1. THE EMPIRE BACKFIRES.
- Author
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Schell, Jonathan
- Subjects
- *
IRAQ War, 2003-2011 , *NUCLEAR weapons , *NUCLEAR nonproliferation , *WEAPONS of mass destruction , *SUBVERSIVE activities , *INTERNATIONAL crimes , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,FOREIGN relations of the United States, 2001-2009 - Abstract
To weigh the full cost [of the war in Iraq], one must look not just at the war itself but away from it, at the progress of the larger policy it served, at things that have been done elsewhere--some far from Iraq or deep in the past--and, perhaps above all, at things that have been left undone. While American troops were dying in Baghdad and Falluja and Samarra, Buhary Syed Abu Tahir, a Sri Lankan businessman, was busy making centrifuge parts in Malaysia and selling them to Libya and Iran and possibly other countries. The centrifuges are used for producing bomb-grade uranium. Tahir's project was part of a network set up by Abdul Qadeer Khan, the "father" of the Pakistani atomic bomb. At least seven countries are already known to have been involved in the Pakistani effort, which Mohamed ElBaradei, the head of the IAEA, called a "Wal-Mart" of nuclear technology and an American official called "one-stop shopping" for nuclear weapons. [N]ot only [George W.] Bush but also the man likely to be his Democratic challenger in this year's election justified war solely in the name of nonproliferation. Proliferation, however, is not, as the President seemed to think, just a rogue state or two seeking weapons of mass destruction; it is the entire half-century-long process of globalization that stretches from Klaus Fuchs's espionage to Tahir's nuclear arms bazaar and beyond. Does the world want to indict and prosecute crimes against humanity? First, it must decide whether the International Criminal Court will do the job or entrust it to unprosecutable American forces. Do we want to reverse global warming and head off the extinction of the one-third of the world's species that are at risk in the next fifty years? First, the world's largest polluter has to be drawn into the global talks.
- Published
- 2004