would hardly be
- in order. Environmentally, the world's armed forces are the single
- largest polluter on earth, and are responsible for more than two-thirds
- of CFC-113 in the ozone layer. The last thing developing countries need,
- having already seen their lands ravaged and forests depleted by
- slash-and-burn World Bank policies, is yet more U.S.-sponsored
- environmental damage.
- For those people left standing once the dust from military conflicts
- settles, the human toll remains devastating. Today, two billion people
- (half of those in developing countries) live in military-backed
- dictatorships. Another one billion live in wannabe-dictatorships in
- countries whose elected officials have little power to bring their
- militaries under control. Law and order takes on a new meaning, and
- basic rights are stripped from the people. Attempts to redress the system
- are often met with fierce resistance by militaries, less public than but
- just as severe as the military reaction at Tiananmen. From simple
- corruption to brutal torture and killings, military forces are the source
- of much of the human rights abuses going on in developing countries, as
- our own State Department has, at times, been forced to admit.
- Nuclear *and* conventional weapons have always been a bugaboo.
- But the numbers of hot wars during and after the Cold War, the numbers
- of dead and dying, the numbers of conventional weapons in the developing
- world: all these have convinced us that conventional weapons exact a
- daily toll in the developing world that must be addressed *now*. If they
- aren't, the time may come when someone is forced to say, "Will the last
- one out of the developing world please turn out the lights?"
-
- The Project on Demilitarization and Democracy is an organization founded
- to promote demilitarization in the developing world. For more information
- write to: PPD, 1601 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC
- 20009.
-
- >From the SANE/FREEZE Newsletter.
-
-