Richard Falk
THE CHARLES GOYETTE SHOW....PUTTING BUSH ON TRAIL
TURN ON YOUR SPEAKERS...
10/20/05 THE CHARLES GOYETTE SHOW....PUTTING BUSH ON
TRAIL
Richard Falk guest....
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-20-Charles-02.mp3
August 24, 2002
Bush's War Against Iraq Would Violate Constitution
No War Against Iraq
by Richard Falk and David Krieger
http://www.counterpunch.org/krieger0824.html
The Bush administration's apparent resolve to wage war
against Iraq, tempered for the moment by conservative
critics, violates the spirit and letter of the US
Constitution, as well as disregards the prohibitions on
the use of force that are set forth in the UN Charter
and accepted as binding rules of international law.
Article 2(4) of the UN Charter states: "All Members
shall refrain in their international relations from the
threat or use of force against the territorial integrity
or political independence of any state, or in any other
manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United
Nations."
Nothing in Iraq's current behavior would justify a
preemptive attack against Iraq based upon self-defense
as set forth in Article 51 of the Charter. Even Henry
Kissinger has stated, "The notion of justified
pre-emption runs counter to modern international law,
which sanctions the use of force in self-defense only
against actual not potential threats."
The proposed war would also have dangerous,
destabilizing and unpredictable consequences for the
region and the world, and would likely bring turmoil to
the world oil and financial markets. While certainly not
endorsing the current repressive governments in Egypt
and Saudi Arabia, a war against Iraq could likely
produce militantly anti-American governments in these
countries that would intensify the existing dangers of
global terrorism.
We oppose on principle and for reasons of prudence, the
acquisition of weapons of mass destruction, especially
nuclear weapons, by any country, including, of course,
Iraq. Our position is one of support for the
Non-Proliferation Treaty as a temporary expedient, while
a good faith effort is being made to achieve the overall
abolition of nuclear weapons through a disarmament
treaty with reliable safeguards against cheating. At the
2000 Review Conference of the Non-Proliferation Treaty,
the nuclear weapons states made an "unequivocal
undertaking...to accomplish the total elimination of
their nuclear arsenals." Unfortunately, they have not
taken this or other promises for nuclear disarmament
seriously and, at present, no effort to achieve nuclear
disarmament is being made. US policy under the Bush
administration has been particularly egregious in
obstructing movement toward eliminating nuclear
arsenals.
At the same time, the acquisition of nuclear weaponry,
prohibited to Iraq by Security Council resolution, is
not itself an occasion for justifiable war. After all,
the United States, along with at least seven other
countries, possesses and continues to develop such
weaponry. There are good reasons for supposing that Iraq
can be deterred from ever using such weapons, or from
transferring them to al Qaeda or other terrorist groups.
The government of Iraq, notwithstanding its record of
brutality and regional aggression, has shown a
consistent willingness to back down in the face of
overwhelming force, as it did in the Gulf War and during
the subsequent decade. As well, Iraq has had a general
posture of antagonism toward political Islam, and as a
radical secular state is a target of al Qaeda rather
than an ally. The alleged prospect of a transfer of
weapons of mass destruction by Baghdad to those engaged
in global terrorism is either an embarrassing display of
ignorance about the politics of the Islamic world or it
represents an attempt to arouse the fears of Americans
to win support for war.
It is necessary to take seriously the possibility that
al Qaeda operatives could gain access to weaponry of
mass destruction, and would have little hesitation about
using it against American targets. Unlike Iraq, al Qaeda
cannot be deterred by threats of retaliatory force. Its
absence of a territorial base, visionary worldview, and
suicidal foot soldiers disclose a political disposition
that would seek by any means to inflict maximum harm.
The US government should be devoting far more attention
and resources to reducing these risks, especially with
respect to the rather loose control of nuclear materials
in Russia. Going to war against Iraq is likely to
accentuate, rather than reduce, these dire risks. It
would produce the one set of conditions in which Saddam
Hussein, faced with the certain death and the
destruction of his country, would have the greatest
incentive to strike back with any means at his disposal,
including the arming of al Qaeda.
The recent hearings of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee did not provide an occasion for public debate,
as the witnesses called accepted as legitimate the goal
of a regime change for Iraq, disagreeing only with
respect to the costs and feasibility of a war strategy.
No principled criticism of the strategy itself was
voiced, and thus the hearings are better understood as
building a consensus in favor of war than of exploring
doubts about the war option. As well, it is regrettable
that the hearings paid no attention to the widely
criticized punitive sanctions that have had such harsh
consequences on Iraqi civilians for more than a decade.
The hearings also failed even to raise the critical
Constitutional issue of authority to wage war, which
vests in the Congress and not with the President, and
requires a casus belli as defined by international law.
Granting the concerns of the US government that Saddam
Hussein possesses or may obtain weapons of mass
destruction, there are available alternatives to war
that are consistent with international law and are
strongly preferred by America's most trusted allies.
These include the resumption of weapons inspections
under United Nations auspices combined with multilateral
diplomacy and a continued reliance on non-nuclear
deterrence. This kind of approach has proved effective
over the years in addressing comparable concerns about
North Korea's pursuit of a nuclear weapons capability.
We are encouraged by the reported practical objections
to the proposed war by important US establishment
figures and most US allies. Personally, and on behalf of
the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, we urge the American
people to exercise their responsibilities as citizens to
join in raising their voices in opposition to waging war
against Iraq, not only because of its high risks of
failure and blowback, but on principled grounds that
this country upholds international law and respects the
constraints of its own Constitution, and is respectful
of world public opinion and of the United Nations
framework dedicated to the prevention of war.
Richard Falk, Professor Emeritus of International Law
and Policy at Princeton University, is Chair of the
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. David Krieger is President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. He can be contacted
at
dkrieger@napf.org
.
====================
Appraising the war against Afghanistan
Richard Falk teaches at the University of California,
Santa Barbara
rfalk@princeton.edu
http://www.theglobalsite.ac.uk/press/201falk.htm
posted August 1, 2002 (August 19, 2002 issue)
The Rush to War
Richard Falk
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20020819/falk
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/index.cgi?2005-10-20-Charles
Thursday, October 20, 2005
6:00 am-6:30 am
JOE STORK
storkj@hrw.org
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/10/16/iraq11883.htm
Saddam's Trial
6:30 am-7:00 am
General Odom Speaks out against Bush Administration.
7:00 am-7:30 am Jane Hamsher
http://www.firedoglake.com Bush Watchdog
7:30 am-8:00 am
RICHARD FALK,
rfalk@princ
Saddam's Trial
Guest: Richard Falk, Jane Hamsher, General Odom, Joe
Stork
Subject: Saddam Trial, Bush Administration, C I A Leak,
Bush Administration Indictments
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 1 (10.66 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-20-Charles-01.mp3
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 2 (9.22 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-20-Charles-02.mp3
* Listen to the MP3 Audio - Segment 3 (9.25 MB)
http://www.charlesgoyette.com/archive/media/2005-10-20-Charles-03.mp3