From: Bill Howard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: WASHINGTON GOES IT ALONE

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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The following article appears in the Jan. 15, 2002, issue of the emailed
Mid-Hudson (N.Y.) Activist Newsletter, based on items reported in the
publication throughout the last year.

WASHINGTON GOES IT ALONE

By Jack A. Smith

Over the decades, the U.S. government has  repeatedly ignored the
desires of the great majority of the worlds countries in matters
concerning international well-being. In the United Nations, the U.S.
frequently stands as a minority of one or two in important progressive
General Assembly votes, and in the Security Council it has used its veto
more than all other countries combined.   The year just passed, however,
was extraordinary even for the United States in terms of scorning the
international communitys ever-so-modest efforts to regulate world
conditions to at least abstractly benefit humankind.  Following are some
of the key treaties, conventions and preferences backed by most of the
world that Washington rejected in 2001, working backward from December,
compiled from a variety of sources.

On Dec. 13, the U.S. government unilaterally withdrew from the
universally supported Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty signed in 1972
with the USSR and continued with Russia.  The far-right always despised
the treaty but never had the power to overturn it until last year when
George W. Bush assumed office.  As with virtually every right-wing
initiative taken since Sept. 11, the Bush administration now claims that
destroying the treaty was required by the war on terrorism.  Speaking
two days before  breaking the historic agreement, President Bush
declared that The attacks on our nation made even more clear that we
need to build limited and effective defenses against a missile attack
.... We must protect Americans and our friends against all forms of
terror, including the terror that could arrive on a missile.  The only
missiles in the hands of Al Qaeda, of course, were Stingers (capable of
hitting low-flying planes overhead, not far distant targets) provided by
the CIA to the Afghanistan warlords in the 1980s.

The Senate fortified its opposition to the 1998 International Criminal
Court Treaty in a 78-21 vote Dec. 7 which amended the military
appropriations bill with a proviso that would prevent U.S. soldiers from
ever being subject to the proposed International Criminal Courts
jurisdiction (the ICC is not to be confused with the existing
International Court of Justice). Two weeks later, however, the provision
was dropped as a result of House-Senate negotiations to produce a final
version of the appropriations bill, but the U.S. government still
opposes the treaty.  The ICC compact -- supported by 120 countries --
would establish a mechanism for prosecuting persons charged with war
crimes and crimes against humanity.  It is expected to go into effect
later this year after it is ratified by the 60th country. The amendment
was designed by right-wing Sen. Jesse Helmes.   Neither the Bush
administration nor the Senate vote showed any inclination to ratify a
treaty that eventually might bring charges against the U.S. government
and military for war crimes.  In recent years the U.S. indicated it
would accept the ICC principle if it could only receive cases submitted
to it by the UN Security Council.  As a permanent member of the council,
of course, Washington could then veto any recommendation to the court.

On Nov. 27, U.S. Undersecretary of State John Bolton declared in Geneva
at a conference convened to strengthen the Biological and Toxic Weapons
Convention that the protocol is dead.  On July 25, the conventions
54-member special committee recommended procedures for genuinely
enforcing the convention, which was signed by 140 member states in
1972.  The U.S. effectively scuttled the protocol on the grounds that it
would impede Washingtons legitimate activities (i.e., research and
development of ever more potent weaponry) and facilitate industrial
espionage (i.e., U.S. openness about its biological and toxic weapons
capability might result in having some of its secrets copied). At the
November meeting, called to reconsider the issue, Bolton introduced a
Bush administration proposal that would keep enforcement non-binding and
eliminated on-site investigations.  This would insure that no
enforcement took place. Several NGOs were furious at the U.S. stance.
Sabotage, was the characterization of the Federation of American
Scientists.  In essence, the U.S. wants to rid the world of all
biological and toxic weapons -- but not at the expense of its own huge
supply.

Every year since 1992, the overwhelming majority of UN members in the
General Assembly have voted to demand that the U.S. government end its
embargo of Cuba.  They did the same thing in October, by a vote of
167-3.  The perennial U.S. and Israeli no votes were joined this year,
inexplicably, by that of the Marshall Islands. The embargo was initiated
by the Eisenhower administration in 1960.  The U.S. strengthened the
sanctions in 1992 in the midst of Cubas economic crisis, hoping to
strangle its small neighbor for good.  The White House tightened the
embargo again in 1996 in an attempt to prevent this island of only 12
million people from recovering.  Why does Uncle Sam continue to subvert
Cuba despite the disapproval of virtually the entire world?  Look at it
this way:  the population of Latin America and the Caribbean is heading
toward 500 million -- and well over 40% of these people are living in
desperate poverty.  The U.S. fears the example of a successful and
prosperous Cuba, with its socialist system and revolutionary origins,
located in close proximity to such grave poverty.  It is for related
reasons that the U.S. destroyed progressive or socialist movements and
governments in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Chile, Guatemala and Grenada, and
why it is now closely monitoring developments in Colombia and Venezuela.

