This is a prime example of the sort of absolute nuttiness and radical
imperialism that drives the Bush policy. Won't even international capital
recoil at this stuff. It promises instability and constant intervention and
a world race to develop WMD's. What other option is there to stop a power
hungry arrogant imperialist who seems to believe in his own
rhetorical madness. And at some stage the opponent will not be an Iraq which
probably has  few if any WMDs. In fact the US may be forced to plant them
after the war. I assume they would not allow unreliable people such as Blix
back in or at least not until they had planted stuff and then given
inspectors intelligence about where they were.


Cheers, Ken Hanly

PS. Notice that at every opportunity now the Iraq war is tied in with the
war against terrorism. US media dont seem to even remark on this. At least
CBC has pointed this out several times.

Thank God for the death of the UN

Its abject failure gave us only anarchy. The world needs order

Richard Perle
Friday March 21, 2003
The Guardian

Saddam Hussein's reign of terror is about to end. He will go quickly, but
not alone: in a parting irony, he will take the UN down with him. Well, not
the whole UN. The "good works" part will survive, the low-risk peacekeeping
bureaucracies will remain, the chatterbox on the Hudson will continue to
bleat. What will die is the fantasy of the UN as the foundation of a new
world order. As we sift the debris, it will be important to preserve, the
better to understand, the intellectual wreckage of the liberal conceit of
safety through international law administered by international institutions.
As free Iraqis document the quarter-century nightmare of Saddam's rule, let
us not forget who held that the moral authority of the international
community was enshrined in a plea for more time for inspectors, and who
marched against "regime change". In the spirit of postwar reconciliation
that diplomats are always eager to engender, we must not reconcile the
timid, blighted notion that world order requires us to recoil before rogue
states that terrorise their own citizens and menace ours.

A few days ago, Shirley Williams argued on television against a coalition of
the willing using force to liberate Iraq. Decent, thoughtful and
high-minded, she must surely have been moved into opposition by an argument
so convincing that it overpowered the obvious moral case for removing
Saddam's regime. For Lady Williams (and many others), the thumb on the scale
of judgment about this war is the idea that only the UN security council can
legitimise the use of force. It matters not if troops are used only to
enforce the UN's own demands. A willing coalition of liberal democracies
isn't good enough. If any institution or coalition other than the UN
security council uses force, even as a last resort, "anarchy", rather than
international law, would prevail, destroying any hope for world order.

This is a dangerously wrong idea that leads inexorably to handing great
moral and even existential politico-military decisions, to the likes of
Syria, Cameroon, Angola, Russia, China and France. When challenged with the
argument that if a policy is right with the approbation of the security
council, how can it be wrong just because communist China or Russia or
France or a gaggle of minor dictatorships withhold their assent, she fell
back on the primacy of "order" versus "anarchy".

But is the security council capable of ensuring order and saving us from
anarchy? History suggests not. The UN arose from the ashes of a war that the
League of Nations was unable to avert. It was simply not up to confronting
Italy in Abyssinia, much less - had it survived that debacle - to taking on
Nazi Germany.

In the heady aftermath of the allied victory, the hope that security could
be made collective was embodied in the UN security council - with abject
results. During the cold war the security council was hopelessly paralysed.
The Soviet empire was wrestled to the ground, and eastern Europe liberated,
not by the UN, but by the mother of all coalitions, Nato. Apart from minor
skirmishes and sporadic peacekeeping missions, the only case of the security
council acting during the cold war was its use of force to halt the invasion
of South Korea - and that was only possible because the Soviets were not in
the chamber to veto it. It was a mistake they did not make again.

Facing Milosevic's multiple aggressions, the UN could not stop the Balkan
wars or even protect its victims. It took a coalition of the willing to save
Bosnia from extinction. And when the war was over, peace was made in Dayton,
Ohio, not in the UN. The rescue of Muslims in Kosovo was not a UN action:
their cause never gained security council approval. The United Kingdom, not
the United Nations, saved the Falklands.

This new century now challenges the hopes for a new world order in new ways.
We will not defeat or even contain fanatical terror unless we can carry the
war to the territories from which it is launched. This will sometimes
require that we use force against states that harbour terrorists, as we did
in destroying the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

The most dangerous of these states are those that also possess weapons of
mass destruction. Iraq is one, but there are others. Whatever hope there is
that they can be persuaded to withdraw support or sanctuary from terrorists
rests on the certainty and effectiveness with which they are confronted. The
chronic failure of the security council to enforce its own resolutions is
unmistakable: it is simply not up to the task. We are left with coalitions
of the willing. Far from disparaging them as a threat to a new world order,
we should recognise that they are, by default, the best hope for that order,
and the true alternative to the anarchy of the abject failure of the UN.

Richard Perle is chairman of the defence policy board, an advisory panel to
the Pentagon.



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