The World Must Support Ireland
Against U.S. Wars
A Letter to Ireland from World Beyond War
By David Swanson
http://worldbeyondwar.org/the-world-must-support-ireland-against-u-s-wars/
Those of us outside Ireland, and in particular those of us in the United States, have a pressing and urgent responsibility to lend all the support we can to our brothers and sisters in Ireland who are resisting U.S. wars.
http://worldbeyondwar.org/the-world-must-support-ireland-against-u-s-wars/
Those of us outside Ireland, and in particular those of us in the United States, have a pressing and urgent responsibility to lend all the support we can to our brothers and sisters in Ireland who are resisting U.S. wars.
Despite Ireland’s officially
neutral status and its claim to have not gone to war since its founding in
1922, Ireland allowed the United States to use Shannon Airport during the Gulf
War and, as part of the so-called coalition of the willing, during the wars
that began in 2001. Between 2002 and the present date, over 2.5 million U.S.
troops have passed through Shannon Airport, along with many weapons, and CIA
airplanes used to transfer prisoners to places of torture. Casement Aerodrome
has also been used. And, despite not being a member of NATO, Ireland has sent
troops to participate in the illegal war on Afghanistan.
Under Hague Convention V in force
since 1910, and to which the United States has been a party from the start, and
which under Article VI of the U.S. Constitution is part of the supreme law of
the United States, “Belligerents are forbidden to move troops or convoys of
either munitions of war or supplies across the territory of a neutral Power.”
Under the United Nations Convention Against Torture, to which both the United
States and Ireland are parties, and which has been incorporated into very
selectively enforced felonies in the U.S. Code since before George W. Bush left
Texas for Washington, D.C., any complicity in torture must be investigated and
prosecuted. Under both the U.N. Charter and the Kellogg-Briand Pact, to both of
which the United States and Ireland have been parties since their creation, the
war in Afghanistan and all the other U.S. wars since 2001 have been illegal.
The people of Ireland have a
strong tradition of resisting imperialism, dating back even before the 1916
revolution of which this year is the centenary, and they aspire to
representative or democratic government. In a 2007 poll, by 58% to 19% they
opposed allowing the U.S. military to use Shannon Airport. In a 2013 poll, over
75% supported neutrality. In 2011, a new government of Ireland announced that
it would support neutrality, but it did not. Instead it has continued to allow
the U.S. military to keep planes and personnel at Shannon Airport, and to bring
troops and weapons through on a regular basis, including over 20,000 troops
already this year.
The United States military has no
need for Shannon Airport. Its planes could reach other destinations without
running out of fuel. One of the purposes of regularly using Shannon Airport,
perhaps the main purpose, is very likely simply to keep Ireland within the
coalition of the killing. On U.S. television, announcers thank “the troops” for
watching this or that major sporting event from 175 countries. The U.S.
military and its profiteers would hardly notice if that number dropped to 174,
but their goal, perhaps their main purpose and driving objective, is to
increase that number to 200. Total global dominance is the explicitly stated
objective of the U.S. military. Once a nation is added to the list, all steps
will be taken, by the State Department, by the military, by the CIA, and by any
possible collaborators, to keep that nation on the list. The United States
government fears an Ireland free of U.S. militarism more than we probably can
imagine. The global peace movement should desire it more than we probably do,
including for the example it would set to Scotland, Wales, England, and the
rest of the world.
How do we, outside of Ireland, know
anything at all about what the U.S. military does in Ireland? We certainly
don’t learn it from the U.S. government or U.S. journalism. And the Irish
government takes no active steps to reveal what it knows, which is likely not
everything. We know what we know because of brave and dedicated peace activists
in Ireland, representing majority opinion, upholding the rule of law,
exercising creative nonviolence, and working through numerous organizations,
most prominently Shannonwatch.org. These heroes have pried loose information, elected and lobbied
members of the Irish legislature, entered the grounds of Shannon Airport to ask
question and draw attention and face criminal prosecution for the cause of
peace. If not for them, citizens of the United States — a nation that literally
bombs other countries in the name of democracy — would have no idea what was
happening whatsoever. Even now, most people in the United States have no idea.
We have to help tell them. Even U.S. supporters of war don’t support a
mandatory draft, at least not until they themselves are too old to qualify.
Many should be willing to oppose forcing Ireland to take part in wars it wants
no part in.
If U.S. military transport
continues to make use of Shannon Airport, a disaster will inevitably occur
there. Of course the moral disaster of participating in the mass killing of
people in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, etc., is ongoing. The cultural disaster of
insidiously creating the impression that war is normal is underway. The
financial cost to Ireland, the environmental and noise pollution, the
heightened “security” that erodes civil liberties: all of those things are part
of the package, along with the racism that finds a target in the refugees
fleeing the wars. But if Shannon Airport survives routine U.S. military use
without a major accident, spill, explosion, crash, or mass-killing, it will be
the first. The U.S. military has poisoned and polluted some of the most
beautiful spots in the United States and around the world.
The unsurpassed
beauty of Ireland is not immune.
And then there is the blowback.
By participating in counterproductive wars that generate international
terrorism, Ireland makes itself a target. When Spain became a target it pulled
out of the war on Iraq, making itself safer. When Britain and France became
targets, they doubled down on their own participation in
terrorism-too-large-to-carry-that-name, generating more blowback and deepening
the vicious cycle of violence. Which path would Ireland choose? We cannot know.
But we do know that it would be wisest for Ireland to pull out of its criminal
participation in the barbaric institution of war before the war comes home. Sign
here. And please share: Twitter. Facebook.
--
David Swanson is an author,
activist, journalist, and radio host. He is director of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign
coordinator for RootsAction.org.
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