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[casi] Voices statement on sanctions and U.S. presence



A statement from 'Voices in the Wilderness' (including founder Kathy Kelly, Bert
Sacks, and Simon Harak) --  urges that sanctions end for occupied Iraq.  While
recognizing the risk that "removal of sanctions will give this (Bush)
administration and its corporate entities free access to Iraq’s potential
wealth", the welfare of Iraq's people are better served by an economy "free of
the paralysis of international power struggles".

Voices also notes, "It will not serve the tremendous human need in Iraq for the
U.S. military to immediately withdraw without a legitimate international
presence to take its place; from what we’ve witnessed, this would create a power
vacuum that could precipitate the implosion of Iraq’s civil society."

No doubt Voices' statement was crafted with deeply mixed emotions.  Voices knows
better than anyone the Administration's willingness to lie, coerce, and commit
horrific violence in pursuing its Iraq policies.  Voices has repeatedly pointed
out U.S. incompetence in responding to the most basic humanitarian consequences
of invasion.

But the moral high road is clear: "Our focus has never been on political
interests or the balance of power in international politics. Our concern has
always been for the needs and interests of ordinary Iraqis."

Given the duelling forces now unleashed (rebuilding vs. profiteering; civil
protection vs. occupation), the question of which Western policies best address
Iraq's interests requires ongoing vigilance.

Regards,
Drew Hamre
Golden Valley, MN USA

===
http://www.nonviolence.org/vitw/pages/US_Foreign_Policy_Iraqi_Lives

U.S. Foreign Policy and Iraqi Lives

“There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people."
--Howard Zinn

Dear Friends,

Over the past seven years, Voices in the Wilderness has been a nonviolent
campaign to end the economic sanctions against the people of Iraq.  Our focus
has never been on political interests or the balance of power in international
politics. Our concern has always been for the needs and interests of ordinary
Iraqis, many of whom we have come to know.

>From our presence in Iraq, we have seen no evidence that the lives of ordinary
Iraqis are considered in U.S. policy decisions. When sanctions were deemed
expedient to fulfill U.S. foreign policy goals, they were touted by U.S.
officials as indispensable.  Now U.S. administration officials have called for
the lifting of economic sanctions.  U.S. corporations see a gold mine in Iraq,
and the removal of sanctions will give this administration and its corporate
entities free access to Iraq’s potential wealth.   Iraq’s culture, economy, and
resources belong to the Iraqis, not to any U.S. administration or foreign power.

We have seen, however, that legitimate third parties have the expertise and
credibility to serve humanitarian needs. NGO’s such as UNICEF, WHO and UNDP have
a history of responding to such. We hope that the U.N. General Assembly, in
which no country has veto power, will assert its legitimacy and act as a
concerned third party to encourage the lifting of sanctions and emphasize that
all countries should respect and abide by the UN charter.

It would be in the best interests of the suffering families of Iraq to lift the
economic sanctions now so that those who have legitimate claim to Iraq’s
finances and resources can use them, free of the paralysis of international
power struggles, to restore Iraq’s civilian infrastructure as quickly as
possible.  It is important for the lives of families in Iraq that true security
and stability emerge from the present chaos.

It will not serve the tremendous human need in Iraq for the U.S. military to
immediately withdraw without a legitimate international presence to take its
place; from what we’ve witnessed, this would create a power vacuum that could
precipitate the implosion of Iraq’s civil society. The U.S. military should be
pulled back from its role as a foreign occupation power into a protective role
sufficient to allow for Iraq’s social and political concerns to be dictated by
Iraqi parties.

The shouts of “victory” by U.S. government officials and media personalities
have nearly eclipsed this complex reality. The future looks less certain from
the streets of Iraq than it does from mainstream newspapers and television in
the United States . The last 38 days may have ended in a “victory” for the White
House and the Pentagon, but not for countless Iraqis subject to the forces of
power politics beyond their control.

But how do we define “victory?”  The end of a regime? The occupation of a
foreign land against the will of its people?  The capture of Iraq’s oil
reserves? The more than 10,000 Gulf War veterans who survived the 1991 war but
died upon their return?  The hundreds of thousands of veterans exposed to
depleted uranium and other hazardous contaminants, returning home to rapidly
shrinking veteran’s health benefits?  The hundreds of thousands of Iraqi
children killed by economic sanctions? The masses of Iraqi civilians living and
dying with this “victory?”  A New American Century of rule by force?

For whom is this  “victory?”


Yours,

Kathy Kelly
Ceylon Mooney
Bitta Mustofi
Amy Mooney
Angela Garcia
John Farrell
Laurie Hasbrook
Danny Muller
Karl Meyer
Bert Sacks
Simon Harak, S.J.
Sue Mackley

on behalf of Voices in the Wilderness

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