Tag peace

International Day Of Peace

Today is the 30th anniversary of the International Day of Peace as established by the United Nations. Despite the United States’ involvement in three different military conflicts, this 2009 article by psychologist Steven Pinker points out that the current era has seen less armed conflict than almost any in human history.

As Pinker says, it’s the relatively broad success of the liberal values espoused in the post-WWII period that deserve the credit for reducing the scourge of war. The present revitalization of the extreme right in governments across Europe and here in the United States does not necessarily mean a reversal in that progress, but nationalism, economic upheaval, and resource scarcity are the traditional engines of war, and the conditions once again exist for the return of extensive violence.

It is likely that humans will never manage to rid themselves of the deeper motivations for killing one another, but it’s still worth the effort to try. The swinging pendulum of politics will continue in the wrong direction for some time to come, and as long as it does the threat will increase, but the outcome is not guaranteed.

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To End All Wars

woodrow wilson

Ninety-one years ago, in a railroad car in Compiegne, France, an armistice was signed between Germany and the Allied Powers that ended the conflict we now call the First World War. Several months later, as Woodrow Wilson sailed to France to preside over the negotiations to formalize the peace and impose reorganization and reparations on the demolished empires of Europe, he did so with the promise that the conflict would become “The War To End All Wars”. His grand designs would, of course, sow the seeds of the Second World War to come twenty years later, which, in turn, would result in thirty years of confrontation that threatened a Third World War big enough to destroy the entire planet.

armistice09

And so it comes to pass that today the Chancellor of Germany, herself a prisoner of that unwaged war, would become the first leader of Germany to stand side-by-side with the President of France at the Arc de Triomphe to commemorate the fallen soldiers of both nations in the very same week when she also stood in Berlin to mark the end of the Berlin Wall and the beginning of the reunification of her country.

Though Wilson was disasterously wrong in his schemes at Versailles, in the long term the notion of a Europe in peace, with self-determination for many of the people who for centuries had been subjects of empires, has largely come to pass. Even the upheavals in the Balkans, which were the precipitating events that led to World War I in the first place, have not seriously threatened the security of the continent. Today, the European Union, largely driven by the co-operation of the French and the Germans, covers the breadth and width of the continent. As the last remaining veterans of that War To End All Wars have finally been laid to rest, perhaps so has a war-driven Europe once and for all.

Meanwhile, on this day we have co-opted to celebrate our military might rather than to reflect on the horrors of war, the current President of the United States stands poised to send tens of thousands of troops to a war initiated by his predecessor eight years ago, with neither an achievable objective nor a justifiable rationale for continuing a struggle that has cost several thousand soldiers their lives, bankrupted the nation, and called into question whatever moral authority this country might once have had. How many wars will this nation fight until it realizes that in the long term the way of peace is the only right one?

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