((TITLE)) Appeal for Help as I File Stories from Baghdad ((/TITLE)) ((BODY)) 1. Background (A): Sacrificing Everything for Peace ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For justice and peace, we must be prepared to sacrifice everything, including life itself. A just peace will not come to the Middle East until ordinary citizens rise up. We plain folk must show by our nonviolent sacrifices of health and life, if need be in the very crossfires of the battlefields, that we are more devoted to peace than the soldiers are devoted to war. The new century may well see an increasing application of this deeply physical line of thought. I imagine in today's Iraq crisis a couple of hundred, but in tomorrow's crises many thousands, of pacifists inserting themselves into conflict zones. This, I repeat, may well become a reality of military affairs in our new century - just as our new century may well see the advent of the planet-wide full-text universal-access "World Wide Library"; or just as our new century may well (to take a more talked-about example) see the replacement of fossil fuels with a hydrogen economy. Trying to do my bit to move that pacifist development forward, I applied yesterday for an Iraqi visa. My career is therefore at a crossroads. If the visa is granted in time, I go to Baghdad as a peacemaker. If the visa application is denied, I have to rethink my plans. 2. Background (B): The Case against the Envisaged War ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The case against the envisaged war has been argued in many ways. I myself argued it last August, in an open letter to Donald Rumsfeld. (The letter was published in the Toronto Estonian community press, but is more conveniently available in the "Literary" section of my Web site.) My thesis back then was that the war planners regard Iraqi lives as less valuable than American lives, contrary to the political ideals of America's founders. That same approach to the case is hinted at in the Toronto _Globe and Mail_ for 2003-02-08, in a fine letter from Toronto reader Richard Bingham: ((QUOTE)) The one incontrovertible fact of empires is they all eventually end. I strongly suspect that when some future Edward Gibbon writes of America's "decline and fall", he will identify George Bush's Iraq vendetta as the point at which this empire decisively, finally and fatally abandoned the virtues that made it great. ((/QUOTE)) The case was interestingly argued earlier this week by legal scholars, many of them British, who considered the envisaged war a breach of international law. Some modest sign that something is wrong, some beginning of an argued case, emerges also from plain news reports, outside the editorial sections of our press. A few weeks ago, Downing Street was embarrassed to have been caught plagiarizing from a decade-old graduate-student paper on the Iraqi organs of control. Mr Blair's government had led many in the British public to think that its plagiarized briefing conveyed the results of up-to-date professional military-political research. Today the newspapers tell us that key documents purporting to detail Iraq's nuclear ambitions are in the opinion of the relevant United Nations experts forged. (The documents include letters representing Iraq as seeking to purchase uranium from Niger. The forgery was committed by a con man who sold his artistry to a gullible European intelligence operative.) Are we not here seeing Washington and London bluffing, formulating policy in a military-intelligence vacuum? I conclude my sketch of the antiwar case by citing a peculiarly authoritative writer. On 27 February, the _New York Times_ published the following letter of resignation, from American career diplomat John Brady Kiesling, to American Secretary of State Colin Powell. Mr Kiesling's American embassy postings had included Tel Aviv, Casablanca, and Yerevan: ((QUOTE)) Dear Mr. Secretary: I am writing you to submit my resignation from the Foreign Service of the United States and from my position as Political Counselor in U.S. Embassy Athens, effective March 7. I do so with a heavy heart. The baggage of my upbringing included a felt obligation to give something back to my country. Service as a U.S. diplomat was a dream job. I was paid to understand foreign languages and cultures, to seek out diplomats, politicians, scholars and journalists, and to persuade them that U.S. interests and theirs fundamentally coincided. My faith in my country and its values was the most powerful weapon in my diplomatic arsenal. It is inevitable that during twenty years with the State Department I would become more sophisticated and cynical about the narrow and selfish bureaucratic motives that sometimes shaped our policies. Human nature is what it is, and I was rewarded and promoted for understanding human nature. But until this Administration it had been possible to believe that by upholding the policies of my president I was also upholding the interests of the American people and the world. I believe it no longer. The policies we are now asked to advance are incompatible not only with American values but also with American interests. Our fervent pursuit of war with Iraq is driving us to squander the international legitimacy that has been America's most potent weapon of both offense and defense since the days of Woodrow Wilson. We have begun to dismantle the largest and most effective web of international relationships the world has ever known. Our current course will bring instability and danger, not security. The sacrifice of global