An
Unjust War
by
David Dieteman
As
the New Year grows old, George Bush and the sycophantic American
media remain intent on war with Iraq.
What
are men of good will to make of this possible war? To what principles
and persons may they turn for wise counsel?
One
source of wisdom is Pope John Paul II. Why the Pope?
First,
a practical reason: over the years of his pontificate, John Paul
has traveled the world in an effort to bring peace. He and his travels
are properly credited with aiding in the downfall of communism in
Eastern Europe (very fitting for a Pope from Poland).
Second,
where the Middle East is concerned, the Pope’s guidance is based
on personal experience. Recall that after a Turk, Mehmet Ali Agca,
shot the Pope in an assassination attempt, the Pope
visited his attacker in prison, and forgave him.
Contrast
the Pope’s conduct with the drumbeat for war emanating from Isengard
on the Potomac, the "White" House, namely, that Saddam
Hussein allegedly tried to assassinate the first president Bush.
Which
approach is more likely to bring peace, let alone lasting and genuine
peace, to the Middle East? (The question is rhetorical).
As
the Pope stated in a January 13 speech,
War
is…always a defeat for humanity. [F]aced with the constant degeneration
of the crisis in the Middle East…the solution will never be
imposed by recourse to terrorism or armed conflict, as if military
victories could be the solution. And what are we to say of the
threat of a war which could strike the people of Iraq, the land
of the Prophets, a people already sorely tried by more than
twelve years of embargo? War is never just another means that
one can choose to employ for settling differences between nations.
To
be clear: Pope John Paul is not supportive of American "foreign
policy."
Could
it be that American foreign "policy" consists of little
more than the notion that "might makes right," and is
thus not a "policy" at all? If it is a "policy,"
then playground bullies and street thugs have as much "policy."
And yet it is little more than the morally repugnant idea of war
as simply a "different" policy tool that the "White"
House has been trying to foist on the American citizenry.
The
Pope’s call for a truly just solution to the human problems of life
in the Middle East, of course, has been echoed in the Church. Cardinal
Walter Kasper of Germany, for example, told the National Catholic
Reporter that "there are neither ‘the motives nor the
proof to justify a war.’"
Contrast
the message of the Pope and Cardinal Kasper with the words of George
Bush. In Bush at War, Bush is quoted as saying that:
We
will export death and violence to the four corners of the earth
in defense of our great nation.
How
charming. Perhaps the famous inscription at the Statue of Liberty
– "Give me your poor," etc. – should be re-inscribed with
Mr. Bush’s words.
Why
do the White House and the Vatican hold different values? The answer
is found in Plato.
Near
the end of Plato’s dialogue The
Gorgias, Socrates tells a myth about the afterlife. The
point of the tale, perhaps surprising only to the American media,
government, and certain voters, is that it is better to do good
than evil.
In
the course of his tale, Socrates pays special attention to the fate
of politicians in the afterlife. As Socrates relates, when dead
politicians are judged, the judge often
finds
that there is no soundness in the soul whatever; it is a mass
of weals and scars imprinted on it by the various acts of perjury
and wrong-doing of which the man has been guilty; it is twisted
and warped by lies and vanity and quite out of the straight
because truth has had no part in its development. Power, luxury,
pride and debauchery have left it so full of disproportion and
ugliness that when he has inspected it Rhadamanthus [the judge]
dispatches it in ignominy straight to prison…
In
fact, Socrates continues, the majority of those incurable souls
who are hung up as examples, who suffer "an eternity of the
most severe and painful and terrible torment," are
drawn
from among dictators and kings and potentates and public men,
whose power gives them the opportunity of committing the greatest
and most deadly sins.
Lest
Americans be tempted to think that Socrates is not referring to
democratic politicians, like Mr. Bush, think again.
As
Walter Hamilton relates in his introduction to The Gorgias,
"Athens in 416 B.C. demanded the surrender of the small and
unoffending island of Melos, and on its refusal killed its men and
enslaved its other inhabitants."
News
flash, 2400 years overdue: the mere fact that a government is democratic
does not mean that a government is incapable of evil. The same goes
for politicians who are democratically elected.
What
to think about war with Iraq? The words of the Pope merit reflection:
"in the Middle East…the solution will never be imposed by recourse
to terrorism or armed conflict, as if military victories could be
the solution."
To
support a war on Iraq is to accept the notion that, with respect
to questions of peace and justice, the wisdom of those in the American
government is greater than the wisdom of the Pope.
To
be charitable, such a notion is highly unlikely at best. Pray for
Mr. Bush, and pray for peace.
January
20, 2003
Mr.
Dieteman [send him mail] is
an attorney in Erie, Pennsylvania, and a PhD candidate in philosophy
at The Catholic University of America.
©
2003 David Dieteman
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