In September, the United States and Israel walked out of the 163-nation
International Conference on Racism in Durban, South Africa, much to the
consternation of virtually the entire Third World.  The main expressed
reason was to circumnavigate anticipated criticism of Israel because of
its oppressive policies toward the Palestinians.  But the U.S.
government even more strongly sought to avoid an international
conference where many African and Asian countries, as well as Africans
of the diaspora, were prepared to demand a formal apology for centuries
of colonialism and slavery.  Many of the countries also raised the
question of reparations for the historic subjugation and
underdevelopment of their societies by the imperialist nations. Several
countries, led  by host  South Africa and Finland, tried to prevent the
walkout  by obtaining a considerably modified substitute version of the
Palestinian criticism, but the U.S. and Israel rejected it, falsely
implying that the conference majority was composed of anti-Semites and
racists. The Congressional Black Caucus condemned the walkout, insisting
that slavery and reparations must be discussed, but it was ignored as
usual.  The positive side of Durban was the unity of the African and
Asian delegations in particular (shades of Bandung in 1955, which gave
rise to the movement of the nonaligned and other struggles against
imperialism) and the exposure of Bush administration arrogance and
racism for staging the walkout.

In August, President Bush renounced President Clintons pledge to
eventually comply with the Land Mind Treaty.  The treaty was approved
in December 1997 by a vote of 122-9.  The U.S. opposed the accord in
part because Commander-in-Chief Clinton did not wish to have a
confrontation with the military brass, which is holding on to land mines
like a dog with a favorite bone.  Since then, some 20 additional
countries have signed the treaty, and the Clinton administration said
the U.S. would take steps to outlaw land mines in the year 2006, under a
new administration. The treaty bans the use, stockpiling, trade and
production of antipersonnel landmines which maim and kill some 20,000
people each year, almost entirely civilian workers, peasants and
children.  The mines also  serve to prevent cultivation of large tracts
of farmland for fear of explosions.  It has been estimated that up to
100 million land mines have been deployed in some 60 countries, largely
in the developing world, all waiting to be triggered by an unfortunate
passerby.  Last month, reflecting the Bush administrations views but
restating a long-standing reluctance to part with this people-maiming
weapon,  the Pentagon recommended that the White House abandon all
efforts to ever join the treaty;  reject proposals to rid the world of
dumb mines by 2003;  refuse to conduct research into developing
alternatives to land mines; and continue deploying mines wherever
needed.  

In July, the Bush administration saw to it that the United States was
the only nation to oppose the United Nations Agreement to Curb the
International Flow of Illicit Small Arms.  The White House did so for
the same reason Attorney General John Ashcroft later ordered a search of
purchase receipts for box cutters -- but not for easily obtained
handguns -- allegedly bought in the U.S. by alleged terrorists from the
Mideast:  A desire not to offend the gun lobby.

In May, reflecting upon White House hypocrisy in matters pertaining to
human rights and the United Nations, the UN Human Rights Commission
voted for the first time against electing  a U.S. representative to this
important group. The vote resulted from an informal coalition led by
some close U.S. allies in Europe and joined by Third World countries on
the 54-nation Economic and Social Council, the groups parent body.
Congress subsequently voted to withhold $244 million in dues to
punish  the United Nations until the U.S. is reinstalled.

In April, the European Union introduced a motion before the UN Human
Rights Commission meeting in Geneva calling for a worldwide moratorium
on legal executions.  The measure passed 27-18, with the U.S.
constituting the key no vote.

In March, President Bush in effect pulverized the 1997 Kyoto Protocol to
reduce greenhouse gases in the atmosphere which generate global
warming.  He did so in opposition to the huge majority of world
countries which signed the accords, and to the views of 75% of the
American people who considered global warming a serious problem.  The
U.S. signed the moderate, first-step treaty four years ago on the basis
of mounting scientific evidence that global warming, left unchecked,
would result in a worldwide catastrophe in several decades.  The Kyoto
Protocol committed its signatories  to the initial goal of reducing
greenhouse gas emissions over the following decade to the levels of
1990. Since the United States releases 25% of the gases, Bushs decision
to withdraw from the treaty means the objective cannot be met.  The U.S.
action was criticized by virtually the entire world, including all the
industrialized countries.  Bush charged the accord was fatally flawed
because performance standards for poorer, developing countries (which
produce far less greenhouse gas) were lower than those of the developed
world.  Nine months later, when the protocol countries met to weaken the
accord in order to induce the U.S. to reconsider its position, the Bush
administration continued to shun the treaty.

Aside from the "Partnership of Nations" coalition Washington constructed
to secure international support for the Bush administrations
expansionist War on Terrorism, the U.S. government is relying more on
unilateral action these days and less on cooperating with other nations,
even close allies, than at any time since the beginning of World War 2.
Economic, military, foreign, environmental and social policies issue
from Washington without regard for the views of other nations or the
danger they represent to the rest of the world.  The sole criterion
appears to be whether or not a policy advances U.S. economic and
military interests and benefits the gargantuan corporations that rake in
the profits from such maneuvers.

The more the hubris-infected U.S. exercises its role as singular
superpower and undisputed military ruler of an earth-spanning domain,
the more precariously positioned become all other nations and peoples.
Unless Washington can be deflected from its present imperial course, its
governance of the world constitutes a harbinger of disaster.


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