interests to domestic politics and to bureaucratic self-interest is nothing new, and it is certainly not a uniquely American problem. Still, we have not seen such systematic distortion of intelligence, such systematic manipulation of American opinion, since the war in Vietnam. The September 11 tragedy left us stronger than before, rallying around us a vast international coalition to cooperate for the first time in a systematic way against the threat of terrorism. But rather than take credit for those successes and build on them, this Administration has chosen to make terrorism a domestic political tool, enlisting a scattered and largely defeated Al Qaeda as its bureaucratic ally. We spread disproportionate terror and confusion in the public mind, arbitrarily linking the unrelated problems of terrorism and Iraq. The result, and perhaps the motive, is to justify a vast misallocation of shrinking public wealth to the military and to weaken the safeguards that protect American citizens from the heavy hand of government. September 11 did not do as much damage to the fabric of American society as we seem determined to so to ourselves. Is the Russia of the late Romanovs really our model, a selfish, superstitious empire thrashing toward self-destruction in the name of a doomed status quo? We should ask ourselves why we have failed to persuade more of the world that a war with Iraq is necessary. We have over the past two years done too much to assert to our world partners that narrow and mercenary U.S. interests override the cherished values of our partners. Even where our aims were not in question, our consistency is at issue. The model of Afghanistan is little comfort to allies wondering on what basis we plan to rebuild the Middle East, and in whose image and interests. Have we indeed become blind, as Russia is blind in Chechnya, as Israel is blind in the Occupied Territories, to our own advice, that overwhelming military power is not the answer to terrorism? After the shambles of post-war Iraq joins the shambles in Grozny and Ramallah, it will be a brave foreigner who forms ranks with Micronesia to follow where we lead. We have a coalition still, a good one. The loyalty of many of our friends is impressive, a tribute to American moral capital built up over a century. But our closest allies are persuaded less that war is justified than that it would be perilous to allow the U.S. to drift into complete solipsism. Loyalty should be reciprocal. Why does our President condone the swaggering and contemptuous approach to our friends and allies this Administration is fostering, including among its most senior officials? Has "oderint dum metuant" really become our motto? I urge you to listen to America's friends around the world. Even here in Greece, purported hotbed of European anti-Americanism, we have more and closer friends than the American newspaper reader can possibly imagine. Even when they complain about American arrogance, Greeks know that the world is a difficult and dangerous place, and they want a strong international system, with the U.S. and EU in close partnership. When our friends are afraid of us rather than for us, it is time to worry. And now they are afraid. Who will tell them convincingly that the United States is as it was, a beacon of liberty, security, and justice for the planet? Mr. Secretary, I have enormous respect for your character and ability. You have preserved more international credibility for us than our policy deserves, and salvaged something positive from the excesses of an ideological and self-serving Administration. But your loyalty to the President goes too far. We are straining beyond its limits an international system we built with such toil and treasure, a web of laws, treaties, organizations, and shared values that sets limits on our foes far more effectively than it ever constrained America's ability to defend its interests. I am resigning because I have tried and failed to reconcile my conscience with my ability to represent the current U.S. Administration. I have confidence that our democratic process is ultimately self-correcting, and hope that in a small way I can contribute from outside to shaping policies that better serve the security and prosperity of the American people and the world we share. ((/QUOTE)) I hope that those among my readers who work in the UN Security Council will take Mr Kiesling's letter particularly to heart. Council delegates! We look to you to represent honestly the interests of the world, including the world's poor and weak nations. Do not betray that trust, however severe the great-power diplomatic pressures may become Sunday and Monday, as you prepare for Tuesday's vote! Many people say that if we are to oppose war, we must offer a concrete alternative. So we must. Here is my alternative: Let there be a hefty United Nations inspection presence in Iraq not as a temporary measure, but more or less permanently. Let it be understood that the intrusivity of the insepctions is variable, with the number of inspectors on the ground liable to increase sharply if the level of cooperation from the Iraqi government declines. If, for the sake of the argument, we ignore the sanctity of human life, and consider only dollar costs, we may well find a massive, permanent inspection force to be expensive, yet cheaper than war and its aftermath. Am I wrong in my conjuecture regarding comparative dollar costs? Then let us have Washington and London move rational debate forward by disproving my conjecture, with a budgetary analysis such as we may