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Ask
Auntie Pinko
July
17, 2003
Dear
Auntie Pinko,
As a member of Amnesty International, I am concerned
about human rights situations worldwide, and I support a U.N.
peacekeeping force in Liberia. It seems increasingly likely
that the United States will be part of this peacekeeping force
- which is something I would normally support. However, given
the example of Dubya's blunderous invasions/occupations of
Afghanistan and Iraq, I'm not sure I trust the Bush Administration's
ability to be part of such a multilateral force. Would you
support the United States being part of this peacekeeping
force in Liberia?
Matthew,
Boise, ID
Dear Matthew,
Auntie Pinko certainly shares your reservations about Mr.
Bush's administration with regards to its military ventures.
But I also share your concern about Liberia. I think the answer
to your question lies in the phrases you yourself used: "U.N.
peacekeeping force," "multilateral force," and "part of."
If the project is truly multilateral, truly under U.N. auspices,
and the United States is only one of several countries participating,
I am wholeheartedly in support of our involvement.
I should add one additional criterion: The project should
have firm commitments from all participants that they will
provide all of the resources needed to complete the project
as quickly and effectively as possible. Half-measures will
not serve.
The United Nations has seldom been able to realize the full
potential of its charter. This isn't surprising, given how
much its charter was dictated by a set of circumstances and
aspirations that relied heavily on the best in human nature
and human history, rather than the worst. And right out of
the gate, it became a political football in a game frequently
dominated by the least admirable qualities in human nature.
But in spite of its many flaws and failures, the United
Nations continues to try to realize its purpose, and I admire
and applaud the hope they represent. In the case of Liberia,
where neighboring countries support a peacekeeping mission,
and where cultural and historical ties offer an additional
leverage to American commitment, I would like to indulge a
little cautious optimism.
The entire issue of America committing military and other
resources to humanitarian interventions is a difficult one
for Auntie Pinko. I believe our position as the consumers
of a disproportionately vast share of the world's resources,
and holders of an equally disproportionate share of the world's
economic assets, carries with it the responsibility to put
those resources and assets at the service of our neighbors.
But I'm also conscious that the power represented by our resources
and assets can far too easily become bullying, manipulation,
and disempowerment of people who may wish to solve their own
problems their own way. And our power and resources are tremendously
vulnerable to misuse, abuse, and foolish squandering.
So what to do? Become the world's policeman? We are seeing
the perils of that most vividly. Ignore the suffering of our
neighbors? We are seeing the results of that, as well.
I think we have to accept certain realities that we may
not like, Matthew. First of all, we must be prepared to write
off a certain proportion of the resources we put into trying
to help our neighbors in the world. We cannot let the realities
of abuse, corruption, and folly deter us from continuing to
do what is right. (On the other hand, neither should we ignore
those realities and fail to learn from them.) Secondly, we
must concede that our vision of what a "peaceful, prosperous
democratic society" should look like will not always correspond
exactly with the visions of those we wish to help. Thirdly,
we should neither condition our help upon, nor expect, "gratitude,"
in the form of support for American economic and political
interests by those we help.
In the face of these realities, it seems to me, Matthew,
that the best way to fulfill the obligations our wealth places
upon us is to do so as part of a team. By providing financial
resources, military backbone, and the influence of our long-standing
cultural ties with Liberia to a United Nations effort, we
have a unique opportunity to get it right. Perhaps, in so
doing, we can recover something that has long been adrift
in an ocean of "enlightened self-interest." It's never
time to give up hope. Thanks for asking Auntie Pinko!
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