legitimately demand from our architects of public policy. Whatever may have been the political climate in the 1990s, Iraq cannot now dare make inspectors unwelcome. If inspections failed in a technical sense in the 1990s, having failed to uncover necessary information, that was not because the idea of inspections as such was impractical. It was, rather, because insufficient technical resources and Western political will were devoted to the task at that time. Fifteen or so years ago, I visited the United Nations tower in New York. Furniture, decor, and fittings are of little intrinsic importance. Nevertheless, such things are clues to underlying administrative realities. My little visit, my little inspection of the physical tools available, suggested to me that the United Nations back then was not a particularly well-resourced enterprise. I understand that inspection of that same physical plant this year would yield the same verdict. Is the day finally dawning when we see that the money we have been pouring into weapons systems would be better spent on the United Nations? Let me make that point again, in a rather sharp tone. The United States spends a billion dollars a day in defence. Various other countries (Canada comes to mind) keep their own security spending low by trusting to American arms, happy enough to benefit from a daily billion-dollar military outflow from the American exchequer. Isn't it time all of us rearranged our financial priorities - even at the cost (if we can't make programme cuts anywhere) of sharply increased taxes? Are higher taxes, perhaps, a fair and reasonable exchange for enhanced world peace? Of course, once we do consider the sanctity of human life, we find that any expenditure at all, no matter how ruinous, is preferable to a war, no matter how cheap. 3. What I Hope to Accomplish in Baghdad ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ One of my aims in travelling is to write. I hope to produce short journalistic pieces on the realities of Baghdad life, and later to pull those pieces together, or have someone pull them together on my behalf, into a short book. (Among the possible book titles: _Shields_.) Another of my aims is to counsel the Iraqi leadership, using a few simple, yet not completely conventional, diplomatic resources. (Whatever the strict theory of international law may prescribe, the practical political realities now, of course, dictate that the leadership save the nation it purports to serve by voluntarily relinquishing power. Given the intransigence of the American State Department, I shall probably be in no position to offer any happier solution.) Although my chances of success in that diplomatic initiative are nearly nil, I can perhaps try to establish a certain common ground with my fellow Catholic Mr Tariq Aziz. Should access to Mr Aziz be granted me, I may be able to make some mildly creative use of my indirect links, or more accurately my potential indirect links, with the government of Estonia. I propose to travel not only with my Canadian passport, but also with my Estonian citizen-identity card, using the passport in crossing international borders. My Estonian citizenship I would hold in reserve for diplomatic work. I stress that I am prepared to make any sacrifice - reputation, health, sanity, life - if I can thereby secure the peaceful departure from power of the current lamentable Iraqi administration. Current American official attitudes, however legally incorrect they may be, seem to make that the only way to save lives. Above all, though, I aim to strengthen, by my mere physical presence in Baghdad, the message of the human shields to the sorely misgoverned Iraqi people. That blindingly obvious message: not only do many ordinary people in the West oppose this war; further, significant numbers of them (with the recent peace-shield flights to safety, still perhaps two hundred of them) are prepared to die demonstrating their unflinching opposition to this most injust, illegal, irrational, reckless, heartless war. How high, I now ask myself, is the probability of my own death? I propose to take normal risks, not extravagant ones. I do not, in other words, seek suicide by politics. Even should the mean Mr Bush and the desperate Mr Hussein together unleash a holocaust, the city of Baghdad is unlikely (I subjectively judge) to see more than a million dead, out of a total population five or six times that size. The odds of my returning alive are thus in a crude mathematical sense favourable. Indeed I somehow foresee the whole episode ending happily, so far as I am myself concerned, with my resuming ordinary nonpolitical duties in Toronto, alive and well after only a few weeks' uncertainty. 4. How You Can Support this Initiative ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This mail will have been brought to the attention, in the majority of cases indirectly and discreetly, of several hundred publishing professionals. That tightly knit community essentially comprises copyeditors and substantive-stylistic editors, many of them freelancing for book houses, across Canada. If you are a member of the community, you can help make my envisaged writing a success. You can put yourself at my disposal when I am in Baghdad, making yourself ready to receive my e-mails, or my live phone calls, or even conceivable crude Canadian-produced tape recordings of my live phone calls. These communications will convey my successive essays, perhaps in many cases at a length of around 700 or 1000 words, perhaps typically at the rate of one essay per day. Your job will start with applying the polish that I do not have time to apply in the field, where rapid writing is essential. You know the kind of polish such writing needs. It will often be necessary to substitute a plain, honest word for some excessively fancy word, as stress drives me more and more out of the Anglo-Saxon vernacular into over-intellectualized academic English. Sometimes it will be necessary for you to clarify my narrative flow by rearranging paragraphs. In an extreme case, you might even have to ghostwrite, on the strength of mere clause-form points that I transmit to you in panic. Your job will continue with getting my pieces into the hands of the newspapers, to the extent that I cannot attend to newspaper relations myself. (I'll try to do my bit.) Finally, your job will involve maintaining connections with our selected book house, ensuring that the essays are quickly assembled into a simple, hard-hitting volume in the tradition of the early George Orwell's social reportage, and that the book presses can start up rapidly in the event of my textual flow coming to an end. (In specifying Orwell's early period, I wish to focus your editorial judgement not on his celebrated late works, _1984_ and _Animal Farm_, but on the straight was-there-saw-that output, such as _The Road to Wigan Pier_, with which he began his writing life.) It may be necessary to bring out some of my material in a condensed form in newspapers, and at full length only in the book. Here your editorial project-management skills will prove helpful. If you are not a member of the Canadian publishing community I have just described, you can still do your bit. I need some technically inclined people to help me with research into satellite phones, into power supplies which take in the Iraqi mains current and put out 110 V 60 Hz AC, and into the more general topic of laptop-computer battery charging. I also need people who can run numerous small, occasionally delicate, not particularly technical, errands. One such errand is the preparation of a set of cloth attachments for my clothing and baggage, showing the peace symbol in reflective tape. (If you not only can manipulate reflective tape, but also are one of that hard-to-find elite which understands Arabic script, all the better.) Another such errand, for which I can even pay eight (8) Canadian dollars an hour through a lawyer, is filling in for me in NASA nearby-stars electronic spectroscopy at the David Dunlap Observatory in Toronto's suburbs. Enthusiasm for astronomy would help. But your main task in this case is to be physically present in a control room through the approximately five March nights scheduled in my Baghdad-probable calendar segment, so that the telescope operator is not left alone. If, as is highly unlikely, an accident occurs to the operator, it becomes your duty to summon help from the other scientists living on the observatory grounds, or from the local emergency services. To volunteer your assistance, please write, in some crude and simple way, sacrificing elegance for speed, to ((verbum@interlog.com)). Use the subject heading (that is, the e-mail software "Re:" line) "HELPING iraq antiwar". Sincerely, Toomas (Tom) Karmo verbum@interlog.com 416-971-6955 http://www.metascientia.com ((/BODY)) ...................................................................... ...................................................................... ...................................................................... ...................................................................... DOCUMENT-IN-A-NUTSHELL: letter asking for help in Iraq antiwar travel/writing AUTHOR __Toomas (Tom) Karmo = {t.karmo} __416-971-6955 __((verbum@interlog.com)) STORAGE __definitive archived version is on {t.karmo} Linix workstation veritas.localdomain __convenient-reference version is in "Technical" section of http://www.metascientia.com __mirrored at http://www.interlog.com/~verbum/ REVISION HISTORY (LATEST FIRST) *_20030310T012532Z __added remarks to satisfy a specific debater's request for my concrete policy alternative to Mr Bush's envisaged war *_20030309T014202Z __prepared base version, quite hastily DOCUMENT DESCRIPTION __long, elaborate letter disseminated in the following ways over the period 20030309T014202Z/20030311T235959Z, and possibly disseminated in other ways at later times: * by direct e-mail to many or all of the recipients of my 20030307T042318Z e-mail __that was an e-mail bearing subject line "SEVERE!! I go Iraq, as Human Shield?" * by direct e-mail to various individuals who should have received my 20030307T042318Z e-mail, but whom I failed, under the stress of the moment, to include in the transmission * by way of e-mail cc to the team of Iranian charge d'affaires Mr{mamdouh.mustafa} in Ottawa, via the one e-mail address I currently know for the Iraqi Embassy in Ottawa, ((iraqyia@on.aibn.com)) * by way of individual e-mails to the desks of the United Nations Security Council delegations * to the United States State Department, through the Web public-feedback interface at ((http://www.state.gov/)) * by way of a short discrete, indirect, nationwide listserv posting at a certain professional organization for Canadian editors __the posting reaches several hundred editors __ths short posting invites its readers to consult the upload of this letter to my Web site * certain Estonian circles, by various (_essentially indirect) means __all readers are free to publish this letter, to forward it, or to publish a URL allowing others to find it on